
Jungle burned for agriculture in
southern Mexico.
Deforestation is the clearance of naturally
occurring forests by the processes of people's logging and/or
burning of trees in a forested area.
Deforestation occurs because of many reasons: trees or derived
charcoal are used as or sold for fuel or a
commodity to be used by humans, while cleared land is used by
humans as
pasture for livestock, plantations
of commodities, and settlements. People's removal of trees without
sufficient
reforestation has resulted
in damage to
habitat,
biodiversity loss and
aridity. It has adverse impacts on
biosequestration of atmospheric
carbon dioxide. Deforested regions typically
incur significant adverse
soil erosion
and frequently degrade into
wasteland.
Disregard or ignorance of intrinsic value, lack of ascribed value,
lax forest management and deficient environmental law are some of
the factors that allow deforestation to occur on a large scale. In
many countries, deforestation is an ongoing issue that is causing
extinction, changes to climatic
conditions,
desertification, and
displacement of
indigenous
people.
Among countries with a per capita
GDP of at least US$4,600, net
deforestation rates have ceased to increase.
Causes of anthropogenic deforestation
There are many root causes of contemporary deforestation, including
corruption of government
institutions, the
inequitable distribution of wealth
and power,
population growth and
overpopulation, and
urbanization.
Globalization is often viewed as another root
cause of deforestation, though there are cases in which the impacts
of globalization (new flows of labor, capital, commodities, and
ideas) have promoted localized forest recovery.
In 2000 the United Nations
Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) found that "the role of population dynamics
in a local setting may vary from decisive to negligible," and that
deforestation can result from "a combination of population pressure
and stagnating economic, social and technological
conditions."
According to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change (UNFCCC) secretariat, the overwhelming direct cause of
deforestation is agriculture. Subsistence farming is responsible
for 48% of deforestation; commercial agriculture is reposnsible for
32% of deforestation; logging is responsible for 14% of
deforestation and fuel wood removals make up 5% of
deforestation.
According to British environmentalist
Norman Myers, 5% of deforestation is due to
cattle ranching, 19% due to
over-heavy
logging, 22% due to the growing
sector of
palm oil plantations, and 54% due
to
slash-and-burn farming.
The degradation of forest ecosystems has also been traced to
economic incentives that make forest conversion appear more
profitable than forest conservation. Many important forest
functions have no markets, and hence, no economic value that is
readily apparent to the forests' owners or the communities that
rely on forests for their well-being. From the perspective of the
developing world, the benefits of forest as carbon sinks or
biodiversity reserves go primarily to richer developed nations and
there is insufficient compensation for these services. Developing
countries feel that some countries in the developed world, such as
the United States of America, cut down their forests centuries ago
and benefited greatly from this deforestation, and that it is
hypocritical to deny developing countries the same opportunities:
that the poor shouldn’t have to bear the cost of preservation when
the rich created the problem.
Experts do not agree on whether industrial logging is an important
contributor to global deforestation. Similarly, there is no
consensus on whether poverty is important in deforestation. Some
argue that poor people are more likely to clear forest because they
have no alternatives, others that the poor lack the ability to pay
for the materials and labour needed to clear forest. Claims that
population growth drives deforestation have been disputed; one
study found that population increases due to high fertility rates
were a primary driver of tropical deforestation in only 8% of
cases.
Environmental problems
Atmospheric
Deforestation is ongoing and is shaping
climate and
geography.
Deforestation is a contributor to
global climate change, and is often
cited as one of the major causes of the enhanced
greenhouse effect. Tropical deforestation
is responsible for approximately 20% of world greenhouse gas
emissions. According to the
Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change deforestation, mainly in tropical
areas, could account for up to one-third of total
anthropogenic carbon
dioxide emissions. But recent calculations suggest that carbon
dioxide emissions from deforestation and forest degradation
(excluding
peatland emissions) contribute
about 12% of total anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions with a
range from 6 to 17%.G.R.van der
Werf,D.C.Morton,R.S.DeFries,J.G.J.Olivier,P.S.Kasibhatla,R.B.Jackson,G.J.Collatz
and J.T.Randerson,
CO2 emissions from forest
loss, Nature Geoscience, Volume 2 (November 2009) pp. 737-738
Trees and other plants remove
carbon (in the
form of
carbon dioxide) from the
atmosphere during the process of
photosynthesis and release oxygen
back into the atmosphere during normal respiration. Only when
actively growing can a tree or forest remove carbon over an annual
or longer timeframe. Both the decay and burning of wood releases
much of this stored carbon back to the atmosphere. In order for
forests to take up carbon, the wood must be harvested and turned
into long-lived products and trees must be re-planted.
