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{{otheruses4|the process of deforestation in the environment|the program transformation in computer science|Deforestation (computer science)}}
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{{redirect|Deforest|the people with the name Deforest|DeForest}}
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[[Image:Deforestationriobranco.jpg|thumb|right|300px|A [[NASA]] satellite observation of illegal deforestation near [[Rio Branco]] in Brazil observed July 28 2000]]
'''Sultan''' ({{lang-ar|سلطان}}) is an [[Islam]]ic title, with several historical meanings. Originally it was an Arabic language abstract noun meaning "strength", "authority", or "rulership", derived from the Arabic ''[[verbal noun|masdar]]'' سلطة ''sulṭah'', meaning "authority" or "power". Later, it came to be used as the title of certain Muslim rulers who claimed almost full sovereignty in practical terms (i.e., the lack of dependence on any higher ruler), without claiming the overall [[Caliphate]], or it was used to refer to a powerful governor of a province within the caliphate. It then developed some further meanings in certain contexts.
[[Image:Djouce.jpg|thumb|300px|[[Djouce]] Mountain, along with the island of [[Ireland]], was systematically [[Clearfelling|clear-felled]] during the 17th and 18th centuries, in order to obtain wood mainly for shipbuilding.]]
[[Image:hatemibeyazit.jpg|thumb|250px|Sultan Bayezid: Ottoman Empire - Oil on Canvas by [[Haydar Hatemi]]-1999]]
'''Deforestation''' is the conversion of [[forest]]ed areas to non-forest land for use such as [[arable land]], [[pasture]], [[urban area|urban]] use, logged area, or wasteland. Since the tropical rainforests are the most diverse ecosystems on earth<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/geography/ecosystems/ecosystemsrainforestrev1.shtml Tropical rainforests - The tropical rainforest], BBC</ref><ref>[http://library.thinkquest.org/11353/trforest.htm Tropical Rainforest]</ref> and about 80% of the world's known [[biodiversity]] could be found in tropical rainforests<ref>[http://www.reuters.com/article/environmentNews/idUSMAN18800220080620 U.N. calls on Asian nations to end deforestation], Reuters</ref><ref>[http://www.rain-tree.com/facts.htm Rainforest Facts]</ref> removal or destruction of significant areas of forest cover has resulted in a [[Soil degradation|degraded]]<ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/geography/ecosystems/ecosystemsrainforestrev4.shtml Tropical rainforests - Rainforest water and nutrient cycles], BBC</ref> environment with reduced biodiversity{{vague}} <!--Seems like s a total non sequitur. Why does high biodiversity result in a soil degradation--><ref>[http://news.mongabay.com/2007/0702-gardner.html Primary rainforest richer in species than plantations, secondary forests], July 2, 2007 </ref> In a few countries, massive{{which}}<ref>[http://www.newsfromafrica.org/newsfromafrica/articles/art_9607.html Massive deforestation threatens food security]</ref> deforestation is ongoing and is shaping [[climate]] and [[geography]]. Deforestation results from removal of trees without sufficient [[reforestation]], and results in declines in biodiversity. <ref>http://www.actionbioscience.org/environment/nilsson.html Do We Enough Forests?
The dynasty and lands ruled by a Sultan are called a '''Sultanate''' ([[Arabic language|Arabic]]: سلطنة).
By Sten Nilsson </ref>


From about the mid-1800s, around 1852, the planet has experienced an unprecedented{{which}} <!--unprecedented since when?--> rate of change of destruction of forests worldwide {{fact}}. Forests in [[Europe]] are adversely affected by [[acid rain]]<ref>[http://www.fao.org/forestry/docrep/wfcxi/publi/V1/T5E/3-43.HTM ASSESSMENT OF DEFORESTATION BY ACID RAIN], FAO</ref> and large areas of [[Siberia]] have been harvested since the collapse of the [[Soviet Union]].<ref>[http://www.american.edu/TED/TAIGA.HTM Taiga Deforestation]</ref> In the last two decades, [[Afghanistan]] has lost over 70% of its forests throughout the country.<ref>[http://www.yubanet.com/artman/publish/article_62235.shtml Afghanistan: Environmental crisis looms as conflict goes on], July 30, 2007</ref> However, it is in the world's great [[tropical rainforests]]<ref>[http://news.mongabay.com/2008/0117-biofuels.html U.S. biofuels policy drives deforestation in Indonesia, the Amazon]</ref> where the destruction is most pronounced at the current time and where [[clearcutting]] is having an adverse effect on [[biodiversity]] and contributing to the ongoing [[Holocene mass extinction]].<ref>Leakey, Richard and Roger Lewin, 1996, ''The Sixth Extinction : Patterns of Life and the Future of Humankind'', Anchor, ISBN 0-385-46809-1</ref><ref>[http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/the-great-rainforest-tragedy-542135.html The great rainforest tragedy], The Independent</ref>
==Muslim ruler under the terms of ''shariah''==
[[Image:HusseinKamelSultan.jpg|thumb|Hussein Kamel, Sultan of [[Egypt]], 1914-1917.]] The title carries moral weight and religious authority, as the ruler's role was defined in the [[Qur'an]]. The Sultan however is not a religious teacher himself. Of course in constitutional monarchies, the sultanship can be reduced to a more limited role.
The first to carry the title of 'Sultan' was the Turkmen chief [[Mahmud of Ghazni]] (ruled [[998]] - [[1030]]). Later, 'Sultan' became an usual title of rulers of [[Seljuk Turks|Seljuk]] and [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] Turks and [[Ayyubid dynasty|Ayyubid]] and [[Mamelukes|Mamluk]] rulers in [[Egypt]]. In the later stages Sultan was used mostly for the wives of the emperor. The religious validation of the title was illustrated by the fact that the shadow [[Caliph]] in [[Cairo]] bestowed the title "Sultan" on [[Murad I]], the third ruler of the emerging Ottoman Empire in [[1383]]; its earlier sovereigns had been (protocollary 'mere') [[Bey]]s or [[Emir]]s.
At later stages, lesser rulers assumed the style "sultan", as was the case for the earlier leaders of today's royal family of [[Morocco]]. Today, only the [[Sultan of Oman]], the [[Sultan of Brunei]] (both sovereign nations), the Sultans of [[Johor]], [[Kedah]], [[Kelantan]], [[Pahang]], [[Perak]], [[Selangor]] and [[Terengganu]] (within the constitutive states of the federation) in [[Malaysia]], and the titular sultans of Sulu and Maguindanao in the [[Mindanao|southern Philippines]] and [[Java island|Java (Indonesia)]] regions still use the title. The sultan's domain is properly called a '''sultanate'''. A feminine form, used by Westerners, is [[Sultana (title)|sultana]] or sultanah; the very styling misconstrues the roles of wives of sultans. In a similar usage, the wife of a German Field-Marshal might be styled ''Feldmarschallin'' (in French, similar constructions of the type ''madame la maréchalle'' are quite common).
Among those modern hereditary rulers who wish to emphasize their secular authority under the [[rule of law]], the term is gradually being replaced by 'king' (i.e. [[Malik]] in Arabic).


