| -The Importance of Rainforests
Rainforests have been called the womb of life because they are
home to 50-90% of the species on Earth. Worldwide, several hundred
million forest-dwelling people live in or depend on rainforests.
Many of the world’s important food crops and domestic animals
have been developed from rainforest species. Human beings depend
on rainforests in numerous ways, but it would be wrong to suggest
that they should be preserved purely so that they can be exploited
by humans.
Biodiversity
Because of tropical deforestation, it has been estimated that
at least 40 species are perishing every day. This is a rate hundreds
of times faster than at any period in recent geological time.
Tropical forests cover only 12 per cent of the land area of the
Earth, yet they are home to between 50 and 90 per cent of the
world's species. They contain 90% of non-human primates, 40% of
all birds of prey and 80% of the world's insects and over 60%
of all known plants. Because one species in a tropical forest
may be found in a small area and nowhere else, the destruction
of relatively small areas of forest can cause extinctions.
No one knows just how the rest of the global ecosystem depends
on rainforests, but we may find out in the next 30 to 50 years.
That is how long it is estimated that it will take for tropical
forests to disappear altogether if current trends continue.
This situation has been likened by biologists Anne and Paul Ehrlich
to an aeroplane losing the rivets which keep it together. No one
knows how many rivets the plane can lose before it falls apart.
Medicines
Rainforests are a vital source of medicines. Today, less than
1% of the world's tropical forest plants have been tested for
pharmaceutical properties, yet at least 25% of all modern drugs
came originally from rainforests. Most were first discovered and
used by indigenous peoples.
Annual worldwide sales of plant-derived pharmaceuticals currently
total $20 billion. These include such drugs as Digitoxin, Vincristine,
Emetine, Physostigmine, Atropine, Morphine, Reserpine, D-Tubocurarine,
and Quinine. All were first used by rainforest shamans and healers.
An impressive 70% of all plants known to have anti-tumour properties
come from tropical rainforests. Any one of these could lead to
breakthroughs in the treatment of cancer. The potential of this
living pharmaceutical factory remains almost completely untapped.
The potential and fragility of the rainforests as an invaluable
source of medicine is clearly illustrated in the following account
from the World Rainforest Report no.26:
"Starting with twigs from a Malaysian gum tree, researchers
in 1991 isolated a compound that blocked the spread of the AIDS
virus in human cells. The team sent biologists racing back to
Malaysia for more samples from the tree. But when they got to
the swamp, the tree was gone, it had been cut down. And no tree
found since has produced the same compound. " No identical
trees have been found in the immediate area and samples from the
same species found elsewhere did not yield the same compound.
In Sarawak, the Penan people use over 50 medicinal plants which
they harvest from the primary forest - plants that are used as
poison antidotes, contraceptives, clot ting agents, general tonics,
stimulants, disinfectants, remedies for headaches, fever, cuts
and bruises, boils, snake bite, toothache, diarrhea, skin infections
and rashes, and for setting bones.
Food Diversity
Apart from being an invaluable source of medicines,
rainforests offer a veritable bounty of foods. Of an estimated
75,000 edible plants found in nature, only 150 enter world commerce
and only 20, (mostly domesticated cereals), stand between human
society and starvation. This means that modern agriculture is
vulnerable to pests, disease and changes in climate.
Genes from wild plants are used to fortify modern varieties, and
are likely to become increasingly important for this purpose.
In the 1920's, when disease decimated the sugar cane crop in South
America, genes from a wild species in Java saved the industry
from ruin. In 1970, wild coffee from Ethiopia's vanishing forests
saved Latin America's plantations from devastation. Every modern
rice plant contains a gene resistant to grassy stunt virus, a
major rice disease. The gene was discovered 25 years ago in just
two seeds from Indian forests. No other seeds containing the resistant
gene were ever found again.
Tomato varieties have been improved by crossbreeding with wild
tomatoes from Ecuador, Chile and Peru. Similar crossbreeding has
improved other varieties of fruits and vegetables.
In the tropics, there are wild trees that yield 650 pounds of
oil-rich seeds a year, a fruit with more vitamin C than oranges,
a palm with more vitamin A than spinach and another palm whose
seeds contain 27% protein. There is a palm whose seed oil is indistinguishable
from olive oil and a tree producing resin which can be used unprocessed
to run a diesel engine.
There are shrubs with fruit containing compounds 300 times sweeter
than sucrose, some with leaves coated in industrial grade waxes,
seeds used for dyes and plants producing insecticides. There are
also plants that yield twine for weaving baskets, furniture and
often even beautiful and elaborate cladding for the homes of forest
dwelling people.
