Scientists trace variation in methyl bromide levels to an increase in fires — which are linked to the climate pattern El Niño.
Flames charred the Brazilian rainforest in late 2014, during the onset of a climatic pattern called El Niño that is linked to high fire activity. Fires release the ozone-depleting gas methyl bromide. Credit: Ricardo Funari/Brazil Photos/LightRocket via Getty
The influence of the tropical Pacific Ocean extends all the way into the stratosphere: the ocean’s waters affect the weather and thus the behaviour of fires in far-flung locales; these, in turn, drive emissions of a powerful ozone-depleting gas
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