About half of the mature [[tropical forest]]s, between 7.5 million to 8 million square kilometres (2.9 million to 3 million sq mi) of the original 15 million to 16 million square kilometres (5.8 million to 6.2 million sq mi) that until, 1947 <ref>[http://www.worldbookonline.com/wb/article?id=ar704660 Deforestation By: Paul F. Maycock], WorldBookOnline</ref>{{when}} <!--Once when? In 1900? In 1800? In 1492? In 3000BC?--> covered the planet have been cleared.<ref name="Nielsen">Ron Nielsen, ''The Little Green Handbook: Seven Trends Shaping the Future of Our Planet'', Picador, New York (2006) ISBN 978-0312425814</ref> The forest loss is already acute in [[Southeast Asia]],<ref>[http://www.asianews.it/index.php?l=en&art=5728 CHINA: China is black hole of Asia's deforestation], Asia News, March 24, 2006</ref> the second of the world's great biodiversity hot spots.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3090071.stm SE Asia faces 'catastrophic' extinction rate], BBC News</ref> More than 40% of the animal and plant species in Southeast Asia could be wiped out in the 21st century.<ref>[http://www.newscientist.com/channel/life/endangered-species/dn3973 Biodiversity wipeout facing South East Asia], New Scientist, 23 July 2003</ref> Much of what remains is in the [[Amazon basin]], where the [[Amazon Rainforest]] covered {{when}} more than 6 million square kilometres. The forests are being destroyed at a pace tracking the [[overpopulation|rapid pace of human population growth]].<ref>[http://www.fao.org/sd/WPdirect/WPan0050.htm SD : People : Population and deforestation], [[FAO]]</ref> Unless significant{{Vague|date=September 2008}} measures such as: seeking out and protecting old growth forests that haven't been disturbed<ref>[http://www.worldbookonline.com/wb/article?id=ar704660 Deforestation By: Paul F. Maycock], WorldBookOnline</ref>, are taken on a worldwide basis to preserve them, by 2030 there will only be ten percent remaining <ref name="Wilson" /><ref name="Nielsen" /> with another ten percent in a degraded condition.<ref name="Wilson" /> 80 percent will have been lost and with them the irreversible loss of hundreds of thousands of species.<ref name="Wilson" />
==Compound ruler titles==
These are generally secondary titles, either lofty 'poetry' or with a message; e.g.:
*'''Mani Sultan = Manney Sultan''', meaning 'the Pearl or rulers', or less poetically Honoured Monarch, was a subsidiary title, part of the full style of the [[Maharaja]] of [[Travancore]]
* [[Sultan of Sultans]] is the 'sultanic equivalent' of [[King of Kings]]
* Certain secondary titles have a devout Islamic connotation, e.g. [[Sultan ul-Mujahidin]] as champion of [[jihad bis saif]] (holy war to establish Islamic rule)
* '''Sultanic Highness''' was a rare, hybrid western-Islamic honorific style, exclusively used by the son, daughter-in-law and daughters of Sultan [[Husain Kamil]] of [[Egypt]] (a British [[protectorate]] since 1914), who bore it with their primary titles of Prince (Arabic [[Amir]], Turkish [[Prens]]) or Princess, after 11 October 1917. They enjoyed these for life, even after the Royal Rescript regulating the styles and titles of the Royal House after the Egyptian Independence in 1922, when the sons and daughters of the newly styled King (Arabic Misr al-[[Malik]], considered a promotion) were granted the style ''Sahib(at) us-Sumuw al-Malik'', or [[Royal Highness]]).


