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November
13, 2006 An
increasing number of countries and regions are transitioning from
deforestation
to afforestation, raising hopes for a turning point for the world as a
whole,
according to researchers advancing a more sophisticated approach to
measuring
forest cover. The
novel approach looks beyond simply how much of a nation’s
area is covered by
trees and considers the volume of timber, biomass, and captured carbon
within
the area. It produces an encouraging picture of Earth’s
forest situation and
may change the way governments size up their woodland resources in
future. Devised
by six distinguished international academic and non-governmental
experts in
forestry science and economics, the “Forest
Identity” considers both area and
the density of trees per hectare to determine the volume of a
country’s
“growing stock”: trees large enough to be
considered timber. The formula also
quantifies the biomass and atmospheric carbon stored in world forests
and will
help track those forest characteristics over time. Applying
the formula to UN-collected data released last year, the researchers
find that,
amid widespread concerns about deforestation, growing stock has in fact
expanded over the past 15 years in 22 of the world’s 50
countries with most
forest. In countries where per capita Gross Domestic Product exceeds US
$4,600
(roughly equal to the GDP of Chile), richer is greener. In about half
of the
most forested countries biomass and carbon also expanded. Earlier work
showed
that by the 1980s wooded areas in all major temperate and boreal
forests were
expanding. Forest
area and biomass are still being lost in such important countries as The
paper, peer-reviewed by the U.S. journal Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences, was created by six
experts from
diverse academic disciplines (forestry, environmental technology,
ecology,
geography, resource economics, and agronomy) in China, Finland,
Scotland, and
the USA who, following independent lines of thinking, came to agree
that forest
transition on a major scale is underway and have now collectively
demonstrated
it. The
new way of measuring forests reflects the comprehensiveness of new FAO
studies,
a new consistency of measurement protocols and reliable ways of
translating
area, volume, and tons across countries. Growing
stock fell fastest in In
absolute terms, “The
Forest Identity separates nations into classes of expanding and
shrinking
forest that clarify the causes of changing forest expanse, timber,
biomass, and
carbon,” says lead author, Pekka E. Kauppi of the University
of Helsinki,
Finland. The co-authors are Jesse H. Ausubel, Rockefeller University,
USA;
Jingyun Fang, Peking University, Beijing, China; Alexander Mather,
University
of Aberdeen, Scotland; Roger A. Sedjo, Resources for the Future, USA;
and Paul
E. Waggoner, The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, USA. Says
Mr. Ausubel, an environmental scientist: “Earth suffered an
epidemic of
deforestation. Now humans may help spread an epidemic of forest
restoration.” Changes in Growing
Stock, 1990 to 2005 Using
data from the Global Forest Resources Assessment of 2005, published by
the UN
Food and Agriculture Organization, the researchers plot on a graph the
shift
from 1990 to 2005 in the forest density and area of 50 countries to
reveal the
change in their respective growing stock. The
authors say The
graph shows With
one exception, the growing stock grew from 1990 to 2005 in the 50 most
forested
nations with more than about $4,600 GDP per capita. In the exception, Evidently,
prosperity and measures such as good governance that raise income need
not
shrink forests, according to the paper. While
forest density data are relatively new, forest area data spanning 200
years
show several places worldwide have shifted from net deforestation to
net
reforestation – the “forest transition.” “Forest
transitions,” says geographer and historian Dr. Mather, who
coined the term,
“occurred between 1810 and 1930 from the lowlands of In
In
the While
forest resources are stable or increasing in countries where per capita
GDP exceeds
US $4,600, the results in In
Other
Asian countries that have made the transition include The
authors foresee still more nations achieving forest transitions within
three
decades. When
forest transition occurs at a global level depends largely on Says
Dr. Kauppi: “The main obstacles to forest transition are
fast-growing poor
populations who burn wood to cook, sell it for quick cash, and clear
forest for
crops. Harvesting biomass for fuel also forestalls the restoration of
land to
nature. Through paper recycling and a growing reliance on electronic
communication, people help the transition by lessening demand for wood
products.” Anticipating Impacts
of Expanding Global Trade The
authors note that it’s possible to sustain a large commercial
harvest and
expand “growing stock” at the same time. Says
economist Dr. Sedjo: “The The
authors also predict the share of industrial wood production in forest
plantations will grow from an estimated one-third today to half by 2025
and
three-quarters by 2050. “Plantations
and the trade to make them effective reduce the impact of industrial
pressures
on the expanse of natural forests, which may be rich in soil carbon and
biodiversity,” adds Dr. Sedjo. Implications for
Climate Change In
addition to the measurement of forest area and growing stock, the
researchers
offer a formula to calculate atmospheric carbon being stored
incrementally in
the trees of a given area, knowledge critical for mitigating climate
change. Says
Dr. Waggoner: “A rapid forest transition at a global scale
would mean that
atmospheric CO2 might not rise as fast as many fear.” As
well, forest transitions are good news for wildlife like tigers and
moose whose
forest habitat has been decimated by human activity. Skinhead Earth? Earlier
research showed farmers have so successfully learned to extract more
crop from
a given area that land needed for agriculture is shrinking, even as
people
become more numerous and eat better. In many countries forests have
begun to
enlarge, as farmers spare land and foresters also shift from extensive
to
intensive strategies. Says
Mr. Ausubel: “This great reversal in land use could stop the
styling of a
Skinhead Earth and begin a great restoration of the landscape by 2050,
expanding the global forest by 10 percent – about 300 million
hectares, the
area of “Without
depopulation or impoverishment, increasing numbers of countries are
experiencing transitions in forest area and density,” adds
Dr. Kauppi. “While
complacency would be misplaced, our insights provide grounds for
optimism about
the prospects for returning forests.” ##
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