Syllabus: GS1/ Geography, GS3/ Environment
Context
- A recent study published in Nature Plants reveals that trees in the Amazon rainforest are steadily increasing in size due to rising levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO₂).
Key Findings of the study
- Tree Growth: Amazon trees are getting bigger, with average diameter increasing by ~3.3% per decade.
- Rise in CO₂ levels (nearly 20% in 30 years) led to the carbon fertilisation effect, where higher CO₂ enhances photosynthesis and accelerates growth.
- Shift in forest structure: The accelerated growth of larger, canopy-level trees is happening at the expense of smaller trees, whose numbers are declining. This fundamentally changes the forest’s structure and biodiversity.
- Shift in forest structure: The accelerated growth of larger, canopy-level trees is happening at the expense of smaller trees, whose numbers are declining. This fundamentally changes the forest’s structure and biodiversity.
Amazon Rain Forests
- Location: The region belongs to nine nations of the South American continent.
- It is bounded by the Guiana Highlands to the north, the Andes Mountains to the west, the Brazilian central plateau to the south, and the Atlantic Ocean to the east.
- Area Covered: The majority of the forest, 60%, is in Brazil, followed by Peru with 13%, Colombia with 10%, and with minor amounts in Bolivia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Suriname and Venezuela.
- Climate: Hot and humid climate with temperatures of 26-30°C throughout the year.
- There are no periodic seasons.The precipitation ranges from 2,000 mm to 10,920 mm annually.
- Tribes: Yanomamo, Kayapo, Akuntsu, Matses, Tupi etc.
- Fauna: Anaconda, Jesus lizard, howler monkey, golden lion tamarin, jaguar, sloth, spider monkey, Amazon River dolphin, toucan and the scarlet macaw, poison dart frog and the glass frog.
- Flora: Moist broadleaf tropical rainforest like myrtle, laurel, palm, acacia, rosewood, Brazil nut, rubber tree, mahogany and Amazonian cedar.
Significance of the Rainforests
- Lungs of the planet: Rainforests generate about 20% of the world’s oxygen and its trees play a key role in reducing pollutant levels.
- Fight climate change: They act as a crucial buffer in the global fight against climate change as it holds tremendous capacity to store carbon.
- It is estimated that around 150-200 billion tonnes of carbon are stored in the Amazon rainforest.
- Biodiversity: Rainforests house a vast array of plant and animal species, many of which are found nowhere else and some of which are endangered.
- Medicinal Properties: Many of these plants contain bioactive compounds capable of treating diseases that are not yet curable, especially cancer.
Threat to the forests
- Climate Change: Due to climate change the forests are witnessing various challenges like changes in rainfall patterns,pollution etc.
- Deforestation: The size of the Amazon forest shrank dramatically as a result of settlers’ clearance of the land to obtain lumber and to create grazing pastures and farmland.
- Wildfires: It causes threat to the survival of ecosystems and biodiversity. The 2019 forest fires in the region have led to widespread devastation in the region.
| Initiatives to Protect the Amazon Rainforest – Brazil’s Forest Code (2012): A key law requiring landowners in the Amazon to maintain a specific percentage of their land (up to 80%) as a Legal Forest Reserve to conserve native vegetation and biodiversity. – Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization (ACTO, 1978): Eight Amazon countries (Brazil, Peru, Colombia, Bolivia, Ecuador, Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname) cooperate on sustainable development and conservation. – UN REDD+ Programme: Supports countries in reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation while promoting sustainable management. – Amazon Fund (2008): Established by Brazil with support from Norway and Germany; finances efforts to prevent, monitor, and combat deforestation. |
Concluding remarks
- Rainforests are nature’s living archives, holding irreplaceable biodiversity and regulating the planet’s climate.
- Their protection is not just an environmental imperative but a safeguard for humanity’s future, linking ecological health with social, cultural, and economic resilience.
Source: IE
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