Many tropical countries, including [[Mexico]], [[Brazil]], [[India]], [[Philippines]], [[Indonesia]], [[Thailand]], [[Myanmar]], [[Malaysia]], [[Bangladesh]], [[China]], [[Sri Lanka]], [[Laos]], [[Nigeria]], [[Democratic Republic of the Congo|Congo]], [[Liberia]], [[Guinea]], [[Ghana]] and the [[Cote d'lvoire]] have lost large areas of their [[rainforest]].<ref>[http://www.mongabay.com/deforestation_rate_tables.htm Chart - Tropical Deforestation by Country & Region]</ref><ref>[http://www.rainforestweb.org/Rainforest_Destruction/ Rainforest Destruction]</ref> Rainforests 50 years ago covered 14% of the worlds land surface, they now only cover 6%.<ref>[http://www.rain-tree.com/facts.htm]</ref> 90% of the forests of the [[Philippine]] [[archipelago]] have been cut.<ref>[http://www.fieldmuseum.org/Vanishing_Treasures/Deforestation_1.htm The Lost Forest]</ref> In 1960 [[Central America]] still had 4/5 of its original forest; now it is left with only 2/5. [[Madagascar]] has lost 95% of its rainforests. [[Brazil]] has lost 90-95% of its [[Mata Atlântica]] forest.<ref>[http://kids.mongabay.com/lesson_plans/lisa_algee/deforestation.html What is Deforestation?]</ref> Half of the [[Brazil]]ian state of [[Rondonia]]'s 243,000 km² have been destroyed or severely degraded in recent years.<ref>[http://www.eorc.jaxa.jp/ALOS/img_up/pal_forest_amz_rondonia.htm Eleven years' deforestation in Amazon Rondonia]</ref> As of 2007, less than 1% of [[Haiti]]'s forests remain.<ref>[http://www.satglobal.com/cfpap2.htm International Conference on Reforestation and Environmental Regeneration of Haiti]</ref> Between 1990 and 2005, [[Nigeria]] lost 81% of its old-growth forests.<ref>[http://rainforests.mongabay.com/20nigeria.htm Nigeria: Environmental Profile]</ref> Several countries,<ref>[http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/environment/2008-01-24-brazil-amazon_N.htm Amazon deforestation rises sharply in 2007], USATODAY.com, January 24, 2008</ref> notably the [[Brazil]], have declared their deforestation a national emergency.<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/brazil/story/0,,1488468,00.html Rainforest loss shocks Brazil]</ref>
==Former Sultans and Sultanates==
===Middle East and Central Asia===
*[[Ghaznavid Empire|Ghaznavid Sultanate]]
*[[Seljuk Empire|Sultans of Great Seljuk]]
*[[Sultanate of Rüm|Seljuk Sultanate of Rum]]
*[[Ottoman Dynasty|Sultans]] (becoming [[Padishah]]s) of the [[Ottoman Empire]], the [[House of Osman|Osmanli]]
*[[Ayyubid dynasty|Ayyubid Sultans of Damascus]] (in Syria)
*in present-day [[Yemen]], various small sultanates of the former British [[Aden Protectorate]] and [[Federation of South Arabia|South Arabia]]:
::[[Audhali]], [[Fadhli Sultanate|Fadhli]], [[Haushabi]], [[Kathiri]], [[Sultanate of Lahej|Lahej]], [[Lower Aulaqi]], [[Lower Yafa]], [[Mahra Sultanate|Mahra]], [[Qu'aiti]], [[Subeihi]], [[Upper Aulaqi Sultanate|Upper Aulaqi]], [[Upper Yafa]] and the [[Wahidi]] sultanates
*in present-day [[Saudi Arabia]] :
**[[Nejd|Sultans of Nejd]]
**[[Hejaz|Sultans of the Hejaz]]


==Impact on the environment==
===Hami===
[[Image:Bolivia-Deforestation-EO.JPG|thumb|right|300px|Orbital photograph of human deforestation in progress in the Tierras Bajas project in eastern Bolivia. Photograph courtesy NASA.]]
This was the authentic style, commonly rendered as sultan, of the Islamic monarchs of the ruling house of Oman, in both its realms:
The removal or destruction of significant areas of forest cover has resulted in a degraded environment with reduced [[biodiversity]].<ref>[http://www.umich.edu/~gs265/society/deforestation.htm Deforestation]</ref> In [[developing countries]], deforestation is ongoing and is shaping [[climate]] and [[geography]].<ref>[http://www.sciencedaily.com/articles/d/deforestation.htm Deforestation], ScienceDaily</ref><ref>[http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/05/070511100918.htm Confirmed: Deforestation Plays Critical Climate Change Role], ScienceDaily, May 11, 2007</ref>
*[[Oman]]{{ndash}} [[Sultan of Oman]], on the southern coast of the Arabian peninsula, still an independent sultanate, since 1784, two years before the imamate lost temporal power in 1786 (assumed the formal style of Sultan in 1861)
*[[Sultan of Zanzibar|Sultanate of Zanzibar]] two incumbents (from the Omani dynasty) since the de facto separation from Oman in 1806, the last assumed the style Sultan in 1861 at the formal separation under British auspices; since 1964 union with Tanganyika part of [[Tanzania]])


Deforestation is a contributor to [[global warming]],<ref>[http://www.fao.org/newsroom/en/news/2006/1000385/index.html Deforestation causes global warming], [[FAO]]</ref><ref name="Fearnidel">Philip M. Fearnside1 and William F. Laurance, ''TROPICAL DEFORESTATION AND GREENHOUSE-GAS EMISSIONS'', Ecological Applications, Volume 14, Issue 4 (August 2004) pp. 982–986</ref> The worlds rain forests are widely believed by laymen to contribute a significant amount of world's oxygen <ref>[http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/article664544.ece How can you save the rain forest. October 8,2006. frank Field]</ref> although it is now accepted by scientists that rainforests contribute little net [[oxygen]] to the [[Earth's atmosphere|atmosphere]] and deforestation will have no effect whatsoever on atmospheric oxygen levels.<ref>Broeker, Wallace S. (2006). "Breathing easy: Et tu, O<sub>2</sub>." Columbia University http://www.columbia.edu/cu/21stC/issue-2.1/broecker.htm.</ref><ref>Moran, E.F., "Deforestation and Land Use in the Brazilian Amazon," Human Ecology, Vol 21, No. 1, 1993"</ref>. However, the incineration and burning of forest plants in order to clear land releases tonnes of CO<sub>2</sub> which contributes to global warming.<ref name="Fearnidel" />
===North Africa===
*in [[Algeria]]: sultanate of [[Tuggurt]]
*in (greater) [[Egypt]]:
**[[Ayyubid dynasty|Ayyubid Sultans]]
**[[Mameluks|Mamluk Sultans]]
*in [[Morocco]], till [[Mohammed V of Morocco|Mohammed V]] changed the style to [[Malik]] (king) on 14 August 1957, maintaining the subsidiary style [[Amir al-Mu´minin]] (Commander of the Faithful)
*in [[Sudan]]:
**[[Darfur]]
**[[Dar al-Masalit]]
**[[Dar Qimr]]
**[[Funj Sultanate]] of [[Sinnar]] (Sennar)
**[[Kordofan]]
*in [[Chad]]:
**[[Baguirmi Kingdom|Bag(u)irmi]] (main native title: [[Mbang]])
**[[Ouaddai Kingdom|Wada'i]] (main native title: [[Kolak]]), successor state to [[Birgu Kingdom|Birgu]]
**[[Dar Sila]] (actually a wandering group of tribes),


