Africa’s trees aren’t disappearing
Environmentalists often contend that Africa is being de-forested at an alarming rate. But recent research indicates that any loss is probably far less than the alarmists would have us believe, and that in fact the number of forested acres is actually growing in some African countries - due to climate change and population growth.
Earlier estimates of the extent of forested areas were exaggerated, making the loss of forests appear greater, say British researchers Melissa Leach and James Fairhead in Population and Development Review.
They calculate, for example, that the Ivory Coast in 1900 probably had half the forested area that environmentalists estimated several decades ago - with the result that the rate of loss is only about 40 percent of what is commonly supposed.
Some of the most famous forest reserves - such as those in Guinea and Sierra Leone - were largely savannas or even farmland a century ago.
Large tracts of supposedly undisturbed forest are actually regrowth on areas which had been intensively cultivated until the slave trade reduced the population, Fairhead argued in a 1998 book.
And there is evidence that forests are actually increasing in some parts of Africa, due to a wetter climate and increasing population.
Over the past 600 to 700 years, the African climate has become more humid - allowing trees to grow where they couldn't in the past. And increasing populations of farmers help control brush fires that could destroy forests. They enrich the soil, as well, and plant or preserve trees for fruit, medicine, shelter or timber.
Source: African Forests: Growing or Going? Economist, April 29, 2000.
For more on Biodiversity http://www.ncpa.org/pi/enviro/envdex5.html#g
Publish date: 07 May 2000
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