Deforestation may cause carbon stores held in soil to be released.
Forests are stores of carbon and can be either sinks or sources
depending upon environmental circumstances. Mature forests
alternate between being net sinks and net sources of carbon dioxide
(see
carbon dioxide sink and
carbon cycle).
Reducing emissions from the tropical deforestation and forest
degradation (REDD) in developing countries has emerged as new
potential to complement ongoing climate policies. The idea consists
in providing financial compensations for the reduction of
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from deforestation and forest
degradation".
Rainforests are widely believed by laymen to contribute a
significant amount of world's oxygen, although it is now accepted
by scientists that rainforests contribute little net
oxygen to the
atmosphere and deforestation will have no
effect on atmospheric oxygen levels.Broeker, Wallace S. (2006).
"Breathing easy: Et tu, O
2." Columbia University
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/21stC/issue-2.1/broecker.htm. However,
the incineration and burning of forest plants in order to clear
land releases tonnes of CO
2, which contributes to global
warming.
Forests are also able to extract
carbon
dioxide and
pollutants from the air,
thus contributing to biosphere stability.
Hydrological
The water cycle is also affected by deforestation. Trees extract
groundwater through their roots and release it into the atmosphere.
When part of a forest is removed, the trees no longer evaporate
away this water, resulting in a much drier climate. Deforestation
reduces the content of water in the soil and groundwater as well as
atmospheric moisture. Deforestation reduces soil cohesion, so that
erosion, flooding and
landslides ensue. Forests enhance the recharge of
aquifers in some locales, however, forests
are a major source of aquifer depletion on most locales.
Shrinking forest cover lessens the landscape's capacity to
intercept, retain and
transpire
precipitation. Instead of trapping precipitation, which then
percolates to groundwater systems, deforested areas become sources
of surface water runoff, which moves much faster than subsurface
flows. That quicker transport of surface water can translate into
flash flooding and more localized floods
than would occur with the forest cover. Deforestation also
contributes to decreased
evapotranspiration, which lessens
atmospheric moisture which in some cases affects precipitation
levels down wind from the deforested area, as water is not recycled
to downwind forests, but is lost in runoff and returns directly to
the oceans. According to one preliminary study, in deforested north
and northwest China, the average annual precipitation decreased by
one third between the 1950s and the 1980s.
Trees, and plants in general, affect the
water cycle significantly:
As a result, the presence or absence of trees can change the
quantity of water on the surface, in the soil or groundwater, or in
the atmosphere. This in turn changes erosion rates and the
availability of water for either ecosystem functions or human
services.
The forest may have little impact on flooding in the case of large
rainfall events, which overwhelm the storage capacity of forest
soil if the soils are at or close to saturation.
Tropical rainforests produce about 30% of our planet's fresh
water.
Soil
Undisturbed forest has very low rates of
soil
loss, approximately 2 metric
tons per square
kilometre (6 short tons per square mile). Deforestation generally
increases rates of soil
erosion, by
increasing the amount of
runoff and
reducing the protection of the soil from tree litter. This can be
an advantage in excessively leached tropical rain forest soils.
Forestry operations themselves also increase erosion through the
development of roads and the use of mechanized equipment.
China's
Loess
Plateau
was cleared of forest millennia ago. Since
then it has been eroding, creating dramatic incised valleys, and
providing the sediment that gives the Yellow River its yellow color
and that causes the flooding of the river in the lower reaches
(hence the river's nickname 'China's sorrow').