Deforestation reduces the content of water in the soil and groundwater as well as atmospheric moisture.<ref>[http://www.wrm.org.uy/deforestation/UNreport.html Underlying Causes of Deforestation: UN Report]</ref> Deforestation reduces soil cohesion, so that [[Soil erosion|erosion]], [[flood]]ing and [[landslide]]s ensue.<ref>[http://www.uwec.edu/jolhm/EH2/Rogge/index.htm Deforestation and Landslides in Southwestern Washington]</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/413717.stm China's floods: Is deforestation to blame?], BBC News</ref> Forests support [[biodiversity]], providing habitat for [[wildlife]];<ref>[http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/08/070808132022.htm Rainforest Biodiversity Shows Differing Patterns], ScienceDaily, August 14, 2007</ref> moreover, forests foster [[medicinal plants|medicinal conservation]].<ref>[http://www.bmbf.de/en/12484.php BMBF: Medicine from the rainforest]</ref> Forests enhance the recharge of [[aquifer]]s in some locales however forests are a major source of aquifer depletion on most locales <ref>http://www.azstarnet.com/sn/byauthor/244797</ref>. With forest biotopes being irreplaceable source of new drugs (like [[Paclitaxel|taxol]]), deforestation can destroy [[Genetics|genetic]] variations (such as crop resistance) irretrievably.<ref>[http://www.bio-medicine.org/biology-news-1/Single-largest-biodiversity-survey-says-primary-rainforest-is-irreplaceable-1218-1/ Single-largest biodiversity survey says primary rainforest is irreplaceable], Bio-Medicine, November 14, 2007</ref>
===Horn of Africa===
*[[Adal Sultanate]], in northwestern [[Somalia]], southern [[Djibouti]], and the [[Somali Region|Somali]], [[Oromia Region|Oromia]], and [[Afar Region|Afar]] regions of [[Ethiopia]]
*the Afar -, Awsa - or [[Aussa Sultanate]], in northeastern Ethiopia
*[[Harar#History|Harar Sultanate]], in eastern Ethiopia
*[[Ifat|Ifat Sultanate]], in eastern Ethiopia
*[[Majeerteen#The_Majeerteen_Sultanates|Majeerteen Sultanates]], in northern Somalia
*[[Marehan#Marehan_Sultanate|Marehan Sultanate]], in northern Somalia
*[[Shewa#History|Shewa Sultanate]] in central Ethiopia
*[[Sultanate_of_Mohamoud_Ali_Shire#Northern_Somali_sultanates|Warsangali Sultanates]], in northern Somalia


Shrinking forest cover lessens the landscape's capacity to intercept, retain and transport precipitation{{Fact|date=September 2008}}. Instead of trapping precipitation, which then percolates to groundwater systems, deforested areas become sources of surface water runoff, which moves much faster than subsurface flows{{Fact|date=September 2008}}. That quicker transport of surface water can translate into [[flash flood]]ing and more localized floods than would occur with the forest cover. Deforestation also contributes to decreased [[evapotranspiration]], which lessens atmospheric moisture which in some cases affects precipitation levels down wind from the deforested area, as water is not recycled to downwind forests, but is lost in runoff and returns directly to the oceans. According to one preliminary study{{which}}, in deforested north and northwest China, the average annual precipitation decreased by one third between the 1950s and the 1980s{{Vague|date=September 2008}} <!--Any evidence tying this to deforestation cf climate change-->.
===East Africa and Indian Ocean===
====Sultan====
*[[Angoche Sultanate]], on the [[Mozambique|Mozambiquan]] coast (also several neighbouring sheikdoms)
*various [[Sultans on the Comoros]]; however on the [[Comoros]], the normally used styles were alternative native titles, including [[Mfalme]], [[Phany]] or ''Jambé'' and the 'hegemonic' title [[Sultani tibe]]
*the Maore (or Mawuti) sultanate on [[Mayotte]](separated from the Comoros)


Longterm gains can be obtained by managing forest lands sustainably to maintain both forest cover and provide a biodegradable renewable resource. Forests are also important stores of organic [[carbon]], and forests can extract [[carbon dioxide]] and [[pollutant]]s from the air, thus contributing to biosphere stability. Deforestation (mainly in tropical areas) account for up to one-third of total anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions.<ref name = "IPCC deforestation"/> Forests are also valued for their aesthetic beauty and as a cultural resource and tourist attraction.
====Maliki====
This was the alternative native style (apparently derived from [[Malik]], the [[Arabic]] word for King) of the Sultans of the [[Kilwa Sultanate]], in [[Tanganyika]] (presently the continental part of Tanzania)


Experts{{which}} estimate that we are losing 137 plant, animal and insect species every single day due to rainforest deforestation, which equates to 50,000 species a year.<ref>[http://www.rain-tree.com/facts.htm]</ref>
====Swahili sultan====
'''Mfalume''' is the (Ki)[[Swahili]] title of various native Muslim rulers, generally rendered in Arabic and in western languages as Sultan:
*in [[Kenya]]:
**[[Rulers of Pate|Pate]] on part of [[Pate island]] (capital also named Pate), in the [[Lamu Archipelago]]
**[[Witu]], came under German, then British [[protectorate]]
*in [[Tanganyika]] (presently part of [[Tanzania]]): of [[Hadimu]], on the island of that name; also styled '''Jembe'''


“Reducing emissions from tropical deforestation and forest degradation (REDD) in developing countries has emerged as new potential to complement ongoing climate policies. The idea consists in providing financial compensations for the reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from deforestation and forest degradation”. <ref>''Bringing ‘REDD’ into a new deal for the global climate'', S. Wertz-Kanounnikoff, L. Ximena Rubio Alvarado, Analyses, n° 2, 2007, Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations.[http://www.iddri.org/Publications/Collections/Analyses/Why-are-we-seeing-REDD]</ref>
====Sultani====
This was the native ruler's title in the Tanzanian state of [[Uhehe]]


