Deforestation: Deforestation Is The Clearance of Forests by
Deforestation: Deforestation Is The Clearance of Forests by
Deforestation: Deforestation Is The Clearance of Forests by
their pre-agricultural area. Indigenous forests now cover 21% of the earth's land surface.
Deforestation occurs for many reasons: trees or derived charcoal are used as, or sold, for fuel or
as lumber, while cleared land is used as pasture for livestock, plantations of commodities, and
settlements. The 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.
Trees are one of the most important aspects of the planet we live in.
Trees are vitally important to the environment, animals, and of course for us humans. They are
important for the climate of the Earth, they act as filters of carbon dioxide, they are habitats and
shelters to millions of species, and they are also important for their aesthetic appeal. However,
the trees on our planet are being depleted at a very fast rate. According to some estimates, more
than 50 percent of the tree cover has disappeared due to human activity. Although humans have
been practicing deforestation since ages, it was in the mid-1800s that forests began to be
destroyed at an unprecedented rate. As a matter of fact, throughout the earlier part of the
medieval age, Europeans used to live amongst vast areas of forested land. But later, they began
deforestation at such a high rate that they started to run out of wood for cooking and heating.
Also, due to the depletion of their natural habitat, wild game too began disappearing, which the
Europeans largely depended upon for their nutritional requirements. Today, parallels can clearly
be observed in the deforestation that is occurring in most developing countries.
Causes of deforestation
Used for Urban and Construction Purposes: The cutting down of trees for lumber that is used
for building materials, furniture, and paper products. Forests are also cleared in order to
accommodate expanding urban areas.
To Grow Crops: Forests are also cut down in order to clear land for growing crops.
To Create Grazing Land: Forests are cut down in order create land for grazing cattle.
Used for Fuel: Trees are cut down in developing countries to be used as firewood or turned into
charcoal, which are used for cooking and heating purposes.
Some of the other causes of deforestation are: clearing forests for oil and mining exploitation; to
make highways and roads; slash and burn farming techniques; wildfires; and acid rain.
When forests are killed, nature basically requires people to renew the
forest. Reforestation is one concept that is in the opposite direction as deforestation, but is
proven to be a much harder effort than deforestation.
Environment change
One major effect of deforestation is climate change. Changes to the surroundings done by
deforestation work in many ways. One, there is abrupt change in temperatures in the nearby
areas. Forests naturally cool down because they help retain moisture in the air.
Second is the long process of global climate change. As mentioned above, deforestation has been
found to contribute to global warming or that process when climates around the world become
warmer as more harmful rays of the sun comes in through the atmosphere.
The ozone layer is a mass of oxygen or O3 atoms that serves as shield in the atmosphere against
the harmful ultraviolet rays from the sun. Because ozone is made up of oxygen atoms, oxygen
reacts with carbon monoxide. Such reaction would use up oxygen atoms.
It follows that when there are more carbon monoxide atoms going to the atmosphere, the volume
of oxygen would decline. Such is the case of ozone depletion.
The third effect to the environment would be on the water table underneath the ground. Water
table is the common source of natural drinking water by people living around forests.
Water table is replenishing. That means, the supply of water underground could also dry up if not
replenished regularly. When there is rain, forests hold much of the rainfall to the soil through
their roots.
Thus, water sinks in deeper to the ground, and eventually replenishing the supply of water in the
water table. Now, imagine what happens when there is not enough forests anymore. Water from
rain would simply flow through the soil surface and not be retained by the soil.
Or other than that, the water from rain would not stay in the soil longer, for the process of
evaporation would immediately set in. Thus, the water table is not replenished, leading to drying
up of wells.
Effect to biodiversity
Forests are natural habitats to many types of animals and organisms. That is why, when there is
deforestation, many animals are left without shelters. Those that manage to go through the flat
lands and residential sites are then killed by people.
Through the years, it is estimated that there are millions of plant and extinct animal species that
have been wiped out because they have been deprived of home. Thus, biodiversity is
significantly lowered because of the savage deforestation practices of some people.
Wildlife advocates have been constantly reminding that several wild animals left in the world
could still be saved if deforested forests would only be reforested and the practice of slash and
burn of forests would be totally abandoned.
Deforestation is hardly hitting the living conditions of indigenous people who consider forests as
their primary habitats. Imagine how they are rendered homeless when forests are depleted. These
natives would be forced to live elsewhere, and are usually left to becoming mendicants in rural
and urban areas.