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Amazon Mangrove Forest Stores Twice As Much Carbon Per Acre As Region’s Famous Rainforest

September 26, 2018 |

By Jonathan Wilkins [CC BY-SA 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], from Wikimedia Commons

This article was originally published on Phys.org


“Scientists have determined for the first time that Amazon’s waterlogged coastal mangrove forests, which are being clear cut for cattle pastures and shrimp ponds, store significantly more carbon per acre than the region’s famous rainforest.

The long-term study, recently published in the journal Biology Letters, provides a better understanding of how  deforestation contributes to the greenhouse gas effect, one of the leading causes of global warming, said J. Boone Kauffman, an ecologist at Oregon State University who led the research.

The Brazilian mangrove forest fringes the entirety of the Atlantic Coast at the mouth of the Amazon, the largest river in the world with the largest mangrove forest. Although preservation of the Amazon rainforest has been the subject of intense awareness efforts over the last few decades, less attention has been paid to the Amazon mangroves.

Mangroves represent 0.6 percent of all the world’s tropical forests but their deforestation accounts for as much as 12 percent of  emissions that come from all tropical deforestation…”

Read on at: Phys.org

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