Forests and Climate Change: Forcings, Feedbacks, and the Climate Benefits of Forests
NSF National Center for Atmospheric Research
Abstract
The world's forests influence climate through physical, chemical, and biological processes that affect planetary energetics, the hydrologic cycle, and atmospheric composition. These complex and nonlinear forest-atmosphere interactions can dampen or amplify anthropogenic climate change. Tropical, temperate, and boreal reforestation and afforestation attenuate global warming through carbon sequestration. Biogeophysical feedbacks can enhance or diminish this negative climate forcing. Tropical forests mitigate warming through evaporative cooling, but the low albedo of boreal forests is a positive climate forcing. The evaporative effect of temperate forests is unclear. The net climate forcing from these and other…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 98.21
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 56
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Environmental science
- Climate change
- Temperate climate
- Global warming
- Albedo (alchemy)
- Radiative forcing
- Reforestation
- Global change
- Climate action