Removal of trees does not always increase erosion rates. In certain
regions of southwest US, shrubs and trees have been encroaching on
grassland. The trees themselves enhance the loss of grass between
tree canopies. The bare intercanopy areas become highly erodible.
The US Forest Service, in Bandelier National Monument for example,
is studying how to restore the former ecosystem, and reduce
erosion, by removing the trees.
Tree roots bind soil together, and if the soil is sufficiently
shallow they act to keep the soil in place by also binding with
underlying
bedrock. Tree removal on steep
slopes with shallow soil thus increases the risk of
landslides, which can threaten people living
nearby. However most deforestation only affects the trunks of
trees, allowing for the roots to stay rooted, negating the
landslide.
Ecological
Deforestation results in declines in biodiversity. The removal or
destruction of areas of forest cover has resulted in a degraded
environment with reduced
biodiversity.
Forests support biodiversity, providing habitat for
wildlife; moreover, forests foster
medicinal conservation. With forest
biotopes being irreplaceable source of new drugs (such as
taxol), deforestation can destroy
genetic variations (such as crop resistance)
irretrievably.
Since the tropical rainforests are the most diverse
ecosystems on Earth and about 80% of the world's
known
biodiversity could be found in
tropical rainforests, removal or destruction of significant areas
of forest cover has resulted in a
degraded environment with reduced
biodiversity.
Scientific understanding of the process of extinction is
insufficient to accurately make predictions about the impact of
deforestation on biodiversity. Most predictions of forestry related
biodiversity loss are based on species-area models, with an
underlying assumption that as forest are declines species diversity
will decline similarly. However, many such models have been proven
to be wrong and loss of habitat does not necessarily lead to large
scale loss of species. Species-area models are known to overpredict
the number of species known to be threatened in areas where actual
deforestation is ongoing, and greatly overpredict the number of
threatened species that are widespread.
It has been estimated that we are losing 137 plant, animal and
insect species every single day due to rainforest deforestation,
which equates to 50,000 species a year. Others state that tropical
rainforest deforestation is contributing to the ongoing
Holocene mass extinction. The known
extinction rates from deforestation rates are very low,
approximately 1 species per year from mammals and birds which
extrapolates to approximately 23,000 species per year for all
species. Predictions have been made that more than 40% of the
animal and
plant species in
Southeast Asia could be wiped out in the 21st
century. Such predictions were called into question by 1995 data
that show that within regions of Southeast Asia much of the
original forest has been converted to monospecific plantations, but
that potentially endangered species are few and tree flora remains
widespread and stable.
Economic impact
Damage to forests and other aspects of nature could half
living standards for the world's
poor and reduce global
GDP by
about 7% by 2050, a major report concluded at the
Convention on Biological
Diversity (CBD) meeting in Bonn. Historically utilization of
forest products, including timber and fuel wood, have played a key
role in human societies, comparable to the roles of water and
cultivable land. Today, developed countries continue to utilize
timber for building houses, and wood pulp for
paper. In developing countries almost three billion
people rely on wood for heating and cooking.
The forest products industry is a large part of the economy in both
developed and developing countries. Short-term economic gains made
by conversion of forest to agriculture, or over-exploitation of
wood products, typically leads to loss of long-term income and long
term biological productivity (hence reduction in
nature's services).
West Africa, Madagascar
, Southeast Asia and
many other regions have experienced lower revenue because of
declining timber harvests. Illegal logging causes billions
of dollars of losses to national economies annually.
The new procedures to get amounts of wood are causing more harm to
the economy and overpowers the amount of money spent by people
employed in logging. According to a study, "in most areas studied,
the various ventures that prompted deforestation rarely generated
more than US$5 for every ton of carbon they released and frequently
returned far less than US$1". The price on the European market for
an offset tied to a one-ton reduction in carbon is 23
euro (about US$35).
Historical causes
Prehistory
Small scale deforestation was practiced by some societies for tens
of thousands of years before the beginnings of civilization. The
first evidence of deforestation appears in the
Mesolithic period. It was probably used to
convert closed forests into more open ecosystems favourable to game
animals. With the advent of agriculture, larger areas began to be
deforested, and fire became the prime tool to clear land for crops.
