Reducing deforestation in the tropics would significantly cut the amount of carbon dioxide emitted into the atmosphere by as much as one-fifth, research shows.
In the first study of its kind, scientists have calculated the amount
of carbon absorbed by the world’s tropical forests and the amounts of
greenhouse gas emissions created by loss of trees, as a result of human
activity.
Scientists analyzed data from previous studies, including satellite
studies, to determine the amount of carbon absorbed and emitted by the world’s
tropical forests in South and Central America, equatorial Africa, and Asia.
“Forest census data from an Amazon-wide network of forest plots,
maintained by the Universities of Leeds and Oxford, played a critical part in
the analysis,” says Professor Emanuel Gloor, a coauthor of the study from the
School of Geography at the University of Leeds. The research appears
in Global Change Biology.
CARBON STORAGE
The researchers found that tropical forests absorb almost two billion
tons of carbon each year, equivalent to one-fifth of the world’s carbon
emissions, by storing it in their bark, leaves, and soil.
However, an equivalent amount is lost through logging, clearing of
land for grazing, and growing biofuel crops such as palm oil, soy beans, and
sugar. Peat fires in forests add significantly to the greenhouse gas emissions.
Researchers say emissions from tropical forests will increase as the
climate warms, as rising temperatures accelerate the decay of dead plants and
trees, giving off more carbon dioxide.
Global temperatures are forecast to rise by two degrees by the year
2099, which is predicted to increase annual carbon emissions from the forest by
three-quarters of a billion tons.
“If we limit human activity in the tropical forests of the world, this
could play a valuable role in helping to curb the rise in carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere. Preventing further losses of carbon from our tropical forests must
remain a high priority,” says Professor John Grace of the University of
Edinburgh’s School of GeoSciences, who led the study.
The Natural Environment Research Council supported the study.
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