Protect the forest
This photograph taken on February 24,
2014 during an aerial survey mission by Greenpeace in Central Kalimantan
province on Indonesia's Borneo Island, shows cleared trees to make way for a
palm oil plantation in a Borneo forest (AFP Photo/Bay Ismoyo)
Primary or ancient forests are
distinguished from managed forests, which are plantations of trees grown for
timber and pulp. The researchers found that primary forest loss
accelerated during the period under review, reaching an annual 840,000 hectares
by 2012 -- nearly twice the deforestation rate of Brazil, which was 460,000
hectares in the same year."Indonesia's forests contain high floral and faunal
biodiversity, including 10 percent of the world's plants, 12 percent of the
world's mammals, 16 percent of the world's reptile-amphibians and 17 percent of
the world's bird species," said the study, published in the journal Nature
Climate Change.
"Extensive clearing of Indonesian
primary forest cover directly results in habitat loss and associated plant and
animal extinctions." Deforestation is also a blow to the fight
against climate change, as ancient trees store more carbon emissions from the
atmosphere than new ones do, and for a longer period, thus mitigating global
warming. The research, led by geographer Belinda Margono of the University
of Maryland, looked at long-term satellite images.
During 2000-2012, total forest cover in
Indonesia retreated by 15.79 million hectares, of which 6.02 million, or 38
percent, was primary forest, the investigation found.
Distinguishing between primary and managed
forest is vital in the campaign to preserve biodiversity and combat climate
change, the paper said."It is critically important to know the context of
forest disturbance, whether of a high-biomass natural forest or a short-cycle
plantation," it said. "Similarly, the clearing of natural forest
has very different implications on the maintenance of biodiversity
richness."
"It noted that in 2010, the UN's Food and Agricultural
Organisation (FAO) put Indonesia's overall forest loss at 310,000 hectares per
year from 2000-2005, and 690,000 hectares annually from
2005-2010. Indonesia itself, in a report to the UN's Framework Convention
on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in 2009, estimated forest loss of 1.1 million
hectares annually from 2000-2005."
Margono's study found the biggest losers
were lowland and wetland forests in Sumatra and Kalimantan, where trees are
typically chopped down by loggers for use in farming. In other islands or
island groups -- Papua, Sulawesi, Maluku, Java and Bali and Nusa Tenggara --
primary forest cover fell back only slightly or remained stable from 2000-2012.

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