Wednesday, September 18, 2019
The Causes of Deforestation in the Amazon Rain Forest Essay -- Exposit
The Causes of Deforestation in the Amazon Rain Forest     à     à  Ã  Ã  Ã   The Amazon Rain Forest  crosses several national boundaries in South America, although the majority of  it is located in Brazil. It covers over 3,562,000 acres, making it the largest  in the world. But globally, over 138,600 acres of rain forest are lost each year  to deforestation, 50,000 of those in Brazil alone (Holdsforth), and the world's  rain forests are quickly disappearing. Deforestation in the Amazon occurs  primarily for three reasons: clear-cutting, fragmentation, and edge effects.       à       à       The term "deforestation" refers to the clear-cutting of large sections of  primary or original-growth forest, which causes the loss of native species of  plant and animal life. This clearing of land is mainly due to agricultural  needs, such as farming and cattle ranching, but also occurs to support logging  and mining companies. The effect of the loss of forest is most obvious in the  loss of native species. Eugene Ng, of the Hong Kong Technical Institute,  explains that the "destruction of habitat forces species out of areas, or causes  them to die." Other factors, according to Ng, "further restrict their range,  exposing them to disease and predators."      à       à       Deforestation does not occur neatly. "Fragmentation" also weakens the rain  forest. As large sections of rain forest are cut down by farmers, ranchers, and  loggers, those plant and animal species are left to die. If all deforestation  occurred along the outside boundaries of the forest, then some of the species  could move deeper into the Amazon to survive. But as Mason Skold and Bill Myer  explain, fragmentation produces "areas of less than 100 square kilometers which  are surrounded by d...              ...in Forest and to  protect the species who live there must take into account how deforestation  occurs.      à       à       Sources Cited     à       Center for Planetary Studies. "Deforestation Isn't the Real Problem in the  Amazon." June 1996. http://www.ctr_planets/Amazon.html (7 June 2003).      à       Holdsforth, J. R. "Deforestation Estimates for Eight National Biozone Regions  and Implications." 1990. http://www.biozone_project.html (7 June 2003).      à       Johns, Lucia and Freida Simms. "Deforestation: Global Problems, Programs, and  Agreements." Environmental Policy Division,      à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Congressional Research  Service. March 1997.     à  Ã        http://www.cnie.org/nle/for-4.htmlà  Ã  Ã   (14 June 2003).     à       Ng, Eugene. "Deforestation Affects Diversity." Hong Kong Technical Institute.  1991.à  Ã    http://www.hktech.edu/forests_diversity.htmlà  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã    (12 June 2003)                      
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