Prasad Kasibhatla, Division of Environmental Sciences and Policy, Duke University, Room A355, LSRC, Durham, NC 27708
Tropical savanna and forest fires are important sources of air pollutants to the global atmosphere. In this talk, I focus on our recent efforts to quantify the magnitude and variability of tropical fire-driven atmospheric emissions using remotely sensed datasets of active fires and burned area in combination with a global biogeochemical model. Satellite based measurements of tropospheric carbon monoxide enable us to characterize the accuracy of the resulting inventory. Finally, I will discuss internannual variability in carbon emissions associated with deforestation in the Amazon and Indonesia in recent years, and explore the causes of these variations.