Crops originating in the rainforests include rice, quinine, rubber,
coffee, bananas, eggplants, lemons, oranges, tea, cacao, cashews,
cassava, tapioca, peanuts, pineapples, guavas, brazil nuts, paw
paws, avocadoes and many more.
-Climate
Water and Temperature
Rainforests have been described as the global heat and
water pumps because of their influence on climate. Rainforests
are dark, and like a dark car parked in the hot sun they absorb
heat. Above a rainforest the air is cooler so it is more likely
to rain. Inside the rainforest, beneath the dense canopy, humidity
stays high and steady compared with the outside world. The forests
stay wet and evaporate vast quantities of water through their
foliage and into the air above, forming clouds. Some falls again
as rain in the tropics but often clouds are carried great distances
to fall as rain in the mid latitudes, often as far away as Europe
and Australia.
The hotter air that exists over deserts and grasslands that replace
the rainforests after logging or clearing, discourages the clouds
and the deserts remain dry. As rainforests disappear this will
dramatically affect the water circulation of the atmosphere and
is likely to alter weather patterns thousands of miles away.
The Greenhouse Effect
As a stable system, all forests hold vast amounts of carbon
in their biomass. When forests are destroyed, vast amounts of
carbon are released into the atmosphere as C02. Because CO2 is
the major greenhouse gas, this adds to global warming. Up until
now the increase of C02 in the atmosphere has been largely due
to the burning of fossil fuels such gas, oil and coal, but this
could change as more forests are destroyed. In one year, fires
from the Amazon alone produced 500 million tons of C02, estimated
to be 10% of the world's total annual atmospheric emissions. Contributing
to these C02 emissions is the burning and decomposition of pulp
and paper made from these forests.
Atmospheric C02 traps the sun's heat in much the same way as the
glass of a greenhouse, and by warming the atmosphere, it also,
has the potential to dramatically change global weather patterns.
Watersheds
One of the most vital functions fulfilled by forests
is the control of rainfall run-off to waterways.
Imagine rainforests as huge sponges or watersheds soaking up the
rain and storing it, releasing a little at a time. In a well forested
watershed, 95% of annual rainfall is trapped and then released
slowly but surely over time, replenishing ground water and keeping
streams and rivers flowing through the dry seasons. This constant
supply of clean water running into streams, rivers, lakes, reefs
and lagoons is vital for replenishing the homes of their myriad
creatures.
When the forest is removed, there is no longer any sponge to absorb
the water and the result is massive flooding, soil erosion and
siltation of the waterways. Siltation causes the water to become
choked with mud and all life that depends on that clean water
eventually suffocates.
Homeland for Forest Peoples
Worldwide there are 300million indigenous people,
and approximately 50 million of them live in tropical forests.
They rely almost exclusively on the forests for their survival
needs.
Rubber tappers are not indigenous to the forests of the Amazon
but have learnt to live sustainably in the forest. Like the indigenous
tribes who depend on the forests, they are under threat from the
destruction of their forest homes.
Non-material Values
The wonder and spiritual importance of the rainforests
to all that live in and around is profound. They are important
even for those of us who may just enjoy a stroll through them
on weekends and holidays. It is impossible to try to put a value
on rainforests for all the riches they can and do offer.
Decay and Renewal in the Rainforest
In a "forest system" nothing is wasted. Plants are constantly
shedding leaves and bark which then mix with the excreta of living
forest animals and the carcasses of dead ones to form a rich layer
of humus on the forest floor. Micro-organisms, insects and fungi
break down this humus and convert it into nutrients for the soil.
Through the soil, with the help of water, these nutrients are
taken up, absorbed through the roots of the trees and plants,
nourishing them, which in turn, provides food and shelter for
birds and animals. So the process of decay, recycling and renewal
goes on.
All things have value in a natural forest no matter what their
age or condition. The youngest groundcover provides a quick snack
for a passing wallaby, while an old dead tree offers many nooks
and crannies in which anything from birds and possums to fungi
and termites can make a home. Although rainforests may appear
chaotic, in fact everything has its niche.
The soils of many rainforests are relatively infertile, despite
the wealth of species they support. In fact, rainforests on Fraser
Island off the coast of southern Queensland, Australia, grow in
pure sand. When tropical rainforests are cleared for agriculture
or grazing, they often are productive for only one or two seasons
and then have to be abandoned. The lack of nutrients in these
soils shows that in rainforests, nutrients are recycled very efficiently
before they become part of the soil.
Traditional slash and burn farmers have adapted to tropical forest
soils with efficient systems of rotation and fallow. No other
form of agriculture has proved to be sustainable in tropical forest
areas.
