Forests have been subject to destruction by humans since ancient times to provide fuel, construction materials, and to make way for agriculture as populations and settlements grew. Major threats to forests include deforestation for agriculture, urban development, and resource extraction which damages forest ecosystems. Additional threats include diseases, pests, fires both natural and human-caused, floods, soil erosion, drought, greenhouse gas emissions, and species extinction as habitat is destroyed. The primary drivers of deforestation are cattle ranching and agriculture to increase exports, exacerbated by inequitable land policies, global warming, and illegal logging.
Forests have been subject to destruction by humans since ancient times to provide fuel, construction materials, and to make way for agriculture as populations and settlements grew. Major threats to forests include deforestation for agriculture, urban development, and resource extraction which damages forest ecosystems. Additional threats include diseases, pests, fires both natural and human-caused, floods, soil erosion, drought, greenhouse gas emissions, and species extinction as habitat is destroyed. The primary drivers of deforestation are cattle ranching and agriculture to increase exports, exacerbated by inequitable land policies, global warming, and illegal logging.
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Forest ecosystem of Snigha the Don the Vampire. This is awesome file. never seen.
Forests have been subject to destruction by humans since ancient times to provide fuel, construction materials, and to make way for agriculture as populations and settlements grew. Major threats to forests include deforestation for agriculture, urban development, and resource extraction which damages forest ecosystems. Additional threats include diseases, pests, fires both natural and human-caused, floods, soil erosion, drought, greenhouse gas emissions, and species extinction as habitat is destroyed. The primary drivers of deforestation are cattle ranching and agriculture to increase exports, exacerbated by inequitable land policies, global warming, and illegal logging.
Forests have been subject to destruction by humans since ancient times to provide fuel, construction materials, and to make way for agriculture as populations and settlements grew. Major threats to forests include deforestation for agriculture, urban development, and resource extraction which damages forest ecosystems. Additional threats include diseases, pests, fires both natural and human-caused, floods, soil erosion, drought, greenhouse gas emissions, and species extinction as habitat is destroyed. The primary drivers of deforestation are cattle ranching and agriculture to increase exports, exacerbated by inequitable land policies, global warming, and illegal logging.
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FOREST ECOSYSTEM
THREATS AND PROBLEMS
Forests have probably been subject to anthropogenic destruction, or deforestation, since the earliest days of Homo Sapiens and its predecessor species. The initial needs for fuelwood and construction materials continued to increase as populations expanded and as industrial construction, discovery of mineral resources in the forested areas, and eventually roadways and highways, and new and successively larger settlements increased the demands for forest products. Of all the anthropogenic impacts on ecosystems, perhaps few are as awesome and on grand scale as the major and systematic destruction of large sized ecosystems as, forestsboreal, temperate, and tropical- and grasslands. Boreal and temperate forest have been subject to acid precipitation/rain, largely a consequence of industrial activity ; tropical forests have been subject to clearing for agricultural and urban/suburban development; and grasslands have been subject to desertification, the shift of desert- like conditions resulting from human misuse of the land.
Forest fires The full benefits of forest resources can be obtained only if timber is protected from fires, diseases, and insect pests. Fire is a great threat to forests, but it is also a natural feature of all but the wettest forests. Natural fires are an important way for old trees and undergrowth to be cleared to make way for new growth. Modern forestry practice therefore attempts to control fires rather than eliminate them. However, the largest number of forest fires are caused by people or are of anthropogenic cause. They may start many fires by carelessly dropping lighted cigarettes, or by leaving behind glass bottles, which can act as a burning glass. Other forest fires are set deliberately. Forest fires could best be prevented by educating people to understand the value of forests and the importance of protecting them.
Diseases and pests Most trees diseases are caused by fungus infections. Diseases attack trees chiefly by clogging the flow of sap, killing the leaves, or rotting the roots or wood. Some of the most destructive diseases include beech bark disease, chestnut blight, Dutch elm disease, oak wilt, and stem blister rusts that affect pine trees.
