Forest ecology Essays

  • Pacific Northwest Deforestation

    1693 Words  | 7 Pages

    101-1998 Environmental Impact of deforestation In the Pacific Northwest The first people to explore the wilderness in what is now Oregon and Washington documented beautiful forests of mesmerizingly large trees as far as the eye can see. The explorer’s initial reports brought in people who came to make a profit off the forest and the vast amounts of lumber it could provide. Lumber mills were built before the area was even added to the union. The environmental footprint started out small, but the lack

  • Deforestation In The Amazon Rainforests

    1483 Words  | 6 Pages

    cutting down of trees, or the permanent destruction of forests. Deforestation is a world problem but is majorly found in South American countries like Brazil. The deforestation in the Brazilian rainforest first began in 1970. The rate of deforestation has only increased rapidly since then. Rain forests cover over 30% of Earth’s land. They provide massive amounts of oxygen and store carbon dioxide. Every second one and a half acres of forest is being cut down. The rate of deforestation per minute

  • Rattus Research Paper

    942 Words  | 4 Pages

    NEED OF PROJECT Shiels et al (2013) Rattus rattus is among the most prevalent intrusive vertebrates on different continents. It thrives in different environments where humans are not present. R rattus is more common in limited forest ranges. It is more dangerous in case of destruction of crops and stored foods than any other pests and vector of different diseases. It has aboreal living style and omnivore and eat every type of food as grain, fruit etc.Rattus rattus (black rat) is omnivores. They

  • A Sand County Almanac By Aldo Leopold

    901 Words  | 4 Pages

    conservation, Aldo Leopold, articulates an unprecedented idea called “land ethic” which upholds the right of the soils, waters, animals, and plants to a life in a natural state. The book itself is a series of discrete essays as Leopold seeks the ecology of his farm in the sand country of Wisconsin, a poor part of the country with infertile soil. In short pieces, he writes of each month of the year, talking of hunting, fishing, watching wildlife, understanding the land, migrating birds, and trees

  • Game Theory: Christian Anthropocentrism And Christian Deep-Ecology

    539 Words  | 3 Pages

    of the society’s attitude from the perspective of the ecological service that the forest and its associated biodiversity will provide to them. They relied on ‘game theory’ and ‘rational theory model’ to explain the attitude of the surrounding people to the sacred forests (Hardin, 1968). In this regard, the theories mainly analyzed the community’s choice how to maximize the profit that they get from the sacred forest. The theories largely interested to know the community intentions and perception towards

  • The Secret Hippo Village Analysis

    865 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Secret Hippo Village By: Luca 0nce upon a time in a nice, calm forest there lived a nation of hippos. There was a special hippo named George. The king of the village, Ion, has more power than anyone else in the village including George. Ion also makes decisions in the Hippo Village. No one likes him but everybody listens to him because he’s HUGE! At least that 's what they say because nobody has actually ever seen him but they 've seen his minions

  • Deforestation Of Rainforests Essay

    2488 Words  | 10 Pages

    Research shows why deforestation of rainforests happen around the world and why should we care. Introduction During this modernization era, more and more rainforests are actually disappearing from the surface of the Earth very quickly without us realizing it. Rainforests are said to be covering almost one third of the Earth’s surface providing lots of environmental benefits such as the prevention of climate change, soil conservation, preservation of biodiversity and the hydrologic cycle (Chakravarty

  • Amazon Rainforest Deforestation

    1552 Words  | 7 Pages

    It is to be held accountable for around eight tenths of the destruction of the rainforest on the South African continent, and makes up almost 15% of all deforestation worldwide. Removal of the forest to make space to keep animals has been occurring since the early 1960s, where local farmers realised that the agriculture they were trying to sustain was simply unprofitable in the long run due to the poor soil they had to utilise. They implemented

  • Deforestation In Honduras Essay

    842 Words  | 4 Pages

    Most people in Honduras live in the north where most of the factories for work are located, but indigenous people and anyone else living in the rural areas deal with most of the effects of deforestation. When you remove large areas of forest the climate will begin to change and effect anyone living around it. Since Honduras is a poor country it is harder to protect yourself from environmental changes. Also, by deforestation the water sources they use are no longer protected and leave

  • Animal Life In Rainforest

    936 Words  | 4 Pages

    Introduction Rainforests are populated with insects, arachnids, reptiles, amphibians, birds, mammals and worms. The rainforest is home to more than half of the world 's animals. The rainforest is a very dense, warm and wet biome. So, where are the rainforests? Most rainforests are located in a latitude band around the equator between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn. Below is a map of the major rainforests over the world. Strata The rainforest contains of four different layers

