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  Small persistent humid forest clearings drive tropical forest biomass losses

Xu, Y., Ciais, P., Santoro, M., Bourgoin, C., Ritter, F., Pellissier-Tanon, A., Feng, Y., Zhou, C., He, G., Heinrich, V., Besnard, S., Robinson, N., Cook-Patton, S. C., Chave, J., Aragao, L. E. O. C., Ometto, J. P., Bowring, S. P. K., Fayad, I., Zhu, L., Su, Y., Wigneron, J.-P., Li, W. (2026): Small persistent humid forest clearings drive tropical forest biomass losses. - Nature, 649, 375-380.
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09870-7

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Xu, Yidi1, Author
Ciais, Philippe1, Author
Santoro, Maurizio1, Author
Bourgoin, Clément1, Author
Ritter, François1, Author
Pellissier-Tanon, Agnès1, Author
Feng, Yu1, Author
Zhou, Chuanlong1, Author
He, Guojin1, Author
Heinrich, Viola2, Author                 
Besnard, Simon2, Author           
Robinson, Nathaniel1, Author
Cook-Patton, Susan C.1, Author
Chave, Jérôme1, Author
Aragao, Luiz E. O. C.1, Author
Ometto, Jean P.1, Author
Bowring, Simon P. K.1, Author
Fayad, Ibrahim1, Author
Zhu, Lei1, Author
Su, Yang1, Author
Wigneron, Jean-Pierre1, AuthorLi, Wei1, Author more..
Affiliations:
1External Organizations, ou_persistent22              
21.4 Remote Sensing, 1.0 Geodesy, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, GFZ Helmholtz Centre for Geosciences, ou_146028              

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 Abstract: Tropical forests store about half of the global forest aboveground carbon (AGC)1, yet extensive areas are affected by disturbances, such as deforestation from agricultural expansion2,3 and degradation from fires4, selective logging5, and edge effects6,7. Over time, disturbed forests can recover, gradually restoring carbon stocks and ecological functions8. However, how recovery rates vary with disturbance size, type and location remains poorly quantified. Here we use a bookkeeping approach with spatially explicit vegetation recovery curves to quantify AGC dynamics in disturbed tropical forests during 1990–2020. We find that disturbed tropical dry forests remained carbon neutral, whereas disturbed tropical humid forests experienced a net AGC loss of 15.6 ± 3.7 PgC, primarily driven by small but persistent deforestation clearings. Despite affecting only about 5% of the disturbed area, these small-size (less than 2 ha) deforestation events accounted for about 56% of carbon losses, owing to persistent land-use conversion without forest regrowth. By contrast, large fire-induced carbon losses were offset by the long-term post-fire recovery. Over time, deforestation expanded into humid forests with higher carbon stock density, intensifying AGC losses per unit area. These findings highlight the disproportionate impact of small clearings on tropical carbon losses, suggesting the need to curb land-use changes and protect young and recovering forests.

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 Dates: 2026-01-072026
 Publication Status: Finally published
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 Identifiers: DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09870-7
GFZPOF: p4 T5 Future Landscapes
GFZPOFCCA: p4 CARF RemSens
OATYPE: Green Open Access
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Title: Nature
Source Genre: Journal, SCI, Scopus
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Pages: - Volume / Issue: 649 Sequence Number: - Start / End Page: 375 - 380 Identifier: Publisher: Springer Nature
CoNE: https://gfzpublic.gfz.de/cone/journals/resource/journals353