Embrapa Amazonia Oriental
Embrapa Amazonia Oriental
5 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2024Partners:National Institute of Space Research, University of Oxford, Embrapa Amazonia Oriental, National Inst of Space Res (replaced), ICMBio +8 partnersNational Institute of Space Research,University of Oxford,Embrapa Amazonia Oriental,National Inst of Space Res (replaced),ICMBio,IBAMA,Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation,INPA,ICMBio,Instituto Chico Mendes de Conservação da Biodiversidade,Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources,INPA,Embrapa Amazonia OrientalFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: NE/S01084X/1Funder Contribution: 650,990 GBPWildfires have become the new norm in many parts of the Amazonian humid forest, an ecosystem that did not co-evolve with this stressor. Large areas of previously undisturbed and human-modified forests are catching fire, jeopardising the future of the largest and most biodiverse tropical rainforest in the world, and potentially acting as a feedback that would further increase regional and global climate change. In recent dry years the extent of fire has greatly exceeded the rate of deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon. These fires result in in about half of the trees dying, and open up the forests to make them more vulnerable to subsequent fires. Despite the growing prevalence of Amazonian wildfires, we still have a very limited understanding of why these low intensity understorey fires cause such high rates of tree mortality, which species functional traits predict vulnerability or survival to these fires, what are the impacts of wildfires on the forest carbon balance and what are the patterns of taxonomic and functional recovery following a fire event. We propose a research plan to achieve major advances in our understanding of such wildfire impacts, including of the underlying mechanisms that cause both short-term and longer-term tree mortality. This work will be based at a field site in Santarem in Eastern Brazilian Amazonia, where we have collected several years of measurements of detailed vegetation ecology and carbon cycle tracking over a range of plots. These include a number of plots which experienced fire during the 2015/16 El Niño. We will implement this project by combining a state-of-the-art forest burn experiment with continued monitoring of a unique set of long-term sampling plots, some of which we have tracked through the 2015-16 wildfire event associated with a strong El Niño. We are uniquely placed to address these fundamental questions given our network of burned and unburned forest plots that is already in place, the strong partnerships we have forged with park managers and federal agencies, and the numerous past datasets that we can use as baseline information. The fire experiment will involve setting fire to limited patch of forest (with the close cooperation of local fire brigades), tracking fire intensity and tracking the physiology and mortality responses of individual trees in the fire plots, including trees that have their root mats or their bark insulated from fire damage. We will also experiment with different fire break methodologies to explore the most effective way to stop such fires. With the intensive carbon cycle studies we will track the carbon cycle responses for up to seven years after the 2015 fires, giving us novel insight into the longer term carbon cycle responses and the ecosystem responses and recovery after a fire event. As well as advancing scientific knowledge about a pervasive and increasing threat to the future of tropical forests in the Anthropocene, our co-designed pathways to impact ensures we will also inform and improve approaches to minimise risk of fire-induced dieback of humid Amazonian forests. We will work closely with local fire managers, and engage with state and national policymakers, to draft recommendations on how to manage forest reserves and forest-agriculture mixed landscapes to minimise the risk of fire spread. If applied at a large scale, these fire prevention strategies are a crucial tool that can help minimise the risk of extensive fire-induced dieback within Amazonian forests.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2019Partners:Embrapa Amazonia Oriental, Ecological Society of Chile, National Scientific and Technical Research Council, University of Lagos, Chilean Network of Pollination +20 partnersEmbrapa Amazonia Oriental,Ecological Society of Chile,National Scientific and Technical Research Council,University of Lagos,Chilean Network of Pollination,Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation,NERC CEH (Up to 30.11.2019),National Agricultural Technology Institute,Chilean Network of Pollination,Apicola Association of the Region,Fed Univ of Jequitinhonha & Mucuri UFVJM,University of Chile,Universidade Federal dos Vales do Jequitinhonha e Mucuri,University of Chile,Ministry of Education,Ecological Society of Chile,Nat Inst of Agricultural Tech (INTA),REBIPP (Plant-Pollinator Interactions),Ministry of Education (Brazil),Federal University of Parana,Embrapa Amazonia Oriental,Nat Sci and Technical Res (CONICET),REBIPP (Plant-Pollinator Interactions),UKCEH,Apicola Association of the RegionFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: NE/S011870/1Funder Contribution: 1,428,850 GBPInsect pollinators have undergone declines across the world, a result of factors including intensive agriculture, habitat loss, climate change and invasive species. This represents a major concern in Latin America (LATAM) where it threatens economically important crops and wider biodiversity. The impact of these losses in LATAM remains poorly understood, undermining the capacity to develop policies vital to mitigate pollinator losses and support both agricultural production and wider ecosystem health. A new, coherent evidence base is required, that considers impacts on individual species, their distributions and populations, the landscapes they persist in and their unique capacities to deliver pollination to different crops. Without this it