PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

The fattening forest: trees of the Amazon are getting bigger 

Embargoed research paper available on request 

2025-09-25
(Press-News.org) Average tree size across the Amazon has increased by 3.2% every decade consistent with a response to rising carbon dioxide levels, a new study suggests.  

 The new research published today (25 Sep) in Nature Plants by a global team of tropical forest scientists shows that the average size of trees in Amazon forests has increased over recent decades. The team of almost a hundred researchers monitored the size of trees in 188 permanent plots and discovered that the increase has continued for at least 30 years.  

The study is the result of an international partnership of more than 60 universities in South America, the UK and beyond – including the Universities of Birmingham, Bristol, and Leeds. 

 Co-author of the study Professor Beatriz Marimon, from Universidade do Mato Grosso, who coordinated much of the Brazilian data collection in southern Amazonia, commented: “This is a good news story. We regularly hear how climate change and fragmentation is threatening Amazonian forests. But meanwhile the trees in intact forests have grown bigger; even the largest trees have continued to thrive despite these threats.”  

 The study found that both large and smaller trees have increased in size, consistent with benefitting from fertilisation by increased atmospheric carbon dioxide.   

Joint lead author of the RAINFOR paper Dr Adriane Esquivel-Muelbert, from the University of Cambridge – who led the research whilst at the Universities of Birmingham and Leeds – commented: “Ahead of COP30 in Brazil later this year, these results underscore just how important tropical rainforests are in our ongoing efforts to mitigate against man-made climate change.   

 “Large trees are hugely beneficial for absorbing CO2 from the atmosphere and this study confirms that. Despite concerns that climate change may negatively impact trees in the Amazon and undermine the carbon sink effect, the effect of CO2 in stimulating growth is still there. This shows the remarkable resilience of these forests, at least for now.”  

 Dr Rebecca Banbury Morgan from the University of Bristol and joint lead author added: “Our paper also highlights how destructive Amazon deforestation really is. Large tropical trees are hundreds of years old. We can’t simply plant new trees and expect them to confer anything like the kinds of carbon or biodiversity benefits that the old, natural forest is providing.”  

 According to previous research by the RAINFOR network, the Amazon Forest plays a key role in taking up carbon which would otherwise be in the atmosphere.  

 “We knew that the total amount of carbon stored in the trees of intact Amazonian forests has increased. What this new study shows is that all sizes of tree have grown larger over the same period – the whole forest has changed.” added Professor Tim Baker from the University of Leeds, joint senior author of the study.  

The study is the first of its kind to measure how increases in CO2 have systematically changed the tree size structure of Amazon forests. The team noted that as the biggest trees have grown larger, they have managed to increasingly dominate competition for resources.   

The authors point out the new research has other implications too. According to Professor Oliver Phillips of the University of Leeds: “What happens to big trees – including how they deal with increasing climate threats and manage to disperse their seeds – is now mission-critical. The only way the giants will stay healthy is if the Amazon ecosystem stays connected. Deforestation is a huge threat-multiplier and will kill them if we let it.”   

ENDS  

For media enquiries please contact:  

University of Birmingham - pressoffice@contacts.bham.ac.uk or +44 (0)121 414 2772.   

University of Bristol - press-office@bristol.ac.uk  

University of Leeds - pressoffice@leeds.ac.uk  

PHOTO CAPTIONS 

Scientists in Colombia measuring a giant Ceiba tree (Credit: Pauline Kindler) 

View of the rainforest canopy (Credit: Adriane Esquivel Muelbert) 

Notes to editor:   

The University of Birmingham is ranked amongst the world’s top 100 institutions. Its work brings people from across the world to Birmingham, including researchers, educators and more than 8,000 international students from over 150 countries.     

The University is leading research to help mitigate and adapt to the risks and impacts associated with climate change - working with industry, academic and policy partners across the globe to accelerate progress on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) towards the 2030 Agenda. Birmingham has been awarded UNFCCC Observer Status, which means its researchers are able to contribute to the vital discussions taking place at COP30.     

