The Amazon rainforest, hammered by climate change and relentless deforestation, has become slower at recovering from longer periods of drought over the past two decades, damaging the world's largest tropical forest's complex ecosystem and pushing it nearer a "tipping point" of die-off wherein the region will be irreversibly changed into a savanna, with dire consequences for the region and the world, researchers said.
Researchers warned that the results mean the Amazon could be approaching a so-called "tipping point" faster than previously understood.
Analyzing 25 years of satellite data, researchers measured for the first time Amazon's resilience against shocks such as droughts and fires, a key indicator of overall health.
This has declined across more than three-quarters of the Amazon basin, home to half the world's rainforest, they reported in Nature Climate Change.
In areas hit hardest by destruction or drought, the forest's ability to bounce back was reduced by approximately half, co-author Tim Lenton, director of the University of Exeter's Global Systems Institute, told Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"Our resilience measure changed by more than a factor of two in the places nearer to human activity and in places that are driest," he said in an interview.
Climate models have suggested that global warming – which has on average warmed Earth's surface 1.1 degrees Celsius (1.98 degrees Fahrenheit) above preindustrial levels – could by itself push the Amazon past a point of no return into a far drier savannah-like state.
If carbon pollution continues unabated, that scenario could be locked in by midcentury, according to some models.
"But of course, it's not just climate change – people are busy chopping or burning the forest down, which is a second pressure point," said Lenton.
"Those two things interact, so there are concerns the transition could happen even earlier," he said.
Besides the Amazon, ice sheets on Greenland and the West Antarctic, Siberian permafrost loaded with CO2 and methane, monsoon rains in South Asia, coral reef ecosystems, and the Atlantic ocean current all are vulnerable to tipping points that could radically alter the world as we know it.
Global fallout
Deforestation in Brazil has surged since far-right President Jair Bolsonaro took office in 2019, hitting a 15-year high last year.
Scientists reported recently that Brazil's rainforest – 60% of the Amazon basin's total – has shifted from a "sink" to a "source" of CO2, releasing 20% more of the greenhouse gas into the atmosphere over the last decade than it absorbed.
Terrestrial ecosystems worldwide have been a crucial ally as the world struggles to curb CO2 emissions. Vegetation and soil globally have consistently absorbed about 30% of carbon pollution since 1960, even as emissions increased by half.
"Savannification" of the Amazon would be hugely disruptive, in South America and across the globe.
Some 90 billion tons of CO2 stored in its rainforest – twice worldwide annual emissions from all sources – could be released into the atmosphere, pushing global temperatures up even faster.
Regionally, "it's not just the forests that take a hit," said Lenton. "If you lose the recycling of rainfall from the Amazon, you get knock-on effects in central Brazil, the country's agricultural heartland," he explained.
Ominously, the new findings marshall data pointing in the same direction.
"Many researchers have theorized that a tipping point could be reached," said co-author Niklas Boers, a professor at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany.
"Our study provides vital empirical evidence that we are approaching that threshold," Boers added.
When sure, it's too late
To assess change in the resilience of the rainforest, Lenton, Boers and lead author Chris Boulton from Exeter University analyzed two satellite data sets, one measuring biomass and the other the "greenness" of the canopy.
"If too much resilience is lost, dieback may become inevitable – but that won't become obvious until the major event that tips the system is over," said Boers.
There may be a "saving grace" that could pull the Amazon back from the brink.
"The rainforest naturally has a lot of resilience – this is a biome that weathered the ice ages, after all," said Lenton.
"If you could bring the temperature back down again even after passing the tipping point, you might be able to rescue the situation," he added.
"But that still puts you in the realm of massive carbon dioxide removal, or geoengineering, which has its own risks," he warned.
Just under 20% of the Amazon rainforest – straddling nine nations and covering more than 5 million square kilometers (2 million square miles) – has been destroyed or degraded since 1970, mostly for the production of lumber, soy, palm oil, biofuels and beef.