- Introduction
- Rainforests the most valuable resources for mankind
- Rainforests major producer of oxygen
- Causes of mass destruction in rainforests
- Logging a great cause of destruction
- Colonisation another major cause
- Population growth forces people to move to rainforests
- Rainforests are loosing nutrients and are becoming infertile
- Cattle ranching the last cause
- Conclusion
This we know – the earth does not belong to man, man belongs to the earth. All things are connected like the blood which unites one family. Man did not weave the web of life; he is merely a strand in it. Whatever he does to the web, he does to himself.
Rainforests are some of the most valuable resources we have, yet they are being destroyed in massive proportions. Many medicines insecticides and oil producing trees are found in the rainforest. The rainforest also holds endless possibilities for useful, undiscovered resources. These could include cures for disease and new food crops that will be wiped out before they are found because of the destruction of the rainforests. The rainforests is also home to millions of species of animals, plants and insects as well… It is limited that five out of six rainforest species have never been seen. This adds up to millions of organisms that have never before been encountered. This demonstrates that more species live in the rainforest than any other ecosystem on earth, and we are obliterating their only habitat. The rainforest is also a big producer of the world’s oxygen supply. When we destroy the rainforest, we are destroying our own oxygen supply. Massive destruction of our precious rainforests is caused by logging, colonization due to over-population, and cattle ranching.
The first major cause of mass destruction in the rainforest is logging. There can be as many as 200 hundred different species of trees on one acre of land. This high number of different species of trees on one acre of land. This high number of different species of trees means there is only a few commercially valuable trees per acre. Trees considered commercially valuable are mahogany and tropical cedar. These trees are used for paneling, boats and furniture. Loggers must bulldoze roads through the forest to find enough of these valuable trees to make a profit. This consumes many other trees that are in the way of the road. The trees in the rainforest are connected at the top with vines, so one when commercially valuable tree gets cut down, on average 17 other non-commercially valuable trees fall down with it. Because of these practices, the logging industry can eradicate 30 percent of a rain forest where only a few commercially valuable trees were cut down. At this rate, they will be able to clear out whole rainforest in a couple of years. After the loggers themselves destroy so much rainforest, the roads they leave behind induce the next phase of rainforest destruction; colonization.
Another major cause of rainforest destruction is colonization. Roads left behind by loggers make the rainforest accessible to farmers looking for a place to live and grow crops. Farm families clear and burn the remains of the forest to plant crops to keep and sell. These families clear more land then they need to show others that they own it and have “developed” it. These colonists are forced to move to the rainforest because there is no room anywhere else for them to live. Most of the land is owned by companies, so families’ feels lucky if they are fortunate enough to have their own land in the rainforest. Population growth forces the people to move to the rainforest. Even if farm families can get their own plot of rainforest land, it is not long before they have to move again and clear our more rainforest. Rainforest land loses nutrients quickly after it has been cleared, and it soon becomes eroded and infertile. Since crops won’t grow after this happen, farm families willingly sell the bad land to companies. After a while, the companies can combine ranching; the most destructive form of land use.