Rainforest Facts
Rainforests cover about 12% of the total land
surface of the globe. They contain between 50 and 90 per cent
of all species (World Rainforest Movement, 1990).
Tropical Forests are the Earth's oldest ecosystems. Fossil records
show that the forests of South-East Asia have survived in their
present form for at least 70 million years (Myers, 1992).
Rainforests have been called the "Lungs of the Earth",
but the term is misleading. Although rainforests do release vast
amounts of oxygen into the atmosphere, they absorb just as much
through the decay of organic matter. However, they do play an
important role in regulating the Earth's atmosphere by storing
carbon in their biomass. When forests are destroyed, the carbon
they contain is released into the atmosphere in the form of carbon
dioxide.
In 1989, the Government of Colombia recognised the claim of tribal
people to half of the Colombian Amazon. The government acknowledged
that the Indians are the best guardians of the rainforest (New
Scientist Dec 1989).
One river in Brazil was found to contain more species of fish
than all the rivers in the USA (World Rainforest Movement, 1990).
The largest forest fire in recorded history occurred in Kalimantan,
the Indonesian section of the island of Borneo in 1982-3. The
fire began after a prolonged drought in the fields of farmers
who moved into the area after it had been opened up by logging
(Collins, Sayer and Whitmore, 1992).
Between 1981 and 1990, seventeen million hectares were destroyed
each year. The same period saw the rate of tropical forest loss
double. If this rate of increase in defore- station were to continue,
all remaining tropical forests would be destroyed in less than
thirty years. (Rainforest Information Centre, 1991).
In Costa Rica, one reserve - the La Selva Forest Reserve - contains
as many species as all of Great Britain. Great Britain is about
17,000 times the size of the La Selva Reserve (World Rainforest
Movement, 1990).
The three main agents of rainforest destruction are commercial
logging, cattle ranching and clearing by 'shifted cultivators'.
Shifted cultivators account for half the world's rainforest destruction
(Colchester and Lohmann, 1992).
In 1990, the International Tropical Timber Organisation, the body
set up to regulate the international trade in tropical timber,
commissioned a study into the sustainability of the tropical timber
industry. Headed by Duncan Poore, the study concluded that on
a world scale, the amount of sustainable harvesting of tropical
timber was "negligible" (Poore, 1990).
A single hectare of tropical rainforest may contain 200 tree species.
The same area of temperate forest typically contains only 10 to
15 species (World Rainforest Movement, 1990).
There are 33 countries now exporting tropical timber. A World
Bank study estimated that all but 10 of those will be net timber
importers by the year 2000 (World Rainforest Movement 1990).
Rainforests act as giant reservoirs of moisture and warmth, releasing
water throughout the year as the perennial streams and rivers
that support the lives of billions of people, meeting the needs
of 40% of the farmers in the Third World (Rainforest Information
Centre, 1991).
Further facts in figures:
Rates of Destruction:
17 million hectares a year
an area larger than Switzerland
About 1 hectare a second
about a football field a second
Species Extinction
about 50 species per day
Tropical timber Exports:
Number of exporting countries, 1991: 33
Number still exporting in the year 2000: 10
(World Bank estimate)
Indigenous Tribes:
Number of native rainforest societies
destroyed in Brazil in 1st half of 20th century: 87
Number of rainforest cultures still in
existence worldwide: 1,000 (approx)
Number threatened by development
plans: 1,000 (approx.)
Worldwide tropical forest
1980: 18.8 million ha.
1990: 17.1 million ha.
2000: 1.54 million ha. (est.)
Expiry Date for all Rainforests
estimates range from 30 to 50 years
if present trends continue
Asia's tropical forest:
1980: 310.8 million ha.
1990: 274.9 million ha.
2000: 239 million ha. (est.)
The Americas tropical forest:
1980: 923 million ha.
1990: 839 million ha.
2000:756 million ha. (est.)
Africa's tropical forest
1980: 650.3 million ha.
1990: 600.1 million ha.
2000: 549 million ha. (est.)
Deforestation in the Temperate
North
The loss of the world's tropical forests is one
of the greatest calamities ever to face humankind. However this
should not divert attention from the destruction of temperate
forests. In Europe, forest cover as a proportion of the total
land area now stands at 30% or less in most countries. In North
America, about 12% of the original forest area remains (World
Rainforest Movement, 1990).
Since the opening of Russia to investment from the West, the Siberian
boreal forests, the largest forested area in the world, have become
under increasing threat (Wood Rainforest Report no.24).
Throughout the temperate regions pollution and pollution-related
diseases are damaging large proportion of trees. A 1988 study
found that in Germany, 52% of all trees were damaged. In Britain,
the figure is 64% and in Czechoslovakia, 70%.
|