Floods and soil erosion The roots of a tree make gaps in the soil so that when it rains the water can sink in before being absorbed by the soil. These spaces also allow air and water to reach the roots of the plants. When trees removed using heavy machinery, the soil is pushed down and the gaps fill in. Because all plants and trees need that water and air to reach roots, the conditions become unfriendly for new growth. Because the soil no longer can absorb the water, when it rains the water remains on the top of the soil and this can result in floods. The moving water also can completely wash away the top layer of the soil. This is called soil erosion. Without the top layer of soil, which is full nutrition, plants are not fed and find it hard to grow. What we lose: About 24 billion tons of agricultural topsoil (the top layer of soil) wash or blow away each year. Drought Forests help produce rainfall. The more trees, the more water gets absorbed into clouds and the more rain falls. If the forests disappear, there will be less rain resulting in dryer conditions that eventually lead to drought. Once this happens, the damage is extensive making it difficult to plant more trees or plants later because the soil is so hard and dry. Greenhouse gases and acid rain The earth's atmosphere contains a number of greenhouse gases. Greenhouse gases trap the heat from the sun inside the atmosphere. Some greenhouse gases are carbon dioxide (CO2), methane and water vapour. We need these gases in small amounts, but they can be harmful at high levels. Forests help remove large amounts of CO2 from the air. They absorb the gas during photosynthesis. However, more CO2 is produced than all the trees can absorb when fossil fuels are burned, for example and when forests are cut down, even less CO2 is being absorbed leaving it trapped in the atmosphere. As greenhouse gases build up, more of the suns heat gets trapped and that can lead to climate change (the disruption of the delicate balance of the earth's ecosystems). The added pollution in the atmosphere can also lead to acid rain when the gases mix with water in clouds. When this is deposited on forests it can damage the trees and the ecosystem as a whole. Species extinction Another harmful result of deforestation is the extinction of animal and plant species. They disappear because their environment and life cycles have been disturbed and they are unable to adapt to the changes. When species disappear, it is called extinction. Essential habitat is lost when forests are cut down; wildlife species lose their homes, their food sources and their place in the web of life. Even though extinction is part of life, it is happening far too quickly now. It is estimated that as many as 150-200 species around the world go extinct every day!
Causes and Motives for/behind Deforestation According to The World Rainforest Movement , Among the direct causes of deforestation, some of the main ones are: the substitution of forests by other activities (agriculture, cattle- raising, tree plantations, shrimp farming, etc.), logging, mining, oil exploitation, and construction of large hydroelectric dams (which result in the flooding of extensive areas of forest). Forests are cleared for agriculture. The deforestation rate in Amazon rainforest, the worlds largest jungle, jumped 40 percent in the 12 months to the middle of 2002. The Amazon is an area of continuous tropical forest just under half the size of the continental United States, and has been described as the lungs of the world because of its vast capacity to produce oxygen. It is also home to up to 30 percent of the planets animal and plant species. The primary driving force behind the destruction of the rainforests is livestock grazing. Beef exporting from Brazil has increased more than fivefold in the last six years. World Watch magazine, in the article, Eating Beef says that From now on, the question of whether we get our protein from animals or plants has direct implications for how much more of the worlds remaining forest we have to raze. Forests are destroyed by inequitable land policies. International finance institutions require countries to increase exports in order to keep up with their loan payments, and clear-cutting the forests for crops is often their only option. The agricultural land of peasants is taken over to increase exports, forcing them to migrate into the forests where they cut and burn the forest in order to survive. In many cases, governments promote migration to expand the agricultural frontier and allow for more farm exports. Global warming threatens forests worldwide. Deforestation contributes to global warming, but, in turn, global warming will increase the loss of forests. M any of the world's forests are in poor condition, fragmented, and depredated, and so they are less able to adapt or adjust to climate change. As the global climate warms up, patterns of rainfall will change; and 'normal' temperature patterns will be disrupted. The expected rate of global warming and sea-level rise will be too fast to allow most forests to be able to adapt quickly enough to survive.
