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Environmental Business Review | Saturday, June 17, 2023
Research shows that the world has had around half of the tropical forests cleared with deforestation, where no new trees have been planted.
Fremont, CA: Deforestation speaks about clearing the forest cover or trees to a larger degree without substitutions. The outcomes of this exercise generally cause the devastation of the quality of land, weather, and climate. The prior culprits in the deforestation exercise are loggers acceding legal and illegal instructions. Research shows that the world has had around half of the tropical forests cleared with deforestation, where no new trees have been planted.
That can crack into 18 million acres of land, representing great environmental loss. Still, tree harvesting is not a criminal act, but the policy of environmental sustenance entails that when trees are cut down, they should be replaced with newly planted ones. There are many outcomes of deforestation.
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Impacts of Deforestation On Climate
1. It decreases Soil Moisture and causes Desertification
In normal cases, the soil contains moisture. The moisture must be conserved, which can be done effectively if there is forest cover. The major role that the trees play is that they shield the soil and control the soil from dehydration. The vapor is lost when the soil is heated, but no surplus vapor is lost when the tree canopies are present.
But with the ongoing deforestation, water vapor is lost, and the water cycle is hurt. Reciprocally, no rainfall will ensue because of the trees' scarcity. The complete process may wind up in the appearance of a desert.
2. Growth of the Greenhouse Effect
In normal cases, trees are often significant in absorbing greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide and nitrogen. With tree felling, which follows the erosion of the forest cover, the concentration of greenhouse gases increases the global warming rate.
This prompts inevitable climate variation and adverse weather patterns like severe flooding or drought. Some negative greenhouse effects are the raised incidences of La Nina and El Nino. An increase in the greenhouse effect also boosts the levels of evaporation & evapotranspiration, and the greater temperatures cause prolonged dry spell periods and the worsening of drought conditions.
3. Melting of the Icebergs
Deforestation in the cold Polar Regions also disrupts the ice caps. Ultimately, growth melting prompts the rising ocean or sea level. Climatic variation is also an outcome of this action. When such trees are trimmed and the ice starts to melt, there is that change in the weather pattern, which also extends to the alteration in the climatic conditions in the Polar Regions. With the thawing of the icebergs, the rise of the water level might cause intense flooding.
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