Deforestation in the Amazon Rainforest The Amazon Rainforest has evolved over millions of years to turn into the incredibly complex environments they are today. Rainforests represent a store of living and breathing renewable natural resources that for years, by virtue of their richness in both animal and plant species, have contributed a wealth of resources for the survival and well-being of humankind. These resources have included basic food supplies, clothing, shelter, fuel, spices, industrial…
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It’s complicated to define the ownership of the Amazon rainforest. The majestic landscape, also known as Amazonia, has been home to thousands of indigenous tribes millions of plant and animal species for countless years. The ancient forest caters as the primary resource of food and life for all inhabitants and contributes largely to the world’s ecosystem and homeostasis. However, in recent times the Brazilian government has expressed their desire to evolve the forest. This can be attributed to Brazil’s…
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environmental threats: deforestation, climate change, and the extraction of natural resources have resulted in animals becoming critically endangered throughout South America. Deforestation has posed a huge threat to species that live throughout the Amazon. Deforestation, which is the removal of trees in forests, takes place due to the expansion of agriculture for economic development. Poorer countries depend on agriculture as their main source of income and food. Farmers migrate to South America in…
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wake up and realize that they have destroyed all of their natural rainforest and medicinal plants; therefore ruining the chance of Earth’s survival. For what? For the beauty of exotic wood in their homes, or a romantic fire in their hearth. Throughout the next several years, deforestation could pump 200 billion tons of carbon into the atmosphere. Natural resources can only go so far without being replenished, and destroying rainforest without replanting is a great way to expend that resource. As the…
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The Amazon, famous for its immense biodiversity, is the world’s largest tropical rainforest in the whole world. Its rainforest area covers 1.4 billion acres. It is the home to millions of species of plants and animals (“Amazon Rainforest Facts”). It holds 30% of the world’s water supply, metals, and minerals (Kurian). The protection of the Amazon is an unsolved matter. Exploitation of the Amazon rainforest has both a positive and negative impact on the Indigenous people, ecosystem, and climate…
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and chemical means. All ecosystems are somewhat vulnerable however they all differ based on their level of vulnerability and adaptation to change which is typically caused by biophysical factors and human impacts. Cronulla sand dunes and the Amazon rainforest are two varying ecosystems which are affected by the wind, temperature, precipitation, global warming and erosion as well as human impacts such as trampling, seawall management, deforestation and mining. The atmosphere plays a pivotal role in…
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Would you like to hang upside 85 percent of your life (“Sloth Fact”)? If so, you might want to consider joining the three-toed sloths! They live in the canopies of the Amazon Jungle. Their bodies were designed to live in the trees. A sloth can have all its needs met while living up in the trees except one, although it also comes down occasionally for some fun! The Three-Toed Sloth is a mammal (“Brown-Throated Three-Toed Sloth”). The scientific genus is Bradypus. The family is Bradypodidae…
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BY: HEEYA SHAH 3N Contents Page What is rainforest?..................................................................................Page 3 Where are rainforests found?..................................................................Page 3 What kinds of animals and plants life are round the rainforest?.............Page 4 Indigenous people of the rainforests?.....................................................Page 4 Why are rain forests important?...............…
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With an estimate of about 10 million types of plants and animals, the amazon rainforest is the largest in the world, and creates about 20% of the world's oxygen. In the Amazon, around 17% of the forest has been lost in the last 50 years, mostly due to forest destruction for cattle ranching ( ). The more trees that are cut down, the less oxygen will be produced and more carbon dioxide will remain in the atmosphere. The Amazon Basin stores approximately 100 billion metric tons of carbon, more than…
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McDonald’s was the claim that the company’s beef was implicated in loss of tropical rainforest. However, as Matt Haig argues in his 2003 book Brand Failures: The Truth About the 100 Biggest Branding Mistakes of All Time, “very few people would now know about the contents of that pamphlet if McDonald’s hadn’t taken the matter to court”. Through the 1980s, allegations of the company’s complicity in rainforest destruction were aired by the BBC2 Nature programme, as well as appearing in articles in the…
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