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The Amazon rainforest is being destroyed twice as quickly as previously estimated,
according to a satellite survey of the region.

Aerial view shows farmland next to the Amazon rainforest August 9, 2005. Damage
to the Amazon rain forest may be twice as large than previously thought due to
undetected 'selective' logging, U.S. and Brazilian forest experts reported on
Thursday. REUTERS/Bruno Domingos |
Scientists have discovered that previous satellite photographs of the Amazon have
missed a form of surreptitious logging that is equally destructive, but not as
apparent from space. Now
a team of American and Brazilian specialists have for the first time been able
to assess from space the damage done by "selective logging", when one or two trees
are removed leaving surrounding trees intact. They
found that selective logging of mahogany and other valuable hardwood trees, which
is often illegal, is destroying an area of the Amazon equal to that razed by conventional
logging. Gregory
Asner, one of the leaders of the study published today in the journal Science,
said that the new satellite technique has provided a shocking insight into the
true scale of Amazonian destruction. "People
have been monitoring large-scale deforestation in the Amazon with satellites for
more than two decades, but selective logging has been mostly invisible until now,"
said Dr Asner, a researcher at the Carnegie Institution in Washington and Stanford
University in California. "With
this new technology, we are able to detect openings in the forest canopy down
to just one or two individual trees," he said. Conventional satellite images have
revealed that an area of about 5,800 square miles of the Amazon rainforest is
burnt or cleared each year to make way for cattle ranching, farming or other development.
However, when
the scientists used the new satellite technique to estimate the area being destroyed
by selective logging they found it was comparable - indicating that the overall
rate of destruction was twice as high as previously thought. The
total volume of carbon released into the atmosphere as a result of selective logging
between 1999 and 2002 is between about 10 and 15 million tons, the scientists
estimated. This represents a 25 per cent increase in the overall flow of carbon
from the Amazonian forests into the atmosphere. Dr
Asner said: "This was totally surprising to us and alarming to our colleagues,
especially those interested in conservation, climate change and the ability of
governments like Brazil to enforce environmental laws." Selective
logging occurs when loggers go into an area of pristine forest to cut down the
most valuable individual trees, such as mahogany, causing enormous damage in the
process. "On average, for every tree removed, up to 30 more can be severely damaged
by the timber harvesting operation itself. That's because when trees are cut down,
the vines that connect them pull down the neighbouring trees," Dr Asner said.
"Logged forests
are areas of extraordinary damage. A tree crown can be 25 meters. When you knock
down a tree it causes a lot of damage in the understory. It's a debris field down
there," he said. Studies
of area subjected to selective logging have revealed that light penetrates to
the understory and dries out the forest floor, making it vulnerable to fires.
Selective logging
also involves bringing in heavy equipment using makeshift dirt roads that allows
other people to come in later and change the landscape even further, fuelling
the process of deforestation. The
satellite technique developed by the scientists at Stanford University and the
Carnegie Institution allows the scientists to peer through the dense forest canopy
to find out what is happening underneath. The
signals they have exploited show how much green vegetation is in the canopy, how
much dead material is on the forest floor and how much bare soil there is, Dr
Asner said. Over
the course of four years, the scientists amassed the first full survey of selective
logging across the Amazon basin. "We found much more selective logging than we
or anyone else had expected - between 4,600 and 8,000 square miles every year
of forest spread across five Brazilian states," said Dr Asner. To
make sure their assessments were correct, the scientists went out into the field
to compare their satellite data to what they could observe from the ground. The
findings confirmed their worst suspicions - that conventional satellite photography
has missed about half of the damage caused by illegal logging. "The
Brazilian government has laws against these logging operations, but they can't
enforce them over the enormous geography we're talking about," Dr Asner said.
"They can't have a cop on every corner, so our idea is to give them these results
in hopes that it might help their law enforcement effort," he said. |