Saturday 26 October 2013

Welcome to the Jungle




Millions of distinctive ecosystems give rise to the biome of tropical rainforest that can be both the terrifying Jungle of our imagination or our myth’s Eden (Rainforest Alliance). Rainforests now only cover less than 6% of the Earth’s land, yet it is estimated by scientists that more than half of the world’s biodiversity resides there. It is astonishing that 40% of the Earth’s oxygen is produced by the rainforests(Blue Planet).

The Earth’s most diverse ecosystem is located between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn at 3 main geographical sites. As the map of Figure 1 shows, they are located in the Amazon basin in Central and South America, in Africa at the Zaire basin and the eastern part of Madagascar and in Southeast Asia from India’s west coast to Queensland, Australia.

Image: World maps of rain forests.
Figure 1: Map of the Tropical Rainforest of the World-indicates by the bright yellow colour (NatGeo)


Their proximity to the equator is key to their existence. Due to their location, rainforests have uniformly high temperatures ranging from 20°C to 30°C and receive annually ≥2 m/yr of rainfall (WWF). These factors in addition to the direct sunlight all year round contribute to the high net primary productivity (Rainforest Conservation).

Plants

The types of plants that exist in a rainforest are more than any other area on Earth. It is astounding that as much as 70% of the flora or the rainforests are trees. The rainforest generally consists of 4 distinct layers: forest floor, understory, upper canopy and emergent. These characteristics allow them to have close resemblance to on another.  They have straight smooth trunks up to the height of 100ft where there, they develop branches creating the canopy layer. At that layer, it is where all the fun happens. It is full of food and animals. Their trunks have a thin bark due to their adaptation to the tropical climate where there is no need for protection over water loss of freezing. Below that layer the understory layer there is not much light penetration through and thus there only very few trees and shrubs growing up to 60 ft. In addition to this the environment there is very humid as there is little air movement.  The lowest level at the forest floor only a few herbs are grown there. The topsoil or rainforests is very thin and poor in quality. It astonishes that Due to the humidity and micro fauna litter is broken where a leaf in an ordinary climate would decompose in 1 year, in the forest floor will only need 6 weeks. The top layer is the emergent where trees are quite spaced and can reach up to 240ft they are distinct since they grow above the canopy. Their trunks are very smooth and to support their gigantic size they grow the famous buttress roots for support over the thin topsoil (Blue Planet).

Figure 2: The Four Layers of the Rainforest (IHMC)

Animals

The colour pallet and patterns of all the types of animals living in rainforests is wonderful. Mammals and birds dominate the canopy .In the rainforest it is never quiet. The vocalizations of the animals are very distinct. Their diet is dependant heavily on fruits. The largest group of animals in the rainforest are insects that have developed various adaptations to camouflage from predation. These include butterflies with bright colours and ant colonies. Rainforests have the highest biodiversity of all biomes. It is estimated that in 1 hectare there could be 40-100 different species.

Even though they are very similar, each on the main rainforest areas around the world are home for different species of animals and trees. There are many species of monkeys that are endemic only to that particular rainforest and thus do not exist in the other 2 rainforests. There are also variations within a particular rainforest. In the Amazon Brazil, there are species of trees that only grow in the mountains and do not grow in the lowlands of the basin. This implies that the destruction of even a small part of such a rich and diverse biome will have an irreversible effect on biodiversity (Blue Planet).

The difference in their location and the species of each particular rainforest makes them special for our survival through the services that they provide to human kind. On the following blogs, I will be discussing the ecosystem services that the rainforest provide and you will be surprised on the amount as well as types of services provided.

Sunday 20 October 2013

From Holocene to Anthropocene

The Earth’s land surface has been ever changing in addition to vegetation cover. Before I dive into details of the three types of forests and their ecosystem services, I would like to provide an overview of the vegetation cover from the Last Glacial Maximum(LGM) and into the interglacial epoch of the Holocene.

Coming out of the glacial period, the Earth had been experiencing cold and arid conditions. According to palaeoevidence, the closed forests were far less than today and desserts were covering a larger part. The map on Figure 1 shows how the Earth is thought to be after the LGM (geoecho).
 
Figure 1: Vegetation cover after the Last Glacial Maximum (geoecho)
 
With thousands of years into the Early and Mid-Holocene, the vegetation cover changed with the warmer and wetter conditions brought about by the climate of the interglacial. The deserts were reduced and the forested areas were expanding (Figure 2) (geoecho).


Figure 2: Early Holocene vegetation cover (geoecho)

 
The map on Figure 3 shows of what is believed to be the original extend of forests in Mid-Holocene with the light green colour and the present day forest cover (Anthropocene) with the dark green colour. It is clear that the forests were reduced by half over this period although this may not be entirely due to human activity but also due to better environmental conditions during the Mid-Holocene such as higher temperature and different precipitation patterns.
 


Figure 3: The shrinking of the vegetation cover to the present day (WWF)
Yes, the vegetation cover has been changing for a long time, but what is different in the epoch of the Anthropocene? It is worth considering the causes of this change as well as the rate of change.

The fun will begin soon with my next blog post, as I will be exploring the biome of the Tropical rainforest.

Friday 11 October 2013

Introduction

Welcome to my first blog!


‘Forests in the Anthropocene’ is a course project for Global Environmental Processes (GEOGG131). I take this opportunity with great enthusiasm to explore the relationship between forests and this new epoch of the Anthropocene. Through my posts, I aim to cover several aspects with regards to  forests and their interaction with humans through the concept of ecosystem services as well as their ability to mitigate climate change.

First things first! I come from the island of Cyprus, where I have the benefit to appreciate nature through land and water. My love for nature gave me the drive to study BSc Environmental Science at the University of Nottingham and my concern about the future of humanity as far as environmental change is concerned, urged me to be currently studying for my Master’s degree in Climate Change at University College London. I find forests fascinating due to their complex interactions with air, water and life.

Enough about me! Forests are considered to be the ‘lungs’ in terms of atmosphere and the ‘heart’ of biodiversity of the Earth. They are biomes dominated by trees and woody undergrowth. There are three distinct types of forest. The Tropical Forests are the most ‘popular’ consisting of high biodiversity on fauna and flora located in the tropics, Temperate Forests are located in the Mid Latitudes and the Boreal Forests are occurring mainly in the Northern Hemisphere between 50 and 60 degrees (ucmp) . Overall, they account for 90% of life that is based on land (WWF). They are a source of income to millions of people around the world adding up to services such as food, fuel and shelter (ucmp; WWF). Forests used to cover the majority of the land’s surface. Today, it is thought that it has decreased by 80% and half of it was vanished over the last 30 years. It is estimated that there is a loss of forest area equal to the size of England. Could this be all natural? What are the consequences of the shrinking of forests (ucmp; WWF; theguardian)?

We live during the Anthropocene, the epoch whereby human activity has become a geological force (Steffen W., Crutzen P.J and McNeill J.R.) .  Could anthropogenic effects cause this rapid decrease in forest area? Is there a negative relationship between the two?

These are questions that I hope to answer by exploring this topic, in addition to highlight their importance and to discuss the different views of scientists, reporters and politicians. This blue planet we are living in is a wonderful world and it is important to conserve it so that future generations can enjoy what we can.

I will leave you to a short video from WWF that will remind you to the feelings that evoke through forests (WWF).