Relationship between land surface temperature and fraction of anthropized area in the Atlantic forest region, Brazil.

There is growing evidence that modification of tropical forests to pasture or other anthropic uses (anthropization) leads to land surface warming at local and regional scales; however, the degree of this effect is unknown given the dependence on physiographic and atmospheric conditions. We investiga...

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Main Authors: Raianny L N Wanderley, Leonardo M Domingues, Carlos A Joly, Humberto R da Rocha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225443
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spelling doaj-ca09e5a7d89745d4844a0a822a89e92a2021-03-03T21:17:50ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-011412e022544310.1371/journal.pone.0225443Relationship between land surface temperature and fraction of anthropized area in the Atlantic forest region, Brazil.Raianny L N WanderleyLeonardo M DominguesCarlos A JolyHumberto R da RochaThere is growing evidence that modification of tropical forests to pasture or other anthropic uses (anthropization) leads to land surface warming at local and regional scales; however, the degree of this effect is unknown given the dependence on physiographic and atmospheric conditions. We investigated the dependence of satellite land surface temperature (LST) on the fraction of anthropized area index, defined as the fraction of non-forested percentual area within 120m square boxes, sampled over a large tropical forest dominated ecosystem spatial domain in the Atlantic Forest biome, southeastern Brazil. The LST estimated at a 30 m resolution, showed a significant dependence on elevation and topographic aspect, which controlled the average thermal regime by 2~4°C and 1~2°C, respectively. The correction of LST by these topographic factors allowed to detect a dependence of LST on the fraction of non-forested area. Accordingly, the relationship between LST and the fraction of non-forested area showed a positive linear relationship (R2 = 0.63), whereby each 25% increase of non-forest area resulted in increased 1°C. As such, increase of the maximum temperature (~4°C) would occur in the case of 100% increase of non-forested area. We conclude that our study area, composed to Atlantic forest, appears to show regulatory characteristics of temperature attenuation as a local climatic ecosystem service, which may have mitigation effects on the accelerated global warming.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225443
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Raianny L N Wanderley
Leonardo M Domingues
Carlos A Joly
Humberto R da Rocha
spellingShingle Raianny L N Wanderley
Leonardo M Domingues
Carlos A Joly
Humberto R da Rocha
Relationship between land surface temperature and fraction of anthropized area in the Atlantic forest region, Brazil.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Raianny L N Wanderley
Leonardo M Domingues
Carlos A Joly
Humberto R da Rocha
author_sort Raianny L N Wanderley
title Relationship between land surface temperature and fraction of anthropized area in the Atlantic forest region, Brazil.
title_short Relationship between land surface temperature and fraction of anthropized area in the Atlantic forest region, Brazil.
title_full Relationship between land surface temperature and fraction of anthropized area in the Atlantic forest region, Brazil.
title_fullStr Relationship between land surface temperature and fraction of anthropized area in the Atlantic forest region, Brazil.
title_full_unstemmed Relationship between land surface temperature and fraction of anthropized area in the Atlantic forest region, Brazil.
title_sort relationship between land surface temperature and fraction of anthropized area in the atlantic forest region, brazil.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description There is growing evidence that modification of tropical forests to pasture or other anthropic uses (anthropization) leads to land surface warming at local and regional scales; however, the degree of this effect is unknown given the dependence on physiographic and atmospheric conditions. We investigated the dependence of satellite land surface temperature (LST) on the fraction of anthropized area index, defined as the fraction of non-forested percentual area within 120m square boxes, sampled over a large tropical forest dominated ecosystem spatial domain in the Atlantic Forest biome, southeastern Brazil. The LST estimated at a 30 m resolution, showed a significant dependence on elevation and topographic aspect, which controlled the average thermal regime by 2~4°C and 1~2°C, respectively. The correction of LST by these topographic factors allowed to detect a dependence of LST on the fraction of non-forested area. Accordingly, the relationship between LST and the fraction of non-forested area showed a positive linear relationship (R2 = 0.63), whereby each 25% increase of non-forest area resulted in increased 1°C. As such, increase of the maximum temperature (~4°C) would occur in the case of 100% increase of non-forested area. We conclude that our study area, composed to Atlantic forest, appears to show regulatory characteristics of temperature attenuation as a local climatic ecosystem service, which may have mitigation effects on the accelerated global warming.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225443
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