In Europe there is little solid evidence before 7000 BC. Mesolithic
foragers used fire to create
openings for
red deer and
wild boar. In Great Britain, shade-tolerant
species such as
oak and
ash are replaced in the
pollen record by
hazels,
brambles, grasses and nettles. Removal of the forests led to
decreased
transpiration, resulting in
the formation of upland
peat bogs.
Widespread decrease in
elm pollen across Europe between 8400-8300 BC and
7200-7000 BC, starting in southern Europe and gradually moving
north to Great Britain, may represent land clearing by fire at the
onset of
Neolithic agriculture.

An array of Neolithic artifacts,
including bracelets, axe heads, chisels, and polishing tools.
The
Neolithic period saw extensive
deforestation for
farming land. Stone
axes were being made from about 3000 BC not just from flint, but
from a wide variety of hard rocks from across Britain and North
America as well.
They include the noted Langdale axe
industry
in the English Lake District
, quarries developed at Penmaenmawr
in North
Wales
and numerous other locations. Rough-outs
were made locally near the quarries, and some were polished locally
to give a fine finish. This step not only increased the
mechanical strength of the axe, but also
made penetration of wood easier.
Flint was still used
from sources such as Grimes Graves
but from many other mines across
Europe.
Evidence
of deforestation has been found in Minoan Crete
; for example
the environs of the Palace of Knossos
were severely deforested in the Bronze Age.
Pre-industrial history
Throughout most of history, humans were hunter gatherers who hunted
within forests. In most areas, such as the
Amazon, the tropics, Central America, and
the Caribbean, only after shortages of wood and other forest
products occur are policies implemented to ensure forest resources
are used in a sustainable manner.
In
ancient Greece, Tjeered van Andel
and co-writers summarized three regional studies of historic
erosion and alluviation and found that, wherever adequate evidence
exists, a major phase of erosion follows, by about 500-1,000 years
the introduction of farming in the various regions of Greece,
ranging from the later Neolithic to the Early Bronze Age. The
thousand years following the mid-first millennium BCE saw serious,
intermittent pulses of soil erosion in numerous places.
The
historic silting of ports along the southern
coasts of Asia
Minor
(e.g. Clarus, and the examples of Ephesus
, Priene
and Miletus
, where
harbors had to be abandoned because of the silt deposited by the
Meander) and in coastal Syria
during the
last centuries BC.
Easter Island
has suffered from heavy soil erosion in recent centuries, aggravated by
agriculture and deforestation. Jared Diamond gives an extensive look into the
collapse of the ancient Easter Islanders in his book
Collapse. The disappearance of the
island's trees seems to coincide with a decline of its civilization
around the 17th and 18th century. He attributed the collapse to
deforestation and over-exploitation of all resources.
The famous
silting up of the harbor for Bruges
, which moved
port commerce to Antwerp
, also
followed a period of increased settlement growth (and apparently of
deforestation) in the upper river basins. In early medieval
Riez
in upper Provence, alluvial
silt from two small rivers raised the riverbeds and widened the
floodplain, which slowly buried the Roman settlement in alluvium
and gradually moved new construction to higher ground; concurrently
the headwater valleys above Riez were being opened to
pasturage.
A typical
progress trap was that
cities were often built in a forested area, which would provide
wood for some industry (e.g. construction, shipbuilding, pottery).
When
deforestation occurs without proper replanting, however; local wood
supplies become difficult to obtain near enough to remain
competitive, leading to the city's abandonment, as happened
repeatedly in Ancient Asia
Minor
. Because of fuel needs, mining and
metallurgy often led to deforestation and city abandonment.
With most of the population remaining active in (or indirectly
dependent on) the agricultural sector, the main pressure in most
areas remained land clearing for crop and cattle farming. Enough
wild green was usually left standing (and partially used, e.g. to
collect firewood, timber and fruits, or to graze pigs) for wildlife
to remain viable. The elite's (nobility and higher
clergy)protection of their own hunting privileges and game often
protected significant woodlands.
