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Detrimental Effects Of Deforestation On The Country Of Panama

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An estimated eighteen million areas of forest, which is roughly the size of the country of Panama, are lost each year due to deforestation, according to the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Deforestation has multiple detrimental effects on the Earth. Companies are illegally cutting down trees, forcing animals to have no choice but to change the way they live, or the result could be deadly. Also, destroying these precious trees, causes the climate in these areas to dramatically change, and affect the way we live, or survive. 100 Animals get affected everyday by deforestation. Nationalgeographic.com claims that eighty percent of Earth’s land animals live in the forest, and millions of species cannot survive, because …show more content…

In forests the soil is very moist, or wet, without the protection of tree-cover, the sun dries up all the terrain. Trees return water vapor in the atmosphere, thus helping to perpetuate the water cycle. The roles of trees are crucial to maintain a suitable environment for ecosystems that are inhabited in that precise area. The lush forests will quickly turn into uninhabited, barren, land. This disruption leads to more extreme temperature swings that can be harmful to biotic factors. Why is there so much precipitation in the rainforest? The answer is simple, the trees in the rainforest transport large quantities of water into the atmosphere using plant transpiration. “Plant transpiration is the evaporation of water from plants. It occurs chiefly at the leaves while their stomata are open for the passage of CO2 and O2 during photosynthesis,” states USGS Water Science School. Deforestation does not just affect the atmosphere, but one day the lush green forests people visit, will turn to nothing but dry, unwanted, …show more content…

From logging operations, where the world’s wood and paper products come from, to poor farmers who do not have the necessities to own a farm, so instead they cut down trees for their government to make money. In most of these tropical areas loggers are illegally killing off the rainforests. Also, many tropical countries face economic challenges. Governments sell logging concessions to raise money, and to pay worldwide debt. For example, according to NASA’s Earth Observatory Deforestation Library, “Brazil had an international debt of $159 billion in 1995, on which it must make payments annually, still to this day. The logging companies then harvest the forest to make profit from the sales of pulp and valuable hardwoods such as

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