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Peru Launches Drive To Regrow Lost Forests And Jungles
Lima (AFP) July 19, 2007 Peru has launched an ambitious drive to regrow millions of hectares (acres) of jungle and forests laid bare by illegal logging, pollution and slash-and-burn farming, officials said Thursday. The immediate goal is to reforest more than 100,000 square kilometers (the size of South Korea) of forest that have been devastated these past 40 years, said National Institute of Natural Resources (Inrena) president Roberto Angeles. Inrena has begun a massive planting program in Peru's Amazon jungle basin, along the Pacific coastline and in the Andes highlands with a variety of trees including eucalyptus, pine, cypress, walnut, cedar, alder, ash and poplar. In mahogany saplings alone, the institute plans to plant one million in the next two years. "The importance of managed forests is that they are fully exploitable, compared to natural forests which, when completely uprooted, would cause the destruction of the ecosystem," said Angeles. He said the reforestation program relies on 1,680 nurseries across the country that together can grow 52 million saplings per year and will soon be equipped with more efficient computer-regulated irrigation systems. Inrena said it currently manages some 200 square kilometers of forests around the country with 2,000 employees. By comparison, Chile manages 22,000 square kilometers of forest with 250,000 employees, and Brazil has 60,000 square kilometers managed by 800,000 employees. The Peruvian territory includes 680,000 square kilometers of forests, 93 percent in the Amazon jungle basin, four percent along the coastline and three percent in the Andean highlands. International environmental groups have estimated that Earth is losing its forest covering at the rate of five percent a year.
Source: Agence France-Presse Community Email This Article Comment On This Article Related Links Forestry News - Global and Local News, Science and Application
Increase In Creeping Vines Signals Major Shift In Southern US Forests Columbus OH (SPX) Jul 18, 2007 A new study of bottomland hardwood forests in the southeastern United States suggests that the increased growth of vines may change the landscape of these forests. Researchers charting the growth of vines in two forests in South Carolina found up to a 10-fold increase in the number of vines in just two decades. Vines commonly found in both forests include grapevines, trumpet vine, poison ivy and Virginia creeper. Most of the vines use adhesive roots or tendrils to climb trees. |
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