Major parts in the spread (and thus more durable growth) of the
population were played by monastical 'pioneering' (especially by
the
Benedictine and
Commercial orders) and some
feudal lords' recruiting farmers to settle (and
become tax payers) by offering relatively good legal and fiscal
conditions. Even when speculators sought to encourage towns,
settlers needed an agricultural belt around or sometimes within
defensive walls. When populations were quickly decreased by causes
such as the
Black Death or devastating
warfare (e.g.
Genghis Khan's
Mongol hordes in eastern and central Europe,
Thirty Years' War in Germany), this could
lead to settlements being abandoned. The land was reclaimed by
nature, but the
secondary forests
usually lacked the original
biodiversity.
From 1100 to 1500 AD, significant deforestation took place in
Western Europe as a result of the
expanding human population. The
large-scale building of wooden sailing ships by European (coastal)
naval owners since the 15th century for exploration,
colonisation,
slave
trade – and other trade on the high seas consumed many forest
resources.
Piracy also contributed to the
over harvesting of forests, as in Spain. This led to a weakening of
the domestic economy after Columbus' discovery of America, as the
economy became dependent on colonial activities (plundering,
mining, cattle, plantations, trade, etc.){{Fact
In
Changes in the Land (1983), William Cronon analyzed and documented
17th-century English colonists' reports of increased seasonal
flooding in New
England
during the period when new settlers initially
cleared the forests for agriculture. They believed flooding
was linked to widespread forest clearing upstream.
The massive use of
charcoal on an
industrial scale in
Early Modern
Europe was a new type of consumption of western forests; even
in Stuart England, the relatively primitive production of charcoal
has already reached an impressive level.
Stuart England was so
widely deforested that it depended on the Baltic trade for ship timbers, and looked to
the untapped forests of New England
to supply the need. Each of Nelson's
Royal Navy war ships at Trafalgar (1805)
required 6,000 mature oaks for its construction. In France,
Colbert planted
oak forests to supply the French navy in the future.
When the oak plantations matured in the mid-nineteenth century, the
masts were no longer required because shipping had changed.
Norman F. Cantor's summary of the effects of late
medieval deforestation applies equally well to Early Modern
Europe:
Industrial era
In the 19th century, introduction of
steamboats in the United States was the cause of
deforestation of banks of major rivers, such as the
Mississippi River, with increased and more
severe flooding one of the environmental results. The steamboat
crews cut wood every day from the riverbanks to fuel the steam
engines.
Between St. Louis
and the confluence with the Ohio River to the south, the Mississippi became
more wide and shallow, and changed its channel laterally.
Attempts to improve navigation by the use of snagpullers often
resulted in crews' clearing large trees 100 to 200 feet back from
the banks.
Several French colonial towns of the
Illinois Country, such as Kaskaskia
, Cahokia
and St. Philippe, Illinois
were flooded and abandoned in the late 19th
century, with a loss to the cultural record of their archeology.
Specific parallels are seen in the twentieth-century deforestation
occurring in many developing nations.
Rates of deforestation
Global deforestation sharply accelerated around 1852. It has been
estimated that about half of the earth's mature
tropical forests — between 7.5 million and 8
million km
2 (2.9 million to 3 million sq mi) of the
original 15 million to 16 million km
2 (5.8 million to
6.2 million sq mi) that until 1947 covered the planet — have now
been cleared. Some scientists have predicted that unless
significant measures (such as seeking out and protecting old growth
forests that have not been disturbed) are taken on a worldwide
basis, by 2030 there will only be ten percent remaining, with
another ten percent in a degraded condition. 80% will have been
lost, and with them hundreds of thousands of irreplaceable
species.
The difficulties of estimating deforestation rates are nowhere more
apparent than in the widely varying estimates of rates of
rainforest deforestation. Some environmental groups argue that one
fifth of the world's tropical rainforest was destroyed between 1960
and 1990, that rainforests 50 years ago covered 14% of the world's
land surface and have been reduced to 6%, and that all tropical
forests will be gone by the year 2090. Meanwhile, Alan Grainger of
Leeds University argues that there is no credible evidence of any
long-term decline in rainforest area.
