yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Climate 101: Deforestation | National Geographic


2m read
·Nov 11, 2024

  • [Narrator] Forests cover about 30% of the planet. And the ecosystems they create play an essential role in supporting life on earth. But deforestation is clearing earth's forest on a massive scale. And at the current rate of destruction, the world's rainforest can completely disappear within 100 years.

Why should we care about deforestation? Together, Forestry and Agriculture are responsible for 24% of greenhouse gas emissions, making deforestation a significant contributor to climate change. Deforestation impacts the amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere in two ways. First, when trees are felled, they release the carbon they are storing into the atmosphere. Second, trees play a critical role in absorbing the greenhouse gases that fuel global warming. Fewer forests mean larger amounts of greenhouse gases entering the atmosphere, and increased speed and severity of global warming.

In addition to helping regulate the earth's climate, forests provide habitats for over 80% of the plants and animals that live on land. But deforestation destroys these habitats, diminishing biodiversity. Some estimate that four to six thousand rainforest species go extinct each year. This also affects the more than two billion people who rely on forests as sources of food and shelter.

The biggest driver of deforestation is agriculture. Farmers chop down trees in order to plant crops like soybeans, palm trees, and cocoa, or to make room to raise livestock for beef. Logging operations, which provide the world's wood and paper products, also cut countless trees each year. Forests are also destroyed as a result of growing urban sprawl, as land is developed for dwellings.

The effects of deforestation are grave, but not irreversible. Efforts such as managing forest resources, eliminating clear-cutting, and planting new trees to replace those removed are already being made to reduce deforestation's environmental impact on our planet. And while some plant and animal species are gone forever, combating deforestation can help prevent further loss of biodiversity. (soft music) (harmonious music)

More Articles

View All
Inflection points (graphical) | AP Calculus AB | Khan Academy
We’re told let G be a differentiable function defined over the closed interval from 4 to 4. The graph of G is given right over here, given below. How many inflection points does the graph of G have? So let’s just remind ourselves what are inflection poin…
Why you should always do business face to face and not over the phone!
I don’t care if I get in front of somebody for 20 minutes; I could have talked to him for 5 years on the telephone, and that 20 minutes face to face is going to change my relationship dynamic over any kind of telephone call. Being in front of the customer…
WEIRDEST TAN LINES EVER! IMG! #24
I choose You Pikachu II and Conan the Snowman. It’s episode 24 of IMG. Cats can be painted to look like Pikachu, and so can girls. She needs to put on this contre sweater. Here are operating systems as Batman villains: Linux is the Penguin, Mac OS is Two…
People Are a Force of Nature
What does the transforming is knowledge? We can take some raw material that had no particular use, and within that raw material, we might find uranium nuclei, which then can be used in a nuclear reactor to create energy or bombs. We can find within someth…
Homeroom with Sal & Lester Holt - Friday, August 14
Hi everyone, Sal here from Khan Academy. Welcome to our homeroom live stream. Very excited about the conversation we’re about to have with Lester Holt. Uh, before we jump into that conversation, I will make a few of my standard announcements. Uh, one, j…
Creativity in biology | High school biology | Khan Academy
[Music] Hi everyone, Salcon here. Biology is the study of living systems, and you can look all around you and even at yourself to recognize that living systems and biology in nature is fundamentally creative. For us to understand it, we have to be even m…