will not be possible to develop the applied experimental and modelling solutions policy makers need to deliver sustainable farming economies. This proposal builds on Newton Phase 1 project SURPASS, an international collaboration between 37 participants, that identified knowledge gaps, issues, and research areas that prioritise conservation and sustainable use of LATAM pollinators. The SURPASS2 goal is to deliver evidence for the creation of resilient pollination services for sustainable economic growth, improved human health and wellbeing as well as positive environmental and agricultural outcomes. This will be addressed by five main objectives, co-designed with academics and stakeholders that establish interconnected work packages that build capacity to manage pollination services and provide tangible outcomes. Our goals will be delivered through 4 work packages: WP1) Monitoring populations and understanding their distributions: before any effective solution can be developed to manage LATAM pollinators it is crucial that we understand the current distribution of species and develop and trial approaches for long term monitoring. Only by understanding where pollinators can be found can we develop applied solutions to manage them. We will design a standardised framework to assess the status and trends of pollinator populations through existing and new monitoring schemes, including citizen science. WP2) How does the environment in which pollinators live affect them, and how does this affect capacity to provide crop pollination: Land use change and land management represent fundamental factors affecting pollinator populations. We will undertake detailed landscape scale experiments across LATAM focusing on production of economically significant crops to understand how landscape management affects pollinators and the pollination services they supply. This will provide data for models and help growers, land managers and policy makers to optimise pollination to sustainably increase crop yields and quality. We will also quantify how invasive species of pollinators impact on wild and native insect pollinators and plants. WP3) Understanding national scale deficits in pollination for key crops identifying areas where pollination services are at high risk. Using cutting edge satellite imagery we will map nationally the occurrence of key insect pollinated crops. We will link this data to the distribution of insect pollinator communities to assess if these populations provide adequate pollination, as well as modelling how resilient these communities are to species losses. As each species of insect pollinator is unique their loss can have potentially huge consequences for agricultural production. WP4) Develop a national scale predictive framework to support policy goals of maximising benefits for agricultural productivity provided by pollination. This will integrate results from WP1-3 to model pollinator communities to develop effective strategies for decision making processes for different stakeholders that benefit from insect pollination. This will provide the framework to work with stakeholders to produce a roadmap for maximising pollination services and long term monitoring in LATAM.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2022Partners:Embrapa Amazonia Oriental, Federal University of Parana, REBIPP (Plant-Pollinator Interactions), UK CENTRE FOR ECOLOGY & HYDROLOGY, University of Chile +20 partnersEmbrapa Amazonia Oriental,Federal University of Parana,REBIPP (Plant-Pollinator Interactions),UK CENTRE FOR ECOLOGY & HYDROLOGY,University of Chile,Ministry of Education,National Scientific and Technical Research Council,University of Lagos,UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology,Ecological Society of Chile,Nat Inst of Agricultural Tech (INTA),Ecological Society of Chile,Fed Univ of Jequitinhonha & Mucuri UFVJM,REBIPP (Plant-Pollinator Interactions),Embrapa Amazonia Oriental,Ministry of Education (Brazil),University of Chile,Universidade Federal dos Vales do Jequitinhonha e Mucuri,Nat Sci and Technical Res (CONICET),Chilean Network of Pollination,Apicola Association of the Region,Apicola Association of the Region,UK Ctr for Ecology & Hydrology fr 011219,Chilean Network of Pollination,National Agricultural Technology InstituteFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: NE/S011870/2Funder Contribution: 934,793 GBPInsect pollinators have undergone declines across the world, a result of factors including intensive agriculture, habitat loss, climate change and invasive species. This represents a major concern in Latin America (LATAM) where it threatens economically important crops and wider biodiversity. The impact of these losses in LATAM remains poorly understood, undermining the capacity to develop policies vital to mitigate pollinator losses and support both agricultural production and wider ecosystem health. A new, coherent evidence base is required, that considers impacts on individual species, their distributions and populations, the landscapes they persist in and their unique capacities to deliver pollination to different crops. Without this it will not be possible to develop the applied experimental and modelling solutions policy makers need to deliver sustainable farming economies. This proposal builds on Newton Phase 1 project SURPASS, an international collaboration between 37 participants, that identified knowledge gaps, issues, and research areas that prioritise conservation and sustainable use of LATAM pollinators. The SURPASS2 goal is to deliver evidence for the creation of resilient pollination services for sustainable economic growth, improved human health and wellbeing as well as positive environmental and agricultural outcomes. This will be addressed by five main objectives, co-designed with academics and stakeholders that establish interconnected work packages that build capacity to manage pollination services and provide tangible outcomes. Our goals will be delivered through 4 work packages: WP1) Monitoring populations and understanding their distributions: before any effective solution can be developed