Home
Scholarly Works
Amazon rainforests are rejuvenating their canopies...
Journal article

Amazon rainforests are rejuvenating their canopies by producing more photosynthetically efficient young leaves under climate change

Abstract

Leaf age structure strongly regulates canopy photosynthesis in Amazon rainforests yet its large-scale patterns and dynamics remain poorly understood. Here we map the fraction of leaf area of photosynthetically efficient young leaves (fyoung) using remote sensing data and assess its spatiotemporal variability from 2001 to 2023. We find that fyoung varies markedly with elevation and canopy height: tall or mountain forests (canopy ≥32 m or elevation ≥300 m) exhibit higher fyoung than short or lowland forests, reflecting higher leaf turnover driven by stronger radiation, greater atmospheric dryness and longer dry seasons. Across the basin, fyoung increased significantly in 85.2% of forests during 2001–2023, linked to decreasing precipitation, rising sunlight, intensifying atmospheric dryness and lengthening dry seasons. This widespread trend towards more juvenile leaves is projected to persist under future climate change. Our findings reveal a fundamental shift in Amazon leaf age structure and highlight its importance for predicting future photosynthetic responses in a warmer, drier climate.

Authors

Yang X; Tian J; Ciais P; Zhou L; Reich PB; Wu J; Shang J; Chave J; Lamour J; Maréchaux I

Journal

Nature Plants, Vol. 12, No. 3, pp. 520–531

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

March 1, 2026

DOI

10.1038/s41477-026-02240-9

ISSN

2055-026X

Contact the Experts team