Bjørn Lomborg, author of the
controversial book
The Skeptical
Environmentalist, claims that global forest cover has
remained approximately stable since the middle of the twentieth
century. Along similar lines, some have claimed that for every acre
of rain forest cut down each year, more than 50 acres of new
forest are growing in the tropics.
These divergent viewpoints are the result of the uncertainties in
the extent of tropical deforestation. For tropical countries,
deforestation estimates are very uncertain and could be in error by
as much as +/- 50%, while a 2002 analysis of satellite imagery
suggested that the rate of deforestation in the humid tropics
(approximately 5.8 million hectares per year) was roughly 23% lower
than the most commonly quoted rates. Conversely, a new analysis of
satellite images reveals that deforestation of the
Amazon rainforest is twice as fast as
scientists previously estimated.
Some have argued that deforestation trends may follow a
Kuznets curve,
which if true would nonetheless fail to eliminate the risk of
irreversible loss of non-economic forest values (e.g., the
extinction of species).
A 2005 report by the United Nations
Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) estimates that although the earth's total
forest area continues to decrease at about 13 million hectares per
year, the global rate of deforestation has recently been slowing.
Still others claim that rainforests are being destroyed at an
ever-quickening pace. The London-based
Rainforest Foundation notes that "the
UN figure is based on a definition of forest as being an area with
as little as 10% actual tree cover, which would therefore include
areas that are actually savannah-like ecosystems and badly damaged
forests." Other critics of the FAO data point out that they do not
distinguish between forest types, and that they are based largely
on reporting from forestry departments of individual countries,
which do not take into account unofficial activities like illegal
logging.
Despite these uncertainties, there is agreement that destruction of
rainforests remains a significant environmental problem. Up to 90%
of
West Africa's coastal rainforests
have disappeared since 1900.In
South
Asia, about 88% of the rainforests have been lost. Much of what
remains of the world's rainforests is in the
Amazon basin, where the
Amazon Rainforest covers approximately 4
million square kilometres. The regions with the highest tropical
deforestation rate between 2000 and 2005 were
Central America — which lost 1.3% of its
forests each year — and tropical Asia. In
Central America, two-thirds of lowland
tropical forests have been turned into pasture since 1950 and 40%
of all the rainforests have been lost in the last 40 years.
Brazil
has lost
90-95% of its Mata Atlântica
forest. Madagascar
has lost 90% of its eastern rainforests.
As of
2007, less than 1% of Haiti
's forests
remained. Mexico
, India, the
Philippines
, Indonesia
, Thailand
, Myanmar
, Malaysia
, Bangladesh
, China, Sri
Lanka
, Laos
, Nigeria
, the Democratic Republic of the
Congo
, Liberia
, Guinea
, Ghana
and the
Côte
d'Ivoire
, have lost large areas of their rainforest.
Several
countries, notably Brazil
, have
declared their deforestation a national emergency.
Deforestation by region
Rates of deforestation vary around the world with South-east Asia
and parts of South America being of the highest concern to
environmentalists.
Controlling deforestation
Kyoto Protocol
A key factor in controlling deforestation could come from the Kyoto
Protocol.
Reducing
Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD)
mechanisms, which provide financial incentives for avoided
deforestation, could be implemented in a future Kyoto Protocol. At
the moment, REDD is not implemented in any of the
flexible mechanisms defined under the
Kyoto Protocol (
Clean
Development Mechanism,
Joint
Implementation and
Emissions
Trading).
Farming
New methods are being developed to farm more intensively, such as
high-yield
hybrid crops,
greenhouse,
autonomous building gardens, and
hydroponics. These methods are often
dependent on chemical inputs to maintain necessary yields. In
cyclic
agriculture, cattle are grazed on
farm land that is resting and rejuvenating. Cyclic agriculture
actually increases the fertility of the soil. Intensive farming can
also decrease soil nutrients by consuming at an accelerated rate
the trace minerals needed for crop growth.