===West and Central Africa===
== Economic impact ==
Historically utilization of forest products, including timber and fuel wood, have played a key role in human societies, comparable to the roles of water and cultivable land. Today, developed countries continue to utilize timber for building houses, and wood pulp for paper. In developing countries almost three billion people rely on wood for heating and cooking.<ref>http://atlas.aaas.org/pdf/63-66.pdf Forest Products </ref>
*in [[Cameroon]]:
The forest products industry is a large part of the economy in both developed and developing countries. Short-term economic gains made by conversion of forest to agriculture, or over-exploitation of wood products, typically leads to loss of long-term income and long term biological productivity (hence reduction in [[nature's services]]). [[West Africa]], [[Madagascar]], [[Southeast Asia]] and many other regions have experienced lower revenue because of declining timber harvests. Illegal logging causes billions of dollars of losses to national economies annually.<ref>[http://rainforests.mongabay.com/0905.htm Destruction of Renewable Resources]</ref>
**[[Bamoun]] (Bamun, 17th cent. founded uniting 17 chieftancies) 1918 becomes a Sultanate, but in 1923 re-divided into the 17 original chieftancies.
**[[Bibemi]] 1770 founded- Rulers first style [[Lamido]] to ...., then Sultan
**[[Mandar]]a Sultanate since 1715 (replacing [[Wandala]] kingdom); 1902 Part of Cameroon
**[[Rey Bouba]] Sultanate founded 1804
*in the [[Central African Republic]]:
**[[Bangassou]] created ca.1878; 14 June 1890 under [[Congo Free State]] [[protectorate]], 1894 under French protectorate; 1917 Sultanate suppressed by the French.
**[[Dar al-Kuti]] - French protectorate since December 12, 1897
**[[Rafai]] ca.1875 Sultanate, 8 April 8, 1892 under Congo Free State protectorate, March 31 1909 under French protectorate; 1939 Sultanate suppressed
**[[Zemio]] ca.1872 established; December 11 1894 under Congo Free State protectorate, April 12 1909 under French protectorate; 1923 Sultanate suppressed
*in [[Niger]]: [[Arabic]] alternative title of the following autochthonous rulers:
** the [[Amenokal]] of the [[Aïr]] confederation of [[Tuareg]]
** the [[Sarkin]] Damagaram since the 1731 founding of the [[Sultanate of Damagaram]] ([[Zinder]])
*in [[Nigeria]] most monarchies has a native title; when most in the north converted to Islam, Muslim titles were generally adopted, such as [[Emir]]- Sultan has been used in
** [[Sayfawa dynasty|Borno]] (alongside the native title Mai)
** since 1817 in [[Sokoto]], the suzerain (also styled [[Amir al-Mu´minin]] and [[Sarkin Musulmi]]) of all [[Fulbe jihad state]]s and premier traditiobal Muslim leader in the Sahel (according to some once a Caliph)


The new procedures to get amounts of wood are causing more harm to the economy and over powers the amount of money spent by people employed in logging.<ref>[http://www.cgiar.org/Newsroom/releases/news.asp?idnews=663 Deforestation Across the World’s Tropical Forests Emits Large Amounts of Greenhouse Gases with Little Economic Benefits, According to a New Study at CGIAR.org], December 4, 2007</ref> According to a study, "in most areas studied, the various ventures that prompted deforestation rarely generated more than US$5 for every ton of carbon they released and frequently returned far less than US $1." The price on the European market for an offset tied to a one-ton reduction in carbon is 23 euro (about $35).<ref>[http://www.asb.cgiar.org/News/default.asp?a=%7B580BF3A6-9A50-4162-B059-80CF00046F24%7D New ASB Report finds deforestation offers very little money compared to potential financial benefits at ASB.CGIAR.org]</ref>
===Southern Asia===
In [[India]]:
*[[Bahmani Sultanate]]
*[[Mysore|Sultanate of Mysore]]
*[[Bengal|Sultanate of Bengal]]
*the [[Deccan sultanates]]: [[Berar Sultanate|Berar]], [[Bidar Sultanate|Bidar]], [[Bijapur Sultanate|Bijapur]], [[Golconda Sultanate|Golconda]] and [[Ahmednagar Sultanate|Ahmednagar]]
*[[Delhi Sultanate|Sultanate of Delhi]] several dynasties, the last (Mughal) became imperial Padshah-i Hind
*[[Gujarat|Sultanate of Gujarat]]
*[[Jaunpur|Sultanate of Jaunpur]]
*[[Kandesh|Sultanate of Kandesh]]
*[[Malwa|Sultanate of Malwa]]


==Characterization==
In the [[Maldives]]:
Throughout most of history{{when}}, humans were hunter gatherers who hunted within forests. In most areas, such as the Amazon, the Tropics, Central America, and the Carribean<ref>http://www.school.eb.com/comptons/article-9310969?query=deforestation&ct=</ref>,only after shortages of wood and other forest products are policies implemented to ensure forest resources are used in a sustainable manner. In developed countries, as urbanization and economic development increases, land previously used for farming is abandoned and reverted to forests.<ref>http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/0608343103v1 Returning forests analyzed with the forest identity</ref> Today, in the developed world, most countries are experiencing forest restoration and most losses in forest land are primarily driven by expanding urban areas.<ref>[http://www.fao.org/DOCREP/ARTICLE/WFC/XII/MS12A-E.HTM Deforestation and forest degradation factors.]</ref>
*[[Maldives|Maldives Sultanate]]


In [[developing countries]], human-caused deforestation and the degradation of forest habitat is primarily due to expansion of agriculture, [[slash and burn]] practices (instead of [[slash-and-char]]), [[urban sprawl]], [[illegal logging]], over harvest of fuel wood, mining, and [[Oil reserves|petroleum exploration]].<ref>[http://www.rainforestinfo.org.au/background/causes.htm The CAUSES of RAINFOREST DESTRUCTION]</ref><ref>[http://uk.encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_781536439/slash_and_burn.html Slash and Burn]</ref>
===Southeast and East Asia===
In [[Brunei]]:
* [[Sultan of Brunei]], Brunei (on Borneo island)