  • Tropical Deforestation Summary

    806 Words  | 4 Pages

    by NASA Earth Observatory it discusses Tropical rain forests, Sub-tropical forests, Mediterranean forests, Temperate forests, Coniferous forests, Montana and Plantation forest and how they are a vital storehouse of biodiversity, sustaining millions of different animals, birds, algae and fish species. The problem of tropical deforestation is now recognized as a very serious and important issue throughout the globe. No matter what type of forest it is they are being cut down to make more room for the

  • Euphemism In Beloved

    792 Words  | 4 Pages

    Anna Tikhomirova Courtney P2 2/13/2018 10 on 1 “It’s a tree, Lu. A chokecherry tree. See, here’s the trunk - it’s red and split wide open, full of sap, and this here’s the parting for the branches.You got a mighty lot of branches. Leaves, too, look like, and dern if these ain’t blossoms. Tiny little cherry blossoms just as white. Your back got a whole tree on it. In bloom. What God have in mind, I wonder.” (Page 79) Over the course of reading the novel Beloved, I came across a fascinating

  • Essay On Forest Management

    1265 Words  | 6 Pages

    Sustainable forest management requires three major criteria which are the maintenance of ecological processes within the forest (soil formation, energy flow, biogeochemical cycles (carbon, nutrient and hydrological cycles), maintenance of biodiversity of forest, improving the net social benefits derived from the mixture of forest uses within the constraints by considering the future. Forest provides habitats for more than half of the fauna and flora on the Earth (SCBD, 2001). Forest biome plays

  • Essay On Colobus Monkeys

    1743 Words  | 7 Pages

    Living and native to the forests of African, its home to hundreds of epidemic animal species, and supposedly no where else in the world. There are many species of the colobus monkeys all with their own appearance. There are three types of colobus the Black and white (genus Colobus), Red Colobus (genus Pillocolobus), and the Oliver colobus (genus Procolobus). The colobus monkey are consider part of the clarification of mammals, as most of the species an earth started. Colobus monkey spits off

  • Rainforest Deforestation Essay

    1657 Words  | 7 Pages

    Cutting down trees deprives the forest of portions of its canopy, which blocks the sun’s waves throughout the daytime and holds in heat at night. This disturbance leads to additional life-threatening temperatures swings that can be risky to plants and animals. Trees also play a serious

  • Prevention Of Deforestation Essay

    779 Words  | 4 Pages

    Mother Natural Network, world’s most visited online network for news and information related to environment suggests going paperless as a solution to deforestation (Sevedge par. 3). Paper is widely used all around the world and geting rid of them would certainly reduce number of trees cut down. Upstream Policy Institute (UPI), an organization dedicated in creating healthy society by addressing causes of environmental harm reports, every year, paper thrown in trash represent around 640 million trees

  • The Negative Effects Of Reforestation

    3362 Words  | 14 Pages

    Introduction: Description: Deforestation is defined as the permanent destruction of forests in order to make land available for other uses. According to the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO) 18 million acres of forest are lost each year. This equals to approximately 36 football fields of forest being cleared each minute. Though deforestation occurs all over the world, it’s the tropical forests which are being particularly targeted. Due to this countries such as Indonesia,

  • Characteristics Of Rainforest

    802 Words  | 4 Pages

    Rainforest have different types of weather patterns , different types locations and different type of species of animals, and plants . According to Ecological Research (2000) An equatorial rainforest in the coastal region of West Sumatra suffered a long period of dry and hazy weather in 1997. Many animals that live in rainforests are threatened by distinction , because the rainforest population is getting smaller and some of the animals will not be safe. They can die because of starvation

  • Native Amazonians Research Paper

    383 Words  | 2 Pages

    live where we belong, on our own land. Our people have lived in these forests for 12,000 years, and our use of the land and its resources is sustainable. Although some Native Amazonian people live much as we do, others still live much as did their ancestors 12 thousand of years before them. These communities organize their daily lives differently than our culture. Their food, medicines and clothing come primarily from the forest. The Native Amazonians hunt, fish, and grow crops on small plots.

  • Old Growth Forest Research Paper

    629 Words  | 3 Pages

    Old growth forests are rare to come by, especially in the United States. The Camillus Unique Forest Area, located in northeastern New York, has many characteristics of an old growth forest. It is unclear how old the forest actually is, as the tree species that reside there have a life span of 100-200 years. This could mean that the forest is thousands of years old, with hundreds of generations of these species, or only a few hundred years old, with the first generation just reaching maturity. Either