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Desert dust feeds tropical rainforest

Press release

30 October 2006

In the centre of NASA's MODIS satellite image the Bodélé is emitting a huge amount of dust in a south-westwards direction. Lake Chad is seen downwind from the Bodélé.

In the centre of NASA's MODIS satellite image the Bodélé is emitting a huge amount of dust in a south-westwards direction. Lake Chad is seen downwind from the Bodélé.

Further downwind, in the bottom left of the picture, a dust parcel that was left by the Bodélé a day before is shown. (Image courtesy of NASA)

 

The Amazon rainforest in South America relies on dust transported by winds from the Sahara desert in North Africa to replenish the nutrients and minerals in its soils. For the first time, scientists have proved that over half the dust transported to the Amazon comes from one location in the Sahara, the Bodélé depression, even though it makes up less than 1% of the Sahara. Without this supply of dust to replenish the nutrients in its soils, the Amazon could become a wet desert.

The work is reported today in the first edition of the Institute of Physics open-access journal, Environmental Research Letters.

Dr Ilan Koren, lead author of the paper said: “The Bodélé is known as the largest source of dust in the world, but until now no-one had any idea how much dust it emits and what portion arrives in the Amazon. Using satellite data, we have calculated that it provides on average more than 0.7 million tons of dust on each day that it is actively emitting dust. It is most active during the winter and spring seasons unlike most of the other areas in the Sahara that emit dust. This is due to the seasonal shift of the surface winds of the Sahara.”

The Bodélé just 0.5% of the size of the whole Amazon yet it contributes almost half the amount of dust needed there to replenish the soils each year.

The most important condition for dust emission is surface wind speed. During the winter, strong surface winds (the Harmattan winds) occur along the southern border of the Sahara closer to the Sahel zone of west-central Africa. The Bodélé is a depression located downwind of a huge crater-like valley formed by the Tibesti and Ennedi mountains near the northern border of the Sahel. This crater narrows to a cone-shaped pass in the southwest corner of the valley. The shape of the pass focuses the winds like a lens focussing light and they speed up towards the Bodélé. It is the unique structure of the pass and the location with respect to the surface winds that causes the Bodélé to produce such a large amount of dust.

Dr Koren continued: “In the early morning on an emission day the winds speed up to the critical velocity for lifting and transporting dust when they reach the Bodélé. By using data from two satellites that take images of the same areas three hours apart, we can estimate the wind speed and calculate the size of the “dust parcels” that are produced at the Bodélé. We are then able to track the progress of the parcel the next day after it has left the Bodélé and watch it progress across the desert.”

“One satellite, MODIS, has extensive coverage of the area but doesn’t tell us anything about the quantities of dust over land whilst another, the MISR instrument, covers a very small area of land but can retrieve dust properties. Our work using data from both together for the first time has given us a valuable insight into the quantities of dust that are transported from the Bodélé. However this leads to more key questions: How long has the Bodélé emitted such a huge amount of dust to the Amazon and how long will it continue to do so? There has been a recent expedition to the area and we hope that further analysis from this and more satellite imaging that we will be able to answer these and further questions.”

ENDS

Notes to Editors:

The paper, The Bodélé depression: a single spot in the Sahara that provides most of the mineral dust to the Amazon forest, will be published in the Institute of Physics journal Environmental Research Letters at http://erl.iop.org on 30 October 2006

For further information, images and interviews with Dr Koren:

Dianne Stilwell, public relations manager,
The Institute of Physics, 76 Portland Place, London. W1B 1NT
Tel +44 (0)20 7470 4875; +44 (0)7957 200214
E-mail:dianne.stilwell@iop.org

Environmental Research Letters, the new open-access journal from the Institute of Physics is launched on 30 October 2006. Aimed at serving the whole environmental science community, the journal’s coverage will reflect the increasingly interdisciplinary nature of environmental science, recognising wide-ranging contributions to the development of methods, tools and evaluation strategies relevant to the field.

The Institute of Physics is a scientific membership organisation devoted to increasing the understanding and application of physics. It has an extensive worldwide membership (currently over 35,000) and is a leading communicator of physics with all audiences from specialists through government to the general public. Its publishing company, Institute of Physics Publishing, is a world leader in scientific publishing and the electronic dissemination of physics.

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Artwork|Image by Fred Swist