Deforestation trends could follow the [[Kuznets curve#Environmental Kuznets Curve|Kuznets curve]]<ref>http://www.aseanenvironment.info/Abstract/41014849.pdf Deforestation and the environmental Kuznets curve:An institutional perspective</ref> however even if true this is problematic in so-called hot-spots because of the risk of irreversible loss of non-economic forest values for example valuable habitat or species loss.<ref>[http://www.env-econ.net/2006/11/a_deforestation.html Environmental Economics: A deforestation Kuznets curve?], November 22, 2006</ref><ref>[http://ideas.repec.org/a/eee/deveco/v58y1999i1p231-244.html Is there an environmental Kuznets curve for deforestation?]</ref>
In [[China]]:
* [[Dali, Yunnan]], capital of the short-lived [[Panthay Rebellion]]
Furthermore, the [[Qa´id Jami al-Muslimin]] (Leader of the Community of Muslims) of [[Pingnan Guo]] ("Pacified South State", a major Islamic rebellious polity in western Yunnan province) is usually referred to in foreign sources as Sultan


The effects of human related deforestation can be mitigated through environmentally sustainable practices that reduce permanent destruction of forests or even act to preserve and rehabilitate disrupted forestland (see [[Reforestation]] and [[Treeplanting]]). These methods help the cause and provide a sustainable growth of forests and allow lumber to become a renewable resource
In [[Indonesia]] (formerly in the [[Dutch East Indies]]):
*On [[Borneo]]
**[[Banjar people|Sultanate of Banjar]]
**[[Berau Regency|Sultanate of Berau]]
**[[Bulungan Regency|Sultanate of Bulungan]]
**[[Sultanate of Gunung Tabur]]
**[[Kubu|Sultanate of Kubu]]
**[[Kutai Kartanegara Regency|Sultanate of Kutai Kartanegara]]
**[[Sultanate of Mempawah]]
**[[Sultanate of Paser]]
**[[Pontianak, Indonesia|Sultanate of Pontianak]]
**[[Sultanate of Sambaliung]]
**[[Sultanate of Sambas]]


===Definitions of deforestation===
*On [[Celebes Island]]
Deforestation is the conversion of forested areas to non-forest land for use such as arable land, pasture, urban use, logged area, or wasteland. Generally, the removal or destruction of significant areas of forest cover has resulted in a degraded environment with reduced biodiversity. In many countries, deforestation is ongoing and is shaping climate and geography. Deforestation results from removal of trees without sufficient reforestation, and results in declines in habitat and biodiversity, wood for fuel and industrial use, and quality of life.
**[[Buton|Sultanate of Buton]]
Environmental effects
**[[Bone state|Sultanate of Bone]]
**[[Sultanate of Gowa]]
**[[Luwu|Sultanate of Luwu]]
**[[Sultanate of Soppeng]]
**[[Wajo Kingdom|Sultanate of Wajo]]


Atmospheric pollution
*On [[Java Island]]
Deforestation is one of the major causes of the enhanced greenhouse effect.<ref>[http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=16875&Cr=climate&Cr1=change Climate change conference urges strategies to curb massive deforestation], United Nations</ref> According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, deforestation, mainly in tropical areas, accounts for up to one-third of total anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions.[14] Trees and other plants remove carbon (in the form of carbon dioxide) from the atmosphere during the process of photosynthesis. Both the decay and burning of wood releases much of this stored carbon back to the atmosphere. Deforestation also causes carbon stores held in soil to be released. Forests are stores of carbon and can be either sinks or sources depending upon environmental circumstances. Mature forests can be net sinks or net sources of carbon dioxide (see Carbon dioxide sink and Carbon cycle).
**[[Sultanate of Banten]]
**[[Sultanate of Cirebon]]- the rulers in three of the four palaces (''kraton'') from which fractioned [[Cirebon]] was ruled: [[Kraton Kasepuhan]], [[Kraton Kanoman]] and [[Kraton Kacirebonan]] (only in Kraton Kaprabonan the rulers title was [[Panembahan]])
**[[Sultanate of Demak]]
**[[Pajang|Sultanate of Pajang]]
**[[Sumedang Larang Kingdom]]
**[[Sultanate of Mataram]]
**[[Sultanate of Yogyakarta]]
**[[Sultanate of Kasunanan]]


The water cycle is also affected by deforestation. Trees extract groundwater through their roots and release it into the atmosphere. When part of a forest is removed, the region cannot hold as much water and can result in a much drier climate.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7511356.stm Is world's wettest place getting drier?], BBC News, 21 July 2008</ref>
*On [[Madura island]]: [[Pamekasan]]


Biodiversity
*In the [[Moluccas|Moluccas Archipelago]]
Most forests (including the Amazon, Carribean forests, and many in Central America) are rich in biological diversity. Deforestation can cause the destruction of the habitats that support this biological diversity, thus contributing to the ongoing Holocene extinction event. Numerous countries in the America's and Africa have developed Biodiversity Action Plans to limit clear cutting and slash and burn agricultural practices as deleterious to wildlife and vegetation, particularly when endangered species are present.
**[[Kerajaan Tanah Hitu]]
**[[Bacan|Sultanate of Bacan]]
**[[Ternate|Sultanate of Ternate]]
**[[Tidore|Sultanate of Tidore]]


Landslides
*In the [[Nusa Tenggara]]
Tree roots bind soil together, and if the soil is sufficiently shallow they act to keep the soil in place by also binding with underlying bedrock. Tree removal on steep slopes with shallow soil thus increases the risk of landslides, which can threaten people living nearby. However most deforestation only affects the trunks of trees, allowing for the roots to stay rooted, negating the landslide.
**[[Bima|Sultanate of Bima]] on Sumbawa island
Controlling deforestation
Farming
New methods are being developed to farm more intensively, such as high-yield hybrid crops, greenhouse, autonomous building gardens, and hydroponics. These methods are often {{when}} dependent on massive{{Vague|date=September 2008}} chemical inputs to maintain necessary yields. In cyclic agriculture, cattle are grazed on farm land that is resting and rejuvenating. Cyclic agriculture actually increases the fertility of the soil{{Fact|date=September 2008}}. Intensive farming can also decrease soil nutrients by consuming at an accelerated rate the trace minerals needed for crop growth.