Only careful, long-term measurements on the ground can tell us how intact forests are really changing on the inside. The RAINFOR Amazon Forest Inventory Network team of 95 researchers measured mature forest plots for more than 30 years, during which carbon dioxide concentrations have risen by nearly a fifth. In each plot the diameter of each tree was measured, the species identified, and investigators returned many times to revisit each tree and learn its fate. RAINFOR’s long-term aim is to understand the dynamics of Amazon ecosystems. For this, team members have developed a framework for the systematic monitoring of forests from the ground-up centred on plots that track the life and death of each tree and species, and including soil and plant traits, as well as intensive monitoring of carbon cycle processes at some sites. RAINFOR partners across the nine nations of the Amazon share a commitment to sustain forest monitoring and help develop new generations of Amazon ecologists.    

About the University of Bristol  

The University is ranked within the top ten universities in the UK and 51st in the world (QS World University Rankings 2026); it is also ranked among the top five institutions in the UK for its research, according to analysis of the Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2021; and is the 5th most targeted university by top UK employers.  

The University was founded in 1876 and was granted its Royal Charter in 1909.  It was the first university in England to admit women on the same basis as men.   The University is a major force in the economic, social and cultural life of Bristol and the region, but is also a significant player on the world stage. It has over 20,000 undergraduates and over 7,000 postgraduate students from more than 150 countries, and its research links span the globe.    

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

USC researchers develop new brain imaging method to reveal hidden vascular changes with aging

2025-09-25
Researchers at the Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute (Stevens INI) at the Keck School of Medicine of USC have developed a groundbreaking brain imaging technique that reveals how tiny blood vessels in the brain pulse with each heartbeat—changes that may hold clues to aging and diseases such as Alzheimer’s. The study, published in Nature Cardiovascular Research, introduces the first noninvasive method for measuring “microvascular volumetric pulsatility”—the rhythmic expansion ...

Topology reveals the hidden rules of amorphous materials — Softness arises from hierarchical structures

2025-09-25
Osaka, Japan — Why do glass and other amorphous materials deform more easily in some regions than in others? A research team from The University of Osaka, the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Okayama University, and the University of Tokyo has uncovered the answer. By applying a mathematical method known as persistent homology, the team demonstrated that these soft regions are governed by hidden hierarchical structures, where ordered and disordered atomic arrangements coexist. Crystalline solids, such as salt or ice, have atoms neatly arranged in repeating ...

CU Anschutz researchers discover how lymphatic endothelials cells help the body remember infections

2025-09-25
A study published today in Nature Communications describes how lymphatic endothelial cells assist in generating robust immune memory, offering new insights into how the immune system functions. Specifically, the researchers found there is a particular genetic program within the lymphatic endothelial cells that enables storage and archival of portions of an immunization or pathogen (antigens) for future use. The research is among the first to outline that there’s a genetic “transcriptional” program within lymphatic endothelial cells that impact the immune response and could be manipulated. The study was led ...

Indonesian breeds may carry genetics that can make cattle more sustainable and productive

2025-09-25
In Indonesia, cattle are not just cattle. The large island-nation houses a variety of different breeds, locally preferred for their unique set of physical attributes and strongly linked to culture and ceremonies. There is even a distinct species of domesticated bovine here, namely the Bali cattle, a domesticated version of the wild banteng (see Box 1). Little is known about the history of cattle in this archipelago, which is positioned at a crossroad between major historical trading empires and cultures, notably India and China. Local ...

Reducing the environmental ‘paw-print’ - plant-based dog foods are better for the environment than red meat options

2025-09-25
A new study, led by experts at the University of Nottingham, has found that the production of meat-based pet foods has a much greater impact on the environment in comparison to plant-based alternatives. The study, led by Rebecca Brociek from the School of Veterinary Medicine and Science, and published in Frontiers in Nutrition - Nutrition and Sustainable Diets, showed that plant-based diets for pets had the lowest impact across all measures of environmental impact. This included the land needed ...

Minute witnesses from the primordial sea

2025-09-25
Earth scientists often face huge challenges when researching the earth’s history: many significant events occurred such a long time ago that there is little direct evidence available. Consequently, researchers often have to rely on indirect clues or on computer models. The team led by ETH Professor Jordon Hemingway, however, has now discovered a unique natural witness to this period: tiny egg-shaped iron oxide stones that can be used to directly measure the carbon reserves in the primordial ocean.  Viewed ...

Hot springs in Japan give insight into ancient microbial life on Earth

2025-09-25
Earth was not always the blue-green world we know today: the early Earth's oxygen levels were about a million times lower than we now experience. There were no forests and no animals. For ancient organisms, oxygen was toxic. What did life look like at that time then? A recent study led by Fatima Li-Hau (graduate student at ELSI at the time of the research) along with the supervisor Associate Professor Shawn McGlynn  (at the time of research) of the Earth-Life Science Institute (ELSI) at Institute of Science Tokyo, Japan, explores this question by examining iron-rich hot springs that mimic the chemistry of Earth's ancient oceans around the time ...

