In the context of the climate crisis, the world’s forests are often discussed and valued for their ability to absorb some of humanity’s carbon pollution, helping to limit the risk of runaway global heating. But trees are much more than standing sticks of carbon. Forests are the primary habitat for many of the world’s unique plants, fungi and creatures.
Thomas Lovejoy, an Amazon research scientist who died recently, was among the first people to use the term “biodiversity” in the 1980s. In the years since, it has become all too clear that an ongoing, catastrophic loss of that diversity is among the world’s major environmental challenges. The world’s hotspots of biodiversity, and therefore the places where the losses are most acute, are the tropical forests of Amazonia, the Congo Basin and Indonesia.
The pace of the losses is hard to characterise, since humanity has no clear fix on historical rates of extinction that can be used to compare with the modern rate. But as far as scientists can tell, species are now being lost hundreds of times faster than they were during relatively stable periods of Earth’s history. There appears to be a real possibility that we have embarked upon the sixth great extinction of plants and animals in Earth’s history, this one precipitated by human mismanagement of the environment.
A great deal of human activity contributes to this loss. The oceans are still being fished in ways that are wholly unsustainable. Water pollution and the spread of toxic chemicals into the environment appear to be major factors. But the biggest single issue is certainly the loss of habitat, due to human land clearance for agriculture. In short, we are wiping out creatures and plants by destroying the only places they can live.
The effort to save the world’s forests must be seen in this context. They are not just carbon sinks, and their salvation cannot be financed by pretending that forests are offsetting industrial emissions in the global North. The forests are worth saving for their own sake, and the citizens of rich countries ought to be willing to pay poor tropical countries to keep them intact.