World’s tropical forests – A look in to what future holds
The recent Smithsonian’s Symposium: “Will the
rainforests survive? New Threats and Realities in the Tropical Extinction
Crisis” had some interesting observations. It brought together the world's
foremost authorities on different aspects of rainforest science.
One of the main arguments put forward was that the
extinction crisis might not be as bad as predicted due to the significance of
secondary forests and other degraded landscapes, which may allow the
preservation of certain species. Robin Chazdon, a professor at the University
of Conneticut who has studied secondary forests for twenty-five years, stated
that secondary forests and other non-primary growth landscapes has great
relevance for biodiversity conservation. According to him these are the areas
that needs focused attention in order to conserve most of our biodiversity. A
study in Veracruzm Mexico came up with the finding that bird biodiversity was
actually greater in shade grown coffee farms than in the forest. In the Western
Ghats of India, where cultivation has been practiced for 2,000 years, arecanut
agriculture retains 90 percent of the bird biodiversity of the forest. In the
largely degraded and devastated Atlantic Forest of Brazil chocolate grown under
the canopy provides homes for 70 percent of many species, including birds,
bats, butterflies, mammals, ferns, lizards and frogs. In Costa Rica, scientists
discovered that a forest less than twenty years old had 90 percent of forest
tree species either already growing or as seedlings. On the other hand soybean
fields have been found to be devoid of biodiversity. Biodiversity is abysmally
poor in palm oil plantations. Palm oil plantations have been shown to retain
only 15 percent of species from the lost forest.
Entomologist Nigel Stork from the University of Melbourne argued that the
scientists who predicted extinction rates of 50-75 percent did not take into
account that certain groups of species, such as birds and mammals, are more
prone to extinction than other groups like insects. Large body size, small
restricted range, low number of young, top of the food chain, high specificity
to another organism, and low physiological adaptation make a species more
vulnerable to extinction.
One place where the scientists at the Symposium largely
agreed was the threat posed by climate change to the tropics and the inability
to know how it would affect biodiversity in the region. All the participants
believe that this is a much greater threat to biodiversity in the tropics than
habitat destruction. Tropical species are much more sensitive to small
increases in temperature than temperate species. Tropical species would have to travel much greater distances than
temperate species to find habitat within their normal range of temperatures.
According to Gregory Asner of the Carnegie Institution,
deforestation is still the dominant pattern in tropical forests worldwide. To
be precise it is on the rise. With the globalization of trade, deforestation
mainly occurs for industrialized agriculture, such as soy and palm oil, and for
logging to produce wood products meant for export to the West. Consumption by
wealthy nations, and not local needs, is largely driving contemporary
deforestation.
At the end of the symposium all the speakers foresaw mass
extinction in the future of the tropics, unless drastic ameliorative actions
are taken on a war footing. While the extinction may not reach 50-75 percent,
since insects dominate the world, it would certainly have a devastating effect
on the world’s vertebrates. Robin
Chazdon argued that in order to ensure enough habitats, secondary forests and
agroforestry should be supported. A conservation action plan for such areas is
the need of the hour.
|