Posted on 11/14/2006 5:34:27 PM PST by blam
World's Forests Rebounding, Study Suggests
James Owen
for National Geographic News
November 13, 2006
Forests are branching out across the planet anew, raising hopes that an end to deforestation may be in sight, a new study claims.
The study suggests that deforestation is not as drastic as it once was and that forests are recovering in many countries.
The researchers say that over the past 15 years the amount of woodland has increased in 22 of the world's 50 most forested nations.
China and the U.S. have achieved the greatest overall forest expansion, the team says, while tree cover has spread fastest in China, Vietnam, and Spain.
Asia as a whole is shown to have gained 2.5 million acres (1 million hectares) of forest between 2000 and 2005.
"Earth has suffered an epidemic of deforestation," said co-researcher Jesse Ausubel, from Rockefeller University in New York City.
"Now humans may help spread an epidemic of forest restoration."
Ausubel said the trend identified in the study could "stop the styling of a skinhead Earth" and lead to a 10 percent increase in global forest coveran area the size of Indiaby 2050.
The team reports its findings this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Forest Density
This encouraging picture of global forest growth comes from an international research team that studied data from a 2005 forest-resources assessment by the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
The team advocates "a more sophisticated approach" to measuring forest cover. This approach takes into account tree density as well as overall tree cover to reveal a country's total forest resources, the team says.
In Japan, for instance, tree cover is shown to be virtually unchanged since World War II, but tree density has risen, producing an average annual 1.6 percent increase in forest biomass.
Lead author Pekka Kauppi of the University of Helsinki, Finland, admits that the study does not distinguish between planted, homogenous tree stands and biologically richer old-growth forests.
However, he says, much of the recorded increase involves both natural regeneration and the effects of reforestation programs, particularly in developing nations.
The study notes, for example, that tropical forest in El Salvador expanded more than 20 percent between 1992 and 2001.
Reforestation efforts in China have contributed to a 116-million-acre (47-million-hectare) increase in forest area since the 1970s, the study adds.
Increased human migration from rural to urban areas and higher agricultural yields may also have aided regeneration, the authors say.
Similar factors may have helped in India, where forest cover was found to have increased since 1990.
The team says forest trends in these and other developing countries may be mirroring those seen in the past in industrialized Western nations.
In the U.S., for instance, forests in Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Illinois have expanded by half since the 19th century.
(See a photo gallery of forests around the United States.)
The authors say factors behind reforestation in North America and Europe range from increased conservation and farming productivity to a decline in newsprint demand following the rise of electronic media.
Whether the transition from deforestation to forest expansion becomes a truly global phenomenon will depend largely on Brazil and Indonesia, where huge areas of tropical forest are still being cleared, Kauppi says.
Indonesia has recorded a 6 percent annual loss in forest biomass between 1990 and 2005.
"But if China and India can do it, why not Brazil and Indonesia?" Kauppi said.
(Read related story: "Indigenous Lands Help Protect Amazon Forests, Study Finds" [February 28, 2006].)
Carbon Sink
Kauppi also points out that forests act as important carbon sinks, tying up carbon that would otherwise appear in the atmosphere as carbon dioxide, a major greenhouse gas.
He says global forest growth between 1990 and 2000 provided some 0.3 to 0.5 billion tons of extra carbon storage.
"For comparison, that's more than the carbon emissions of Germany," he said.
But conservation groups say the study's findings are overly optimistic.
Mark Aldrich of WWF International's Forests for Life Program says increased wood production from tree plantations may reduce pressures on natural forests.
But he adds that the authors' suggestion that the "end of deforestation is in view" is not supported by other evidence.
Aldrich says the same FAO report on which the new study is based found that 32 million acres (13 million hectares) of forest is lost annually.
"Whilst these losses are countered by an increase in forest growing stock in some countries, these forests do not have the same composition or provide the same variety of functions as natural forests," he said.
Aldrich adds that the European Environment Agency has reported that while the net area of forests in Europe is increasing, the level of biodiversity has shown a dramatic decline.
And where deforestation is fueled by agricultural expansion, such as in Brazil, Aldrich said, "there are few signs of this slowing given the huge and growing demand across the globe for products from palm oil and soy."
Another benefit of the Democratic takeover in congress. Wow, they work fast.
Interesting. Yesterday that guy said the world's oil reserves are three times what they thought. Today the forrests are back. Tomorrow global warmning will be debunked.
The stock market is rolling up, economy is great, unemployment way down.
The dems are gonna take credit for it all!!
No more news about the Homeless either.
This is not good. We need to figure out how we can turn this into another bad effect of Global Warming (or as we say in Texas, weather)
"Interesting. Yesterday that guy said the world's oil reserves are three times what they thought. Today the forrests are back. Tomorrow global warmning will be debunked.
The stock market is rolling up, economy is great, unemployment way down.
The dems are gonna take credit for it all!!"
To top it all off, they say we'll be out of Iraq in a few months.
Life is good.
also expect the paralyzed to get up out of their wheelchairs and walk now the democrats can cure them ...
happy daze are here again
Happy "daze" is right on target.
Soon, Christopther Reeves will walk again.
One of the advantages of increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Bring on the greenhose gasses.
LOL< Geez! I drilled right through all kinds of historic crap in boston working on the big dig. If anyone knew, we'd get shut down for a historic review. pottery, all kinds of conatiners, silverwear. It all got loaded out as fast as possible to never be seen again, except the cobblestones which my crew used for their driveways.
Greenhoses are my favorites. ;-)
So we can assume that this news will have absolutely no affect on the global warming craze.
We're just not European enough. Go figure.
Ouch! The DBM might want to put some ice on that.
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