Forest management
Efforts to stop or slow deforestation have been attempted for many
centuries because it has long been known that deforestation can
cause environmental damage sufficient in some cases to cause
societies to collapse.
In Tonga
, paramount
rulers developed policies designed to prevent conflicts between
short-term gains from converting forest to farmland and long-term
problems forest loss would cause, while during the seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries in Tokugawa,
Japan, the shoguns developed a highly sophisticated system of
long-term planning to stop and even reverse deforestation of the
preceding centuries through substituting timber by other products
and more efficient use of land that had been farmed for many
centuries. In sixteenth century Germany landowners also
developed
silviculture to deal with the
problem of deforestation. However, these policies tend to be
limited to environments with
good rainfall,
no dry
season and
very young soils
(through
volcanism or
glaciation). This is because on older and less
fertile soils trees grow too slowly for silviculture to be
economic, whilst in areas with a strong dry season there is always
a risk of forest fires destroying a tree crop before it
matures.
In the areas where "
slash-and-burn"
is practiced, switching to "
slash-and-char" would prevent the rapid
deforestation and subsequent degradation of soils. The
biochar thus created, given back to the soil, is not
only a durable carbon sequestration method, but it also is an
extremely beneficial
amendment to the
soil. Mixed with
biomass it brings the
creation of
terra preta, one of the
richest soils on the planet and the only one known to regenerate
itself.
Certification of sustainable forest management practices
Certification, as provided by global certification systems such as
PEFC and
FSC, contributes to
tackling deforestation by creating market demand for timber from
sustainably managed forests. According to the United Nations Food
and Agriculture Organization (FAO), "A major condition for the
adoption of sustainable forest management is a demand for products
that are produced sustainably and consumer willingness to pay for
the higher costs entailed. Certification represents a shift from
regulatory approaches to market incentives to promote sustainable
forest management. By promoting the positive attributes of forest
products from sustainably managed forests, certification focuses on
the demand side of environmental conservation."
Reforestation
In many parts of the world, especially in East Asian countries,
reforestation and
afforestation are
increasing the area of forested lands. The amount of woodland has
increased in 22 of the world's 50 most forested nations. Asia as a
whole gained 1 million
hectares of forest
between 2000 and 2005. Tropical forest in El Salvador expanded more
than 20% between 1992 and 2001. Based on these trends, one study
projects that global forest will increase by 10%—an area the size
of India—by 2050.
In the
People's
Republic of China
, where large scale destruction of forests has
occurred, the government has in the past required that every
able-bodied citizen between the ages of 11 and 60 plant three to
five trees per year or do the equivalent amount of work in other
forest services. The government claims that at least 1
billion trees have been planted in China
every year since 1982. This is no longer required today, but March
12 of every year in China is the
Planting Holiday. Also, it has introduced
the
Green Wall of China project,
which aims to halt the expansion of the Gobi desert through the
planting of trees. However, due to the large percentage of trees
dying off after planting (up to 75%), the project is not very
successful. There has been a 47-million-hectare increase in forest
area in China since the 1970s. The total number of trees amounted
to be about 35 billion and 4.55% of China's land mass increased in
forest coverage. The forest coverage was 12% two decades ago and
now is 16.55%.
An ambitious proposal for China is the
Aerially
Delivered Re-forestation and Erosion Control System and the
Proposed sahara forest
project coupled with the
Seawater Greenhouse.
In Western countries, increasing consumer demand for wood products
that have been produced and harvested in a sustainable manner is
causing forest landowners and forest industries to become
increasingly accountable for their forest management and timber
harvesting practices.
The
Arbor Day Foundation's Rain
Forest Rescue program is a charity that helps to prevent
deforestation. The charity uses donated money to buy up and
preserve rainforest land before the
lumber
companies can buy it. The Arbor Day Foundation then protects the
land from deforestation. This also locks in the way of life of the
primitive tribes living on the forest land. Organizations such as
Community Forestry
International,
Cool Earth,
The Nature Conservancy,
World Wide Fund for Nature,
Conservation
International,
African Conservation
Foundation and
Greenpeace also focus
on preserving forest habitats. Greenpeace in particular has also
mapped out the forests that are still intact
[900] and published this information on the
internet.