to manage LATAM pollinators it is crucial that we understand the current distribution of species and develop and trial approaches for long term monitoring. Only by understanding where pollinators can be found can we develop applied solutions to manage them. We will design a standardised framework to assess the status and trends of pollinator populations through existing and new monitoring schemes, including citizen science. WP2) How does the environment in which pollinators live affect them, and how does this affect capacity to provide crop pollination: Land use change and land management represent fundamental factors affecting pollinator populations. We will undertake detailed landscape scale experiments across LATAM focusing on production of economically significant crops to understand how landscape management affects pollinators and the pollination services they supply. This will provide data for models and help growers, land managers and policy makers to optimise pollination to sustainably increase crop yields and quality. We will also quantify how invasive species of pollinators impact on wild and native insect pollinators and plants. WP3) Understanding national scale deficits in pollination for key crops identifying areas where pollination services are at high risk. Using cutting edge satellite imagery we will map nationally the occurrence of key insect pollinated crops. We will link this data to the distribution of insect pollinator communities to assess if these populations provide adequate pollination, as well as modelling how resilient these communities are to species losses. As each species of insect pollinator is unique their loss can have potentially huge consequences for agricultural production. WP4) Develop a national scale predictive framework to support policy goals of maximising benefits for agricultural productivity provided by pollination. This will integrate results from WP1-3 to model pollinator communities to develop effective strategies for decision making processes for different stakeholders that benefit from insect pollination. This will provide the framework to work with stakeholders to produce a roadmap for maximising pollination services and long term monitoring in LATAM.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2022 - 2026Partners:MET OFFICE, UNIVERSITY OF EXETER, Fluminense Federal University, University of Exeter, Embrapa Amazonia Oriental +20 partnersMET OFFICE,UNIVERSITY OF EXETER,Fluminense Federal University,University of Exeter,Embrapa Amazonia Oriental,Embrapa Amazonia Oriental,Met Office,University of Exeter,James Cook University,UCI,Fluminense Federal University,University of California, Irvine,Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation,Missouri Botanical Garden - Peru,University of Oxford,INPA,JCU,Met Office,University of Sao Paulo,National Institute of Amazonian Research,Universidade de São Paulo,University of Sao Paolo,Mato Grosso State University,Missouri Botanical Garden - Peru,Mato Grosso State University (Unemat)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: NE/W001691/1Funder Contribution: 653,044 GBPWildfires are becoming the new normal across Amazonia. Deforestation is transforming the region at a rate of around 10,000 square km/year (half the area of Wales), and now the area degraded annually -forest logged and burned but not cut down-is greater than the area deforested. Fire has historically been rare in Amazonia, meaning that the forests are not adapted to fire and the trees often die from fires - releasing carbon (C) back to the atmosphere and amplifying global climate change. Burning of tropical forests is already releasing more climate-warming carbon dioxide than fossil fuel burning in the whole of Europe. Trees in Amazonia contain around 7x more C than humans are releasing every year, and soils contain the same amount again, so it is vital to understand what is happening to this C and minimize emissions. As vegetation sheds its leaves, branches, and roots, or dies, some of the C released remains in the soil, and some is later decomposed and released back to the atmosphere. Carbon exists in the soil in many different forms, from new inputs from decomposing plant material to ancient C formed over millennia. Burning adds pyrogenic carbon (PyC) to the soil, a partially burnt form of C that is resistant to decomposition and could make the soil more fertile. Because soil C takes a long time to form, its conservation is particularly important. Despite the widespread increase in fire in Amazonia, there have been few measurements of soil C fractions and dynamics in burned areas - most have focussed on natural forests. Burned forests will have different composition, forest structure, and C dynamics. Understanding how different soil C fractions are formed and lost is crucial to understand how fire and climate change affect C storage. We propose to make major advances in understanding fire impacts, including the processes that affect the type and quantifies of soil C formed, and how C gains/losses vary over time, with soil type, and climate. We will combine new measurements with innovative modelling to inform land management strategies and C budgets. We have already collected data from across Amazonia in intact forests that have not recently burned. Crucially our project will collect a new, comprehensive dataset from human-modified forests, including logged, burned and abandoned land. We will use an approach known as a chronosequence, where we take samples at sites that were burnt at different times in the past, so we can see how the soil C has changed after e.g. 1 year, 2 years, or up to 20 years after a fire. This will then be used to develop a state-of-the-art land surface model, JULES, which forms part of the UK Earth System Model. At our sample sites, we will evaluate how different burn severities affect soil C, both in surface and deep soils, and how these change over time post-burning and with soil, climate, and land-use such as logging. At 3 focal sites, we will take detailed measurements of the decomposition rate of the C over 4 years, comparing measurements with different land-use, burn severity and wet vs dry seasons. Knowing what forms C takes after a fire and how fast it decomposes under different conditions will enable us to build these processes into the JULES model. We will model PyC globally for the first time and make projections of land C changes in Amazonia over the next ~40-60 years under different management practices. As well as transforming scientific understanding of post-fire soil C and its resilience to climate and management, our project will inform socio-environmental planning for sustainable resource use to conserve soil C. We will work with regional partners, fire managers, state and national policymakers to integrate our findings into decision-making to minimise negative fire impacts. Due to the Amazon Basin-scale of our work, these strategies are a crucial step to limit the risk of large-scale loss of soil C.