1 / 12

The Importance of Rainforests

The Importance of Rainforests. By Maria Ximena Arteaga, Daniella Blanco, Carolina Fuchs , Marie Claire Garnier and Maria Itziar Aguilar . Biodiversity and impacts in rainforests.

oke
Download Presentation

The Importance of Rainforests

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. TheImportance of Rainforests By Maria Ximena Arteaga, Daniella Blanco, Carolina Fuchs, Marie Claire Garnierand Maria Itziar Aguilar

  2. Biodiversity and impacts in rainforests • Biodiversity has become a major environmental issue this last decades since environments are being degraded at an accelerating rate. • In many parts of the world much diversity is being lost by the destruction of natural habitats • The IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) Red List (animals in danger) stated that a third of amphibians, 23% of mammals, 12% of birds and around 20% of plants and fish are threaten with extinction.

  3. Causes Some of the reasons researchers have found are: • Habitat loss • Overexploitation • Destruction by invasive alien species • Climate change • Living dead species are reffered to the species which are low in numbers in which they cannot maintain a viable populatio • Current species loss has been about 1000 times the ‘background’ rate experienced before the Industrial Revolution • Predictions that alarm everyone is that as many as a half of all current species could be lost.

  4. Biodiversityhotspots • This are areas of particularly high biodiversity within countries. • It has been estimated than 25 land-based hotspots which only cover 1.4% of the Earth’s surface is distributed this way: - 25% of all birds - 54% of amphibians - 30% of mammals - 44% of plants

  5. Ecologicalvalue • Makesecosystems more stable and less vulnerable to extreme events • Strength of natural cycles: energy, water, carbon, oxygen and nitrogencycle. • Helptomaintainhumidenvironment and more variety of species.

  6. Example: Amazon rainforest • providesessentialenvironmentalservice of continuouslyrecyclingcarbondioxideintooxygen. • 20% of world’soxygen • Known as thelungs of theplanet.

  7. Economicvalue • bologicallydiversenatualenvironmentsprodive human populationwiththenecessities of life and formsthebasisfortheeconomy (food, primarygoods, etc.) • evrythingwe use and trade comes fromthe natural world

  8. Crops and plantations • 1650 known tropical forestplantshavethepotentialgrow as vegetable crops, whichincrementsthevaritety of cropsgrownnow a days. • 30 cropssupplyabout 90% of thecalories in the global human diet

  9. Health and Medicine • rainforest flora isanimportantresoure of medicines and drugs. • 25% of western pharmaceiticals are derivedfromrainforestingredients • 3000 plantspecies are active combatersagainstcancercells and 70% of them are found in the tropical rainforest • 25% of the active ingredients in cancer-fightingdrugs come fromthe tropical rainforestsexclusively.

  10. Cultural Value • mostpeoplefeelconnectedtonature in varyingdegrees • somepeoplefeelstrong spiritual bondsthantmay be rooted in ourcommonbiologicalancestry • the cultural diversity in inextricablylinkedtoEarth'sbiodiversity • thousands of cultural groupsaroundtheworldeachhavedistincttraditions and knowledgeforrelatingtothe natural world

  11. in rainforestsindigenouspeoplewhohavelived in theseenvironmenttforthousands of yearsusually place verydifferentvaluesontherainforestenvoronment in contrasttooutsidegroupscomingintothebiome • because of itsintrinsiccharacteristics, manypeoplefromotherenvironmentsnowvisitorwanttovisitareas of rainforest

  12. Rainforest Uses… • directuse values( goods): food, medicines, buildingmaterials, fibre and fuel • indirect use values (servieces): atmospheric and climateregulation, pollination, nutrientrecyclying. cultural, spiritual and aesthetic. • non-use values: potentialvalue ( futurevalueeither as a goodor a servie), exitencevalue (value of knowingsomethingexists), bequestvalue ( value of knowingthatsomethingwill be thereforfuturegenerations)

More Related