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What's So Bad About Deforestation?
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INTERNATIONAL: June 5, 2007


Worldwide about 13 million hectares or 32 million acres of forest -- an area the size of Greece or Nicaragua -- is cleared every year, the United Nations estimates.


Here are some explanations of the environmental impacts associated with deforestation:


CLIMATE CHANGE:

-- Trees store carbon by absorbing carbon dioxide via photosynthesis and holding it in woody branches and roots.

-- When trees are burned, or cut and left to decay, their stored carbon is released into the atmosphere.

-- Tropical deforestation contributes 20 percent of global carbon emissions. Slowing the rate of forest destruction is one of the cheapest ways to fight climate change, experts say.


LANDSLIDES AND FLOODING:

-- Clear-cutting old growth timber increases the likelihood of landslides by speeding erosion; as large trees' root structures bind soil to underlying bedrock.

-- Forests foliage canopy dissipates rainfall over large areas and vegetation soaks up rainfall, so the risk of floods is raised when dense forests are cleared.


SOIL NUTRIENT DEPLETION AND DESERTIFICATION:

-- Deforestation-exacerbated wind and water erosion of soil depletes it of vital mineral nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus, making soil less fertile and less able to sustain agricultural production, and speeds desertification.


OXYGEN PRODUCTION:

-- Sucking in carbon dioxide and sending out oxygen through photosynthesis, the world's largest tropical rainforest in Brazil's Amazon contributes an estimated 20 percent of global oxygen production.

-- As different plants put out differing amounts of oxygen, some scientists say it is misleading to call forests "the lungs of the Earth", as some are oxygen neutral, and sea plants like plankton and algae are more significant oxygen producers.


BIODIVERSITY/HABITAT

-- Around two thirds of the world's estimated five to 30 million animal and plant species live in forests.

-- An estimated 60 million people inhabit forests and depend on them for their livelihoods, according to Global Forest Watch.

-- Species threatened by forest loss include the great apes (orangutan, gorillas, chimpanzees and bonobos,) tiger, Asian rhino, and elephant, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) says.


DOES REPLANTING HELP?:

-- Rehabilitated and/or secondary forests can never fully replace original rainforest's multi-storied mix of trees and millions of organisms, some of which are only now being discovered.

Sources: Global Forest Watch (www.globalforestwatch.org/english/about/faqs.htm), The United Nations Environment Programme (www.unep.org/billiontreecampaign/FactsFigures/QandA/index.asp) The Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), (www.cifor.cgiar.org), World Wide Fund for Nature, Species Habitat Loss (www.panda.org/about_wwf/what_we_do/species/problems/habitat_los s_degradation/index.cfm)


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE


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top

 
5 JUN 2007
ENVIRONMENT
NEWS

AUSTRALIA:
Global Warming Overheats Australian Politics

BELGIUM:
Threatened Eels Live to Swim Again in EU's Rivers

BRAZIL:
Ethanol Boom Won't Threaten Food Supply - Analysts

CANADA:
Airlines Seen Having to Buff Up Green Reputation

CHINA:
Key Facts on China and Climate Change

CHINA:
China Makes Slim Progress on Energy Savings - Adviser

CHINA:
China Says 180,000 Evacuated After Earthquake

CHINA:
China Could Lose Western Glaciers by 2100

CHINA:
China Says 2004 Carbon Emissions Hit 6 Bln Tonnes

CHINA:
Experts React to China's Climate Change Plan

CHINA:
China Says EU Two Degree Warming Goal Lacks Basis

CHINA:
China Says US Climate Plan Positive But Not Answer

CYPRUS:
Cyprus Wants to be Declared GMO Free - Minister

FINLAND:
Global Warming Brings Vampire Moths to Finland

GERMANY:
Canada Dilutes Climate Change Tone, Backs Merkel

GERMANY:
Germany in Climate Change Dilemma Ahead of G8

INDIA:
Cyclonic Storm Stalls India's Monsoon, Not Unusual

INDIA:
India Uses "Mooing" Ringtones to Catch Leopards

INDONESIA:
Indonesia's Forests Threatened by Logging, Palm Oil

INDONESIA:
Indonesia World's No.3 Greenhouse Gas Emitter - Report

INDONESIA:
Indonesian Boy Killed in Komodo Dragon Attack

INTERNATIONAL:
What's So Bad About Deforestation?

INTERNATIONAL:
What is the Kyoto Protocol?

NEPAL:
Vanishing Himalayan Glaciers Threaten a Billion

NETHERLANDS:
New UN Database to Help Combat Wildlife Crime

NEW ZEALAND:
Global Warming Threatens New Zealand "Dinosaurs"

NORWAY:
Norwegians Strain to Remove Pesky Arctic "Palm"

NORWAY:
Melting Ice, Snow to Hit Livelihoods Worldwide - UN

NORWAY:
UN Praises China on Climate, Says Rich Can Do More

PAKISTAN:
Pakistani Elephant Beats Keeper When Meals Late

US:
Purple Frog Among 24 New Species Found in Suriname

US:
Carbon Capture Makes US Coal Growth Uncertain



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