19. Destruction of Rainforests Worst Ever
Source:
The Independent/UK, October 21, 2005
Title: Revealed: the True Devastation of the Rainforest
Author: Steve Connor
Faculty Evaluator: Myrna Goodman
Student Researcher: Courtney Wilcox and Deanna Haddock
New developments in satellite imaging technology reveal that the Amazon
rainforest is being destroyed twice as quickly as previously estimated
due to the surreptitious practice of selective logging.
A survey published in the October 21 issue of the journal Science is
based on images made possible by a new, ultra-high-resolution satellite-imaging
technique developed by scientists affiliated with the Carnegie Institution
and Stanford University.
With this new technology, we are able to detect openings in the
forest canopy down to just one or two individual trees, says Carnegie
scientist Gregory Asner, lead author of the Science study and assistant
professor of Geological and Environmental Sciences at Stanford University.
People have been monitoring large-scale deforestation in the Amazon
with satellites for more than two decades, but selective logging has
been mostly invisible until now. While clear-cuts and burn-offs
are readily detectable by conventional satellite analysis, selective
logging is masked by the Amazons extremely dense forest canopy.
Stanford Universitys website reports that by late 2004, the Carnegie
research team had refined its imaging technique into a sophisticated
remote-sensing technology called the Carnegie Landsat Analysis System
(CLAS), which processes data from three NASA satellitesLandsat
7, Terra and Earth Observing 1through a powerful supercomputer
equipped with new pattern-recognition approaches designed by Asner and
his staff.1
Each pixel of information obtained by the satellites contains
detailed spectral data about the forest, Asner explains. For
example, the signals tell us how much green vegetation is in the canopy,
how much dead material is on the forest floor and how much bare soil
there is.
For the Science study, the researchers conducted their first basin-wide
analysis of the Amazon from 1999 to 2002. The results of the four-year
survey revealed a problem that is widespread and vastly underestimated,
We found much more selective logging than we or anyone else had
expectedbetween 4,600 and 8,000 square miles every year of forest
spread across five Brazilian states, Asner said.
Selective loggingthe practice of removing one or two trees and
leaving the rest intact is often considered a sustainable alternative
to clear-cutting. Left unregulated, however, the practice has proven
to be extremely destructive.
A large mahogany tree can fetch hundreds of dollars at the sawmill,
making it a tempting target in a country where one in five lives in
poverty. People go in and remove just the merchantable species
from the forest, Asner says. Mahogany is the one everybody
knows about, but in the Amazon, there are at least thirty-five marketable
hardwood species, and the damage that occurs from taking out just a
few trees at a time is enormous. On average, for every tree removed,
up to thirty more can be severely damaged by the timber harvesting operation
itself. Thats because when trees are cut down, the vines that
connect them pull down the neighboring trees.
Logged forests are areas of extraordinary damage. A tree crown
can be twenty-five meters. When you knock down a tree it causes a lot
of damage in the understory. Light penetrates to the understory
and dries out the forest floor, making it much more susceptible to burning.
Thats probably the biggest environmental concern,
Asner explains. But selective logging also involves the use of
tractors and skidders that rip up the soil and the forest floor. Loggers
also build makeshift dirt roads to get in, and study after study has
shown that those frontier roads become larger and larger as more people
move in, and that feeds the deforestation process. Think of logging
as the first land-use change.
Another serious environmental concern is that while an estimated 400
million tons of carbon enter the atmosphere every year as a result of
traditional deforestation in the Amazon, Asner and his colleagues estimate
that an additional 100 million tons is produced by selective logging.
That means up to 25 percent more greenhouse gas is entering the
atmosphere than was previously assumed, Asner explains, a finding
that could alter climate change forecasts on a global scale.
Notes
1. Mark Shwartz, Selective logging causes widespread destruction,
study finds, Stanford University website, October 21, 2005.