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Rainforests

A rainforest is a dense, evergreen forest. It has heavy rainfall and high humidity throughout the year. Most are in tropical or subtropical areas. They are usually in mountainous regions and areas near the sea.

Rainforests take in vast quantities of carbon dioxide and convert it into clean, breathable oxygen. Along with our oceans, they are the greatest source of the air that we breathe.

Even though rainforests cover only 2% of the earth’s surface, they house two thirds of all living species. Also, almost 40% of the medicines we use come from rainforest plants.

Rainforests are one of our planet’s oldest, continuous ecosystems, going back 100 million years. The largest rainforests are found in the Amazon basin of South America, West Africa, and the South Pacific.

Rainforests circle the earth’s equator like a belt and maintain an almost constant temperature of 80°F. They receive 190 to 400 inches of rain a year. Weather conditions there allow many life forms to prosper year-round. 

Sadly, by the time you finish reading this page, an area of rainforest almost 90 times the size of the Pentagon will have been destroyed! Each year, an area almost twice the size of Florida, disappears, leading to other losses such as animal extinction.

Many factors contribute to this destruction:

Logging
Logging companies cut down large areas. Additionally, the heavy machinery used to build roads and penetrate forests causes extensive, often permanent damage.

Shifted Cultivators
These are people who move into rainforests to carve out small-scale farms. Rainforest soils quickly lose their fertility. The farmers are forced to move to other parts of the forest, causing further damage.

Cattle Ranching
Rainforests areas are being completely cleared to provide land for cattle. In many cases, cattle damage the land to such an extent that it is of no more use to ranchers and they move on, destroying still more rainforest.

Wood for Fuel
An estimated 40% of the world’s population relies on burning wood for cooking and heating. This leads to deforestation and soil erosion.

Mining and Industry
Large areas of rainforest have been cleared for mining and industrial projects. This not only causes forest loss, but also severe water, land, and air pollution. Large-scale fishing industries have over-fished and polluted the rivers running through rainforests. 

Tourism
National parks have been created to help protect rainforests. However, many of these parks are being opened to the public before sufficient management plans are in place. Further, there is not enough funding to protect these lands. Many species are unable to adapt to or survive the increases in human traffic.

Make your voice heard! Write to officials, educate your family and friends, and start your own group to conserve the rainforests.

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by Maya G.
Article and Website © Copyright: 1997 - 2007 by Hearts and Minds Network, Inc. http://www.heartsandminds.org/environment/rainforest.htm - latest text changes December 27, 2005

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