HowStuffWorks in turn has
made a simpler thematic map showing the amount of forests present
just before the age of man (8000 years ago) and the current
(reduced) levels of forest. These maps mark the amount of
afforestation required to repair the damage caused by man.
Forest plantations
To meet the world's demand for wood, it has been suggested by
forestry writers Botkins and
Sedjo that
high-yielding forest
plantations are
suitable. It has been calculated that plantations yielding 10 cubic
meters per hectare annually could supply all the timber required
for international trade on 5% of the world's existing forestland.
By contrast, natural forests produce about 1-2 cubic meters per
hectare; therefore, 5 to 10 times more forestland would be required
to meet demand. Forester Chad Oliver has suggested a forest mosaic
with high-yield forest lands interpersed with conservation
land.
One analysis of FAO data suggests that afforestation and
reforestation projects "could reverse the global decline in
woodlands within 30 years."
Reforestation through tree planting could take advantage of
changing precipitation patterns due to climate change. This would
be done by studying where precipitation is projected to increase
(see
the
"2050 Precipitation" thematic map created by Globalis) and
setting up reforestation projects in these locations. Areas such as
Niger, Sierra Leone and Liberia are especially important candidates
because they also suffer from an expanding desert (the Sahara) and
decreasing biodiversity (while being important
biodiversity hotspots).
Military context
the preponderance of deforestation is due to demands for
agricultural and urban use for the human population, there are some
examples of military causes. One example of deliberate
deforestation is that which took place in the U.S.
zone of occupation in
Germany after World War II. Before the onset of the
Cold War defeated Germany was still considered a
potential future threat rather than potential future ally. To
address this threat, attempts were made to
lower German industrial
potential, of which forests were deemed an element. Sources in
the U.S. government admitted that the purpose of this was the
"ultimate destruction of the war potential of German forests." As a
consequence of the practice of clear-felling, deforestation
resulted which could "be replaced only by long forestry development
over perhaps a century."
War can also be a cause of deforestation, either
deliberately such as through the use of
Agent Orange during the
Vietnam War where, together with bombs and
bulldozers, it contributed to the destruction of 44% of the forest
cover, or inadvertently such as in the 1945
Battle of Okinawa where bombardment and
other combat operations reduced the lush tropical landscape into "a
vast field of mud, lead, decay and maggots".
See also
References
- Notes
- General references
- BBC 2005 TV series on the history of geological factors shaping
human history (name?)
- A Natural History of Europe - 2005 co-production
including BBC and ZDF
- Whitney, Gordon G. (1996). From Coastal Wilderness to
Fruited Plain : A History of Environmental Change in Temperate
North America from 1500 to the Present. Cambridge University Press. ISBN
0-521-57658-X
- Williams, Michael. (2003). Deforesting the Earth.
University of Chicago Press, Chicago. ISBN 0-226-89926-8
- Wunder, Sven. (2000). The Economics of Deforestation: The
Example of Ecuador. Macmillan
Press, London. ISBN 0-333-73146-8
- FAO&CIFOR report: Forests and Floods: Drowning in Fiction or Thriving on
Facts?
- Ethiopia deforestation references
- Parry, J. (2003). Tree choppers become tree planters.
Appropriate Technology, 30(4), 38-39. Retrieved November 22, 2006,
from ABI/INFORM Global database. (Document ID: 538367341).
- Hillstrom, K & Hillstrom, C. (2003). Africa and the Middle
east. A continental Overview of Environmental Issues. Santabarbara,
CA: ABC CLIO.
- Williams, M. (2006). Deforesting the earth: From prehistory to
global crisis: An Abridgment. Chicago: The university of Chicago
Press.
- Mccann. J.C. (1990). A Great Agrarian cycle? Productivity in
Highland Ethiopia, 1900 To 1987. Journal of Interdisciplinary
History, xx: 3,389-416. Retrieved November 18, 2006, from JSTOR
database.
External links
- In the media
- Films online