“…Deforestation has implied substantial environmental changes (Davidson et al., 2012) and forest disturbance (Bullock et al., 2020), such as water stress due to shallower roots (Huete et al., 2006) that causes an energy imbalance, loss of biodiversity, changes to carbon storage (Huete et al., 2006) and an overall decrease in BVOC emissions due to the loss of biomass (Scott et al., 2018). Biomass burning also profoundly affects the oxidation pathways of BVOCs and increases emissions of air pollutants (Bulbovas et al., 2014) by clearing land mainly for soy production (Bulbovas, de Souza, de Moraes, Luizão, & Artaxo, 2007), oil palm production (Jardine, Gimenez, et al, 2016) and cattle ranching (Figure 5). Soy crops are very sensitive to tropospheric ozone (Bulbovas et al., 2007), so higher ozone mixing ratios will feed back to more deforestation to counteract decreased soy productivity (Pimentel, 2011).…”