Forest management
*In the [[Riau archipelago]]: sultanate of [[Lingga-Riau]] by secession in 1818 under the expelled sultan of [[Johore]] (on Malaya) Sultan Abdul Rahman Muadzam Syah ibni al-Marhum Sultan Mahmud
Efforts to stop or slow deforestation have been attempted for many centuries because it has long been known around the 1970's {{when}} that deforestation can cause environmental damage sufficient in some cases to cause societies to collapse{{Fact|date=September 2008}}<!--I'd love to see a reference that this has long been known--><ref>http://www.pbs.org/earthonedge/ecosystems/forests1.html</ref>. In Tonga, paramount rulers developed policies designed to prevent conflicts between short-term gains from converting forest to farmland and long-term problems forest loss would cause,[49] while during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in Tokugawa Japan[50] the shoguns developed a highly sophisticated system of long-term planning to stop and even reverse deforestation of the preceding centuries through substituting timber by other products and more efficient use of land that had been farmed for many centuries. In sixteenth century Germany landowners also developed silviculture to deal with the problem of deforestation. However, these policies tend to be limited to environments with good rainfall, no dry season and very young soils (through volcanism or glaciation). This is because on older and less fertile soils trees grow too slowly for silviculture to be economic, whilst in areas with a strong dry season there is always a risk of forest fires destroying a tree crop before it matures.
Historical causes
Further information: Timeline of environmental events {| class="wikitable"


===Use of the term deforestation===
*In [[Sumatra]]
It has been argued {{Who|date=September 2008}} that the lack of specificity in use of the term deforestation distorts forestry issues.<ref>[http://www.cifor.cgiar.org/publications/html/occpaper9/chapter2.html "Rate and Causes of Deforestation in Indonesia: Towards a Resolution of the Ambiguities" William D. Sunderlin and Ida Aju Pradnja Resosudarmo] </ref> The term deforestation is used to refer to activities that use the forest, for example, [[fuel]] wood cutting, commercial [[logging]], as well as activities that cause temporary removal of forest cover such as the [[slash and burn]] technique, a component of some [[shifting cultivation]] agricultural systems or [[clearcutting]]. It is also used to describe forest clearing for annual crops and forest loss from over-[[grazing]]. Some definitions of deforestation include activities such as establishment of industrial forest plantations that are considered afforestation by others. It has also been argued that the term deforestation is such an emotional term that is used "so ambiguously that it is virtually meaningless" unless it is specified what is meant.<ref>[http://www.unu.edu/unupress/unupbooks/80a02e/80A02E09.htm ''The Himalayan Dilemma: Reconciling Development and Conservation'' – "What are the physical effects of deforestation?" ] </ref> More specific terms terms include forest decline, forest fragmentation and forest degradation, loss of forest cover and land use conversion.
**[[Aceh Sultanate|Sultanate of Aceh]] (full style Sultan Berdaulat Zillullah fil-Alam) , which had many vassal states
**[[Sultanate of Asahan]]
** [[Awak Sungai]], established 17th century at the split in four of [[Minangkabau]], in 1816 extinguished by Netherlands East Indies colonial government
**[[Sultanate of Deli]] since 1814, earlier Aceh's vassal as Aru
**[[Sultanate of Indragiri]]
**[[Sultanate of Langkat]] since 1817 (previous style Rajah)
**[[Palembang|Sultanate of Palembang]] (Darussalam), also holding the higher title of [[Susuhunan]]
**[[Pagaruyung Kingdom|Sultanate of Pagaruyung]]
**[[Pelalawan|Sultanate of Pelalawan]]
**[[Peureulak|Sultanate of Perlak]]
**[[Riau Islands|Sultanate of Riau-Lingga]]
**[[Pasai|Sultanate of Samudera Pasai]]
**[[Serdang|Sultanate of Serdang]]
**[[Siak Regency|Sultanate of Siak Sri Inderapura]]


The term also has a traditional legal sense of the conversion of [[Royal forest]] land into [[purlieu]] or other non-forest land use.
*In the [[Malay Peninsula]]:
** In [[Peninsular Malaysia]] (or Malaya), where all nine of [[Malaysia]]'s present sultanates are located:
*** [[Sultanate of Malacca]]
*** [[Sultanate of Johor]]
*** [[Sultanate of Kedah]]
*** [[Sultan of Kelantan|Sultanate of Kelantan]]
*** [[Sultan of Pahang|Sultanate of Pahang]]
*** [[Sultan of Perak|Sultanate of Perak]]
*** [[Sultan of Selangor|Sultanate of Selangor]]
*** [[Sultan of Terengganu|Sultanate of Terengganu]]
*** Furthermore, the ruler of [[Luak Jelebu]], one of the constitutive states of the [[Negeri Sembilan]] confederation, had the style Sultan in addition to his principal title Undang Luak Jelebu.
**In [[Thailand]] (Siam):
*** [[Pattani Kingdom|Sultanate of Pattani]]


== Historical causes ==
*In the [[Philippines]]:
{{see|Timeline of environmental events}}
** [[Sultanate of Buayan]]
===Prehistory===
** [[Sultanate of Maguindanao]]
Prehistory
** [[Sultanate of Sulu]] (Basilan, Palawan and Tawi-Tawi islands and part of -now Malaysian- Sabah on North Borneo)
Deforestation has been practiced by humans for tens of thousands of years before the beginnings of civilization<ref>Flannery, T. (1994) "The future eaters" Reed Books Melbourne. </ref>. Fire was the first tool that allowed humans to modify the landscape. The first evidence of deforestation appears in the [[Mesolithic period]].<ref>[http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/119153736/abstract?CRETRY=1&SRETRY=0 Clearances and Clearings: Deforestation in Mesolithic/Neolithic Britain], Oxford Journal of Archaeology</ref> It was probably used to convert closed forests into more open ecosystems favourable to game animals<ref>Flannery, T. (1994) "The future eaters" Reed Books Melbourne. </ref>. With the advent of agriculture, fire became the prime tool to clear land for crops.
In [[Europe]] there is little solid evidence before 7000 BC. Mesolithic [[hunter-gatherer|foragers]] used fire to create openings for [[red deer]] and [[wild boar]]. In [[Great Britain]] shade tolerant species such as [[oak]] and [[Ash tree|ash]] are replaced in the [[palynology|pollen]] record by [[hazel]]s, brambles, grasses and nettles. Removal of the forests led to decreased [[transpiration]] resulting in the formation of upland [[peat bog]]s. Widespread decrease in [[elm]] [[pollen]] across [[Europe]] between 8400-8300 BC and 7200-7000 BC, starting in southern Europe and gradually moving north to Great Britain, may represent land clearing by fire at the onset of [[Neolithic]] agriculture.
[[Image:Néolithique 0001.jpg|thumb|250px|An array of Neolithic artifacts, including bracelets, axe heads, chisels, and polishing tools.]]
The [[Neolithic period]] saw extensive deforestation for [[Agriculture|farming land]].<ref>[http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/254115/hand-tool/39205/Neolithic-tools hand tool :: Neolithic tools -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia ]</ref><ref>[http://www.archaeolink.co.uk/Neolithic-Age.html Neolithic Age from 4,000 BC to 2,200 BC or New Stone Age]</ref> Stone axes were now{{when}} being made not just from flint, but from a wide variety of hard rocks from across Britain and North America as well{{Vague|date=September 2008}}<!--what about in the rest of the world? And were stone axes really linked ot deforestation? They certainly weren't in Australasia or SE Asia.--}}. They include the noted [[Langdale axe industry]] in the [[English Lake District]], quarries developed at [[Penmaenmawr]] in [[North Wales]] and numerous other locations. Rough-outs were made locally near the quarries, and some were polished locally to give a fine finish. This step not only increased the [[mechanical strength]] of the axe, but also made penetration of wood easier. [[Flint]] was still used from sources such as [[Grimes Graves]] but from many other mines across Europe.


