What is the historical state of this ecosystem?
Before the
Industrial Revolution, the Amazon Rainforest of Brazil enjoyed a limited
relationship with those who wished to exploit it. While members of western civilization came and went, the Amazon was mostly home to native tribes like the Tupis and Tapuias. However, with the dawn of advances in new
machinery and technology, loggers, rubber harvesters, and those who otherwise
wished to extract resources from this ecosystem could more easily do so. Issues of tribal displacement and loss of
species diversity—related to massive deforestation—abounded.
---Malhi, Yadvinder. Tropical Forests & Global Atmospheric Change. Oxford: Oxford Univ., 2005. Print.
What are the current human impacts?
<http://sitemaker.umich.edu/section2group3/results_and_discussion> |
<http://sitemaker.umich.edu/section2group3/results_and_discussion> |
Likely future prospects for this ecosystem?
Assuming that humans continue to ravage this ecosystem in
the way we do now, the future of the Amazon in Brazil looks bleak. Giant clearings of trees thin the canopy
(allowing sunlight to reach the forest floor) and suck moisture from the
surrounding forest. This dries leaf
litter and causes trees to die, which in turn promotes recurring fires. As a result of these fires, smoke clouds the
air, and inhibits cloud formation, drying out and destroying the forest as it
exists today.
Additionally, the "greenhouse" effect that takes place, in part because of deforestation, may take a horrifying toll on the Amazon. A 4 °C rise in global temperatures by 2100 would kill 85% of the Amazon rainforest while a temperature rise of only 3 °C would kill 75% of it. Whether these come to pass or not, global climate change is having a decidedly negative effect on this ecosystem.
Additionally, the "greenhouse" effect that takes place, in part because of deforestation, may take a horrifying toll on the Amazon. A 4 °C rise in global temperatures by 2100 would kill 85% of the Amazon rainforest while a temperature rise of only 3 °C would kill 75% of it. Whether these come to pass or not, global climate change is having a decidedly negative effect on this ecosystem.
---<http://news.mongabay.com/2008/0801-amazon.html>
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