Overlogging
Overlogging is a form of overexploitation caused by legal or illegal logging activities that lead to unsustainable or irrecoverable deforestation and permanent habitat destruction for forest wildlife.
Causes
[edit | edit source]The use of poor logging practices and heavy machinery leads to overlogged forests.[1] Norman Myers argued that forms of environmental degradation like overlogging are a consequence of "perverse subsidies."[2] The production of disposable tissues significantly contributes to the effects of overlogging.[3]
In rural China, overlogging is related to the need for firewood as fuel.[4] Overlogging is often associated with attempts at reducing the "Third world debt," although it is not restricted to developing countries.[5]
In central Japan, forests located closer to power plants were found to be more vulnerable to overlogging.[6]
Effects
[edit | edit source]With the developed world's growing demand for pulp and paper, overlogging is an imminent threat to Earth's forests.[3]
Overlogging has caused significant damage to dipterocarp forests in Southeast Asia,[1] including in Vietnam.[7] In the Philippines, overlogging has created brushlands comprising relict trees, shrubs, and grasses.[8] As of 1994, overlogging had led to the loss of 1.2 million hectares of Russia's forests.[9]
In China, tropical forests were affected by overlogging prior to the establishment of the People's Republic in 1949, and they were overlogged during the Cultural Revolution from 1966 to 1976.[10] The process has created post-extraction secondary forests.[10] At the Nature Reserve of Jinyun Mountain in Chongqing, overlogging affects the growth of Phyllostachys pubescens (giant bamboo).[11] It is also a problem in the Karakoram and Kunlun Mountains,[12] and it has caused flooding in the Min River Area of Fujian.[13]
Restoration
[edit | edit source]The restoration of overlogged forests can be important to the conservation of biodiversity or the availability of natural resources like water and carbon for local populations.[1]
The effects of overlogging can be mitigated by setting aside profits for forest rehabilitation, a practice which is also economically profitable.[14] Enrichment planting, or planting trees in degraded forests, is a form of artificial regeneration that has been employed in East Kalimantan and South Kalimantan, Indonesia.[1] A logging quota was established in China in 1987; it has stopped deforestation and degradation but has not led to forest regeneration.[15]
In 1996, in response to activism regarding overlogging by corporations in Malaysia, the primary industries minister led a forestry mission to see the impact.[16]
Representations
[edit | edit source]The works of Frederic Edwin Church, a 19th-century American painter who often portrayed the progress of industrialization in his landscapes, indicate that he was "aware that overlogging led to erosion and the pollution of streams."[17]
See also
[edit | edit source]References
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- ^ Yong'an, Shen Fengge Wang. "On Strategic Choice of Energy in Rural Sustainable Development." Journal of Beijing Forestry Management Staff College (2002).
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- ^ Ut, Ngo, and Tran Van Con. "The evaluation and classification of rehabilitated forest site after over logging in east-southern Vietnam." Science and Technology Journal of Agriculture and Rural Development (2009).
- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ Speranskaya, O A. The Russian forest as an element in stabilizing global climatic change. United States: N. p., 1994. Web.
- ^ a b Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ Li, R., Werger, M.J.A., During, H.J. et al. Biennial variation in production of new shoots in groves of the giant bamboo Phyllostachys pubescens in Sichuan, China. Plant Ecology 135, 103–112 (1998). Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
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