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2022Partners:Universidad Nacional Abierta y a Distancia, Universidade de São Paulo, Missouri Botanical Garden, University Gabriel Rene Moreno, Embrapa Amazonia Oriental +43 partnersUniversidad Nacional Abierta y a Distancia,Universidade de São Paulo,Missouri Botanical Garden,University Gabriel Rene Moreno,Embrapa Amazonia Oriental,Federal University of Sao Carlos,University of Sao Paolo,Austral University of Chile,CNRS,Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation,University (State) of Campinas (Unicamp),Socio-environmental Institute (ISA),National Open & Distance University UNAD,State University of Campinas (UNICAMP),UA,Forest Institute of Chile,University of Aysen,Embrapa Amazonia Oriental,Instituto Investig. Amazonia Peruana,Universidade Estadual Santa Cruz (UESC),Socio-environmental Institute (ISA),Research Inst of the Peruvian Amazon,Naturalis Biodiversity Center,Federal University of São Carlos,University of Sao Paulo,Missouri Botanical Garden,University of Birmingham,National Institute for Space Research,Naturalis Biodiversity Center,Austral University of Chile,Forest Institute of Chile,University of Leeds,University Gabriel Rene Moreno,Research Inst for Forestry Development,Research Inst for Forestry Development,University of Leeds,University of Birmingham,Universidad de Aysén,Mato Grosso State University,State University of Santa Cruz,Universidade Estadual Santa Cruz (UESC),CNRS,Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Argentina,NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF CORDOBA,The University of Arizona,INPE,Austral University of Chile,University of the State of Mato GrossoFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: NE/S011811/1Funder Contribution: 1,107,050 GBPLatin American forests cover a very large latitudinal and climate gradient extending from the tropics to Southern hemisphere high latitudes. The continent therefore hosts a large variety of forest types including the Amazon - the world's largest tropical forest - as well as the diverse Atlantic forests concentrated along the coast, temperate forests in Chile and Argentina as well as the cold rainforests of Valdivia and the Nothofagus forests of Patagonia. These forests are global epicentres of biological diversity and include several tropical and extra-tropical biodiversity hotspots. For example, the Amazon rainforest is home to ~10% of terrestrial plant and animal species and store a large fraction of global organic carbon. hotspots. Some of these Latin American forests still cover a large fraction of their original (pre-colombian) extent: the Amazon still covers approximately 5 Million km2, which is 80% of its original area. However, others, such as the Atlantic forest, have nearly disappeared and are now heavily fragmented. Temperate forests have also shrunk, despite efforts to halt further reduction. However, economic development, population rises and the growth in global drivers of environmental change mean that all forests now face strong anthropogenic pressures. Locally stressors generally result from ongoing development, selective logging, the hunting of larger birds and mammals, over-exploitation of key forest resources such as valuable palm fruits, mining, and/or forest conversion for agricultural use. Global environmental drivers stem from the world's warming climate. Yet it is not clear how these local pressures and changing environmental conditions will alter the composition of Latin American forests, and whether there are thresholds between human impacts - such as the lack of dispersers in heavily fragmented forest landscapes or climate conditions exceeding limits of species tolerance - and the community level responses of forest plants. We aim to investigate this, supporting the development of strategies that can preserve the diversity of these forests and their functioning. We achieve this by investigating the relationships between diversity and functioning of these forests; exploring whether there are thresholds in functioning resulting both from pressures of forest use and changing climate; by experimentally testing responses; and by generalizing predictive capability to large scales. ARBOLES aims to achieve these goals by integrating established forest inventory approaches with cutting-edge functional trait, genomics, experimental and remote sensing approaches. Our approach involves combining forest plots with plant traits, which will enable us to characterize state and shifts over time in the face of local human disturbance and changing climate and atmospheric composition. We will focus on traits along the following axes: (i) life-history strategies measuring investment in structure (like wood density, leaf mass per area, maximum height), (ii) investment in productive organs (like leaf nutrients), (iii) investment in reproductive organs, (iv) tolerance to water stress and heat stress. The work is being conducted in collaboration with research groups in Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Peru - and will provide a first cross-continent assessment of how humans are influencing Latin American forests.
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