Shortfin mako sharks show enhanced thermoregulation abilities during deep dives

2025-09-25
Tunas, billfishes, and some sharks, such as white sharks and shortfin mako sharks, have an ability known as regional endothermy, which allows them to maintain body temperatures higher than the ambient water. This ability has been regarded as an adaptation to cold environments. However, its role in warm-water species such as shortfin mako sharks, bigeye tuna, and swordfish has been unclear.   In this study, we attached data loggers to shortfin mako sharks caught off southeastern Taiwan to record water temperature, body temperature, and swimming depth (Fig. 1). During repeated deep dives, ...

Motion of planet-forming spirals captured on video

2025-09-25
The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) has captured the motion of spirals of dust around a young star and shown that the winding motion of the spiral pattern is conducive to planet formation. This provides new evidence for planet formation around this young star. The results could have implications for other young stars as well. Observations have revealed a spiral pattern in the disk of gas and dust around the young star IM Lup located 515 light-years away in the direction of the constellation Lupus. Spiral patterns are thought to be one of the signs that a new planet will form soon, but ...

Routing photonic entanglement towards a quantum internet

2025-09-25
Imagine the benefits if the entire internet got a game-changing upgrade to speed and security. This is the promise of the quantum internet - an advanced system that uses single photons (particles of light) to operate. Researchers at Tohoku University developed a new photonic router that can direct single and (quantum) entangled photons with unprecedented levels of efficiency. This advancement in quantum optics brings us closer to quantum networks and next-generation photonic quantum technologies becoming an everyday reality. The findings were published in Advanced Quantum Technologies on September 2, 2025. Photons are the backbone ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Lightweight UAV object detection with reparameterized convolutions and shallow fusion networks

Protecting the protectors: as measles cases surge, how can we help healthcare workers get vaccinated?

Superlattice blotting constructs ordered mesoporous carbon with high nickel single atom support for efficient electrocatalysis

Beyond adsorption: Dalian scientists uncover biochar’s hidden superpower—direct pollutant destruction

Turning a problem into a resource: Scientists transform biomass tar into high-value carbon materials

New study reveals hidden “electron highways” that power underground chemistry and pollution cleanup

International healthcare workers report on war related injuries among civilians in Gaza

Emergency departments report more consults for hospice, palliative care

PSU research shows Portland transit-oriented developments reduce car trips, especially at affordable housing sites

Rice anthropologist among first to use AI to uncover new clues that early humans were prey, not predators Were early humans hunters — or hunted?

Handbook offers in-depth exploration of information history

Super-resistant bacteria found in wild birds at a rehabilitation center on the coast of São Paulo state, Brazil

Leading maternal health physician-scientist Andreea Creanga, MD, Ph.D., named chair of the department of epidemiology and public health at the University of Maryland School of Medicine

AI system learns from many types of scientific information and runs experiments to discover new materials

UAlbany Atmospheric scientists awarded $855K NOAA grant for water isotope research

MD Anderson experts highlight top trends ahead of 2025 ASTRO meeting

How could AI help (and hurt) forestry?

Tiniest lung tumors that are hardest to reach can be diagnosed with robot-assisted bronchoscope

Babies who grow up around dogs may have a lower risk of developing childhood asthma

New book examines language loss among multilingual speakers

Q&A: Insect pollinators need more higher-quality habitats to help farmers, new research says

Restored mangrove forests could act as important carbon stores, per study examining Vietnamese mangrove carbon since 1900, but they might not have “normal” ecological function

Bridge recombinases, optimized for human cells, enable massive programmable DNA rearrangements

“What if” scenario reveals the impact of a drastically smaller NIH

Revealed: How fungus-farming termites protect gardens from invaders

Digital reconstruction reveals Yunxian 2 crania as early member of Homo longi

Different color-changing strategies better protect prey, depending on conditions

Leaving a mark: New research shows how longevity is inherited across generations

“Why can’t we all just get along?” Study reveals how mice and AI learn to cooperate

How research support has helped create life-changing medicines

[Press-News.org] The fattening forest: trees of the Amazon are getting bigger 
Embargoed research paper available on request