-in deforested areas there's no tree canopy for interception, more water reaches the ground. There's too much water for the soil to soak in so runoff increases, increasing the risk of flooding
-Deforestation reduces the rate of evapotranspiration, less water vapour reaches the atmosphere, fewer clouds form, rainfall is reduced increasing risk of drought
-Without roots holding soil together, heavy rain washes away the nutrient rich top layer of soil, carbon stored in soil will be transferred to hydrosphere
-There will be less leaf litter, humus isn't formed. Soil cannot support much new growth limiting the amount of carbon absorbed
-Trees remove CO2 from the atmosphere and store it, fewer trees means more CO2 in the atmosphere, enhancing the greenhouse effect and global warming
Limiting human impacts on the Amazon - selective logging
-only some trees (eg. oldest ones) are felled - most are left standing
-Less damaging than felling all the trees in an area. If only a few trees are taken from areas the forest structure is still kept - canopy is still there and the soil isn't exposed
-forest is able to regenerate, impact on carbon and water cycle is low
-EXAMPLE: project in Peru replanted 115+ acres of forest between 2016-19
-Important the same type of trees are replanted as the ones cut down, so variety is kept for the future & local water and carbon cycles return to their initial status
-Many countries have set up national parks/nature reserves to protect the rainforest ( Central Amazon Conservation Complex in Brazil set up in 2003 to protect biodiversity in a 49,000 Km squared are whilst allowing local people to use the forest in a sustainable way)
-Within national parks/nature reserves damaging activities like logging can be monitored and prevented
-2015 study shows Amazon is losing its capacity to absorb CO2 from the atmosphere
-peak of 2 billion tonnes each year in the 1990s, net uptake by the forest has halved. For the first time its overtaken by the fossil fuel emissions in South America
-trees have had a growth spurt. Trees life cycles are accelerated, growing faster dying younger
- as a result the rate of tree death in the Amazon has surged in recent years.