Tragedy of Deforestation in the Amazon Rainforest

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Of all of the issues that effect the planet Earth from a Global Change standpoint, one of the most visible and highly publicized is the issue of rainforest destruction. The loss of this emerald on the planet's crown will end life as we know it, if something is not done... * Rain forests are shrinking at a rate of 100 acres per minute... There are primarily three activities which are causing rainforest destruction: agriculture, logging, and mining. Agriculture Agriculture is an absolute necessity for human life on Earth to continue. There are too many people on the planet for existence as hunters and gatherers to work anymore. That said, it must be realized that concessions must be made to allow such food growth and production to occur. But this does not mean that another important element of life on Earth can be destroyed for it. Unfortunately, that is indeed what is occurring, at an alarming rate. The rainforests of the planet are dwindling as the land they belong on is used more and more for agriculture, all over the world. In the Amazon, ,the most commonly detrimental agricultural practice is the technique of land clearing known as Slash and Burn. Slash and Burn This practice is a quick and economically inexpensive method or clearing land for grazing or raising crops. It is accomplished by cutting down all the trees and brush in an area, as fast as possible (Slash) and then setting fire to the area, to get rid of all of the mess (Burn). It has proved to be a quite efficient way to pointlessly destroy the forest, because the land shortly becomes arid and barren without the trees there to maintain it's former richness. This is compounded by the lack of crop-rotation, which only speeds up the process of dry des... ... middle of paper ... ..."scientific yardstick." * Enact a moratorium on new mining and logging concessions until there is a clearly defined policy on environmentally responsible mining, and reclamation standards have been established. * Establish an "early warning" monitoring system to minimize negative environmental and social impacts while increasing governmental capacity for effective oversight of forest extractive activities. * Develop a regional land-use plan in collaboration with local communities, local governments, ministry officials, non-governmental organizations and universities. * Demarcate indigenous territories, in consultation with indigenous peoples, and consider new collaborative arrangements between parks personnel and indigenous communities. * Publicly disclose and discuss government plans, such as environmental impact assessments or forest management plans.

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