The organization, American Forests, reports that the U.S. could offset 20 to 40 percent of its carbon dioxide emissions by increasing carbon storage by 300-600 million tons per year. This would require a comprehensive plan to plant trees, improved forest management practices, and alternatives to wood and biomass fuels Each year, forest fires, burn between 6 and 14 million hectares of forest. A major cause of the loss and degradation of forested land comes from fire. The area lost to fire is roughly equal to that caused by destructive logging and conversion to agriculture combined. Severe forest fires, such as those in Indonesia in 1997/1998 and in Australia in 2001/2002, bring enormous and in some cases life-threatening levels of pollutants. Governments rarely address the underlying causes of forest fires. Instead of prevention efforts, they just work to put the fires out. Working on prevention will become essential because global warming will increase the number of forest fires. Forests are harmed by the trade in illegal extracted timber. Legal supplies of wood fiber fall short of demand by up to 40 million cubic meters per year. Illegal logging fills the gap-- accounting for almost 70 percent of wood supply, meaning that illegal logging exceeds the volume of legal logging. All told, illegal logging alone has destroyed 10 million hectares of Indonesia's rich forests, an area the size of Virginia. It is important to use only wood certified by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC)--the only label recognized as providing "ecologically-sound" timber. Worldwide, FSC-accrediting bodies have certified about 24 million hectares of forests in 45 countries. When consumers demand certified wood, non-certified sellers will have difficulty competing, and illegal logging becomes more difficult. This certification stamp means the wood is from well-managed and environmentally sensitive logging operations. It also assures that the wood is not the result of monoculture plantations, clear-cutting, violations of indigenous land claims, or other environmental hazards. Due to these other considerations, relying on wood labeled "second- growth" is not enough. The FSC label is the only guarantee that the wood purchased is environmentally sound. Currently only a small portion of the U.S. lumber market, FSC wood is growing in popularity in other areas, especially in Europe. Building large hydroelectric dams destroys forests. Forests are lost when farmers, displaced by dams being built, are forced to move and clear forests in other areas in order to grow their crops. Dams also require road building, allowing access to previously remote areas by loggers and "developers," causing even more deforestation. Forests are cleared for fuel or export. Crucial to slowing the loss of the world's natural forests is finding alternative sources of energy for low-income countries so that wood is not burned for energy. Consequences of Deforestation Removing forests (and their natural functions) causes many serious problems. Loss of trees makes global warming worse. Through photosynthesis, trees remove carbon dioxide from the air, produce oxygen, and store carbon as wood. One ton of carbon in wood or forest biomass represents 3.67 tons of atmospheric carbon dioxide recycled. We are creating warming, not only by putting more CO2 into the air, but also by getting rid of trees that absorb and remove carbon from the air. I mpact on Ecosystems. Forests preserve water, soils, plants and wildlife. Their destruction aggravates droughts, soil erosion, and pollution of watercourses, and causes extensive flooding, and increased pest populations due to the ecological imbalance. Loss of Species. Tropical forests contain at least half the Earth's species, so their loss causes a dramatic loss of biodiversity. Clearing and destructive logging of forests is the single greatest cause of species extinction worldwide. Harm to Water. Forests are natural dams that catch rainwater in their canopies and in leaves and litter on the forest floor, retaining and purifying rainwater. Forest logging allows rapid run-off and destroys the ability of the soil to absorb water. Policies Needed to Halt Deforestation Despite the creation of new organizations to promote sustainable forestry, and continuing efforts of major international conservation organizations, the rate of forest loss accelerated through the 1990s. In "Requiem for Nature," John Terborgh, says Deforestation is driven by a wide range of social and economic forces, but underlying them all is the relentless march of human population growth and the exponentially rising demand for land and forest products such growth generates. These demands are not going to slacken in the decades ahead; indeed, they will only expand. Slowing down tropical deforestation, much less halting it will therefore entail bucking powerful and inexorably growing forces. It is in this stark light that the prospects for conserving tropical forests must be considered. If we do not soon change public policy regarding tropical forests, the primary forest will probably be gone sometime before 2045 Effect on global climate A natural rainforest emits and absorbs vast quantities of carbon dioxide. On a global scale, long- term fluxes are approximately in balance, so that an undisturbed rainforest would have a small net impact on atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, though they may have other climatic effects (on cloud formation, for example, by recycling water vapor). No rainforest today can be considered to be undisturbed. Human induced deforestation plays a significant role in causing rainforests to release carbon dioxide, as do other factors, whether human-induced or natural, which result in tree death, such as burning and drought. Some climate models operating with interactive vegetation predict a large loss of Amazonian rainforest around 2050 due to drought, forest dieback and the subsequent release more carbon dioxide. Five million years from now, the Amazon rainforest may long since have dried and transformed itself into savannah, killing itself in the progress (changes such as this may happen even if all human deforestation activity ceases overnight). The descendants of our known animals may adapt to the dry savannah of the former Amazonian rainforest and thrive in the new, warmer temperatures.