WEBVTT 1 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:00.130 2 00:00:00.150 --> 00:00:03.500 [ music ] 3 00:00:03.520 --> 00:00:08.000 Narrator: Pulses of laser light. 300,000 per second 4 00:00:08.020 --> 00:00:12.570 each one represented by a single leaf. 5 00:00:12.590 --> 00:00:15.750 6 00:00:15.770 --> 00:00:19.780 Flying above a protected area of a Brazilian rainforest, 7 00:00:19.800 --> 00:00:24.840 NASA scientists measure changes in the canopy to understand how climate change affects 8 00:00:24.860 --> 00:00:29.260 the amount of carbon stored in the Amazon’s mighty trees. 9 00:00:29.280 --> 00:00:33.460 They flew the same transect of the forest three times over three years, 10 00:00:33.480 --> 00:00:38.450 first comparing two fairly normal weather years, 2013 and 2014, 11 00:00:38.470 --> 00:00:41.540 and then surveying again in 2016, 12 00:00:41.560 --> 00:00:45.230 after a severe El Niño drought. 13 00:00:45.250 --> 00:00:50.060 With trees more than 16 stories tall, airborne measurements capture changes 14 00:00:50.080 --> 00:00:54.260 in forest structure not possible from the ground or from space. 15 00:00:54.280 --> 00:00:58.370 Lighter areas, seen falling away here, 16 00:00:58.390 --> 00:01:02.450 represent limbs and whole trees crashing to the ground 17 00:01:02.470 --> 00:01:06.690 as a result of storms and environmental stress 18 00:01:06.710 --> 00:01:10.890 As they fall, they take other trees with them. 19 00:01:10.910 --> 00:01:14.970 In collaboration with Brazilian scientists, 20 00:01:14.990 --> 00:01:19.140 the team also conducted ground surveys to measure the woody material 21 00:01:19.160 --> 00:01:23.310 on the forest floor. They found that 22 00:01:23.330 --> 00:01:27.640 80% of the carbon losses came from the death of larger trees. 23 00:01:27.660 --> 00:01:31.830 But surprisingly, large trees were not hurt comparatively more by the drought 24 00:01:31.850 --> 00:01:35.940 than were smaller trees, as had been previously suspected. 25 00:01:35.960 --> 00:01:40.120 The team also surveyed areas of forest impacted by logging, 26 00:01:40.140 --> 00:01:44.310 where even more dramatic changes can be seen. 27 00:01:44.330 --> 00:01:48.390 Researchers will continue to analyze 28 00:01:48.410 --> 00:01:52.560 the changing climate and human activity affect rainforests 29 00:01:52.580 --> 00:01:56.770 and how much carbon these forests both take up – and release – to the atmosphere. 30 00:01:56.790 --> 00:02:01.089 [ music fades ]