loading page

Contrasting impacts of forest on cloud cover based on satellite observations
  • +6
  • Ru Xu,
  • Yan Li,
  • Adriaan J Teuling,
  • Lei Zhao,
  • Dominick V Spracklen,
  • Ronny Meier,
  • Liang Chen,
  • Youtong Zheng,
  • Bojie Fu
Ru Xu
Beijing Normal University
Author Profile
Yan Li
Beijing Normal University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

Author Profile
Adriaan J Teuling
Wageningen University and Research
Author Profile
Lei Zhao
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Author Profile
Dominick V Spracklen
University of Leeds
Author Profile
Ronny Meier
ETH Zurich
Author Profile
Liang Chen
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Author Profile
Youtong Zheng
University of Maryland, College Park
Author Profile
Bojie Fu
Beijing Normal University
Author Profile

Abstract

Forests play a pivotal role in regulating climate and sustaining the hydrological cycle. The biophysical impacts of forest on clouds, however, remain unclear due to the lack of direct observations. In this first global-scale observational study, we use long-term satellite-derived cloud cover data to show that forests can have opposite effects on summer cloud cover. We find enhanced cloud cover over most temperate and boreal forests, but inhibited cloud cover over Amazon, central Africa, and Southeast US. These cloud effects mainly arise from convection processes associated with forests. The spatial variation in the sign of cloud effects is driven by sensible heating where cloud enhancement (inhibition) is more likely to occur when sensible heat in forest is larger (smaller) than nearby nonforest. Ongoing forest cover loss has led to opposite cloud cover changes, with local cloud increase over forest loss hotspots in the Amazon (+0.78%), Indonesia (+1.19%), and Southeast US (+0.09%), but cloud reduction in East Siberia (-0.20%) from 2002-2018. Our data-driven assessment informs the climate effects of local-scale forest cover change and improves mechanistic understanding of forest-cloud interactions, the latter of which remains uncertain in Earth system models.
03 Feb 2022Published in Nature Communications volume 13 issue 1. 10.1038/s41467-022-28161-7