The repercussions of rainforest reduction

By 2020, palm oil plantations in Indonesian Borneo will emit more than 600

million tons of carbon dioxide more than the entire fossil fuel emissions

from Canada. This figure comes from a study in the scientific journal Nature

Climate Change, which reports that about one-third of Indonesian Borneo s

lowland rainforests will be deforested for palm oil production in the coming

decade.

Rainforests are natural carbon sinks , absorbing carbon dioxide during

photosynthesis and creating a significant line of defence against climate

change. So the environmental impact of Borneo s deforestation for industrial

purposes is two-fold: the clearing of forests reduces the absorption of carbon

dioxide and the subsequent production of palm oil releases mass emissions of

the same harmful gas.

Rainforests worldwide are currently being cleared at a rate of 1.5 acres per

second, according to the international environmental organisation Greenpeace.

If deforestation continues at this speed, all of the world s rainforests could

be wiped out entirely in less than 100 years. Considering that more than half

of the world s plants and animals live in rainforests, the implications are

grave.

The relationship between rainforests and climate change is also highly

symbiotic. Not only does deforestation reduce the amount of carbon dioxide that

a rainforest can absorb, but an unexpected weather event, such as a drought

(which some scientists believe may itself be a result of climate change), can

actually reverse a rainforest s role, causing it to emit carbon dioxide rather

than absorbing it.

The latter phenomenon is what happened in 2005 when the Amazon rainforest was

hit by a serious drought. As trees died off, the Amazon released between 1.2

billion and 1.6 billion tons of carbon dioxide, according to the scientific

journal Nature. Contrast that with a typical year, during which the world s

rainforests consume around 1.3 billion tons of carbon dioxide per year about

one-fifth of the world s fossil fuel emissions.

Some parts of the world are faring better than others, though. An international

conference held at the University of Oxford this year found that African

rainforests are more resilient in the face of climate change than those in

South America or Southeast Asia. African forests have experienced a more

variable climate over the past 10,000 years and endured several natural

disasters over the past 4,000 years. The species that have persevered,

scientists say, are adaptable to sporadic changes in rainfall.

While sustainable forestry techniques -- such as selectively culling trees

rather than clear-cutting whole areas of forests -- could reduce deforestation

of rainforests by millions of acres per year, according to National Geographic,

travellers can also play their part. There are several volunteer projects that

allow people to visit the rainforests while also helping to save them

including reforestation efforts in Borneo, Brazil and Ecuador, in which

volunteers replant trees, build forest trails and study disappearing species --

and volunteers with the Earthwatch Institute are working with scientists to

figure out why frog species are vanishing from Australia s rainforests.