Evidence of deforestation has been found in [[Minoan]] [[Crete]]; for example the environs of the [[Palace of Knossos]] were severely deforested in the [[Bronze Age]].<ref>[http://letmespeaktothedriver.com/site/10854/knossos.html#fieldnotes C. Michael Hogan, ''Knossos fieldnotes'', Modern Antiquarian (2007)]</ref>
==Contemporary sultanates==
*[[Brunei]]
*[[Indonesia]]{{ndash}} Sultan of [[Yogyakarta Special Region]] is governor of that province
*[[Malaysia]]
**Sultan is the title of seven ([[Johor]], [[Kedah]], [[Kelantan]], [[Pahang]], [[Perak]], [[Selangor]] and [[Terengganu]]) of the nine [[Malay Ruler|rulers]] of the [[Malay states]]. The federal head of state the [[Yang di-Pertuan Agong]], is elected (de facto rotated) for five years by and among the hereditary state rulers, but is usually styled "king" in foreign countries; political power, however, lies with the [[prime minister]]. ''See also'': [[Malay titles]]
*[[Oman]], an Arabian nation, formerly sultanate of [[Muscat and Oman]]


===Pre-industrial history===
==Princely and aristocratic titles==
In [[ancient Greece]], Tjeered van Andel and co-writers<ref>Tjeerd H. van Andel, Eberhard Zangger, Anne Demitrack, "Land Use and Soil Erosion in Prehistoric and Historical Greece' ''Journal of Field Archaeology'' '''17'''.4 (Winter 1990), pp. 379-396</ref> summarized three regional studies of historic erosion and alluviation and found that, wherever adequate evidence exists, a major phase of erosion follows, by about 500-1000 years the introduction of farming in the various regions of Greece, ranging from the later Neolithic to the Early Bronze Age. The thousand years following the mid-first millennium BCE saw serious, intermittent pulses of soil erosion in numerous places. The historic [[silting]] of ports along the southern coasts of [[Asia Minor]] (''e.g.'' [[Clarus]], and the examples of [[Ephesus]], [[Priene]] and [[Miletus]], where harbors had to be abandoned because of the silt deposited by the Meander) and in coastal [[Syria]] during the last centuries BC.
[[Image:The Sultan Valide.jpg|thumb|200px|The Sultan Valide.]]
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In the Ottoman dynastic system, male descendants of the ruling ''[[Padishah]]'' (in the West also known as [[Great Sultan]]), enjoyed a style including Sultan, so this normally Monarchic title is used equivalent to a western [[prince of the blood]]: ''Daulatlu Najabatlu Shahzada Sultan'' (given name) ''Hazretleri Effendi''; for the Heir Apparent however, the style was ''Daulatlu Najabatlu [[Vali Ahad]]-i-''Sultanat'''' (given name) ''Effendi Hazlatlari'', i.e. Crown Prince of the sultanate.
It's Not Good To Copyright -->
*The sons of Imperial Princesses, excluded from the Ottoman imperial succession, were only styled '''Sultan''zada''''' (given name) ''[[Bey]]-Effendi'', i.e. ''Son'' of a Prince[ss] of the dynasty.


[[Easter Island]] has suffered from heavy [[soil erosion]] in recent centuries, aggravated by agriculture and deforestation.<ref>[http://www.smithsonianmag.com/people-places/The_Mystery_of_Easter_Island.html The Mystery of Easter Island], Smithsonian Magazine, April 01, 2007</ref> [[Jared Diamond]] gives an extensive look into the collapse of the ancient Easter Islanders in his book ''[[Collapse (book)|Collapse]]''. The disappearance of the island's trees seems to coincide with a decline of its civilization around the 17th and 18th century.<ref>[http://www.mongabay.com/09easter_island.htm Historical Consequences of Deforestation: Easter Island]</ref><ref>[http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/24/042.html Jared Diamond, Easter Island's End]</ref>
In certain Muslim states, Sultan was also an aristocratic title, as in the Tartar [[Astrakhan Khanate]]


The famous silting up of the harbor for [[Bruges]], which moved port commerce to [[Antwerp]], also follow a period of increased settlement growth (and apparently{{Vague|date=September 2008}} of deforestation) in the upper river basins. In early medieval [[Riez]] in upper Provence, alluvial silt from two small rivers raised the riverbeds and widened the floodplain, which slowly buried the Roman settlement in alluvium and gradually moved new construction to higher ground; concurrently the headwater valleys above Riez were being opened to pasturage.
The ''[[Sultan Valide]]'' was the title reserved for the mother of the ruling sultan.


A typical [[progress trap]] is that cities were often built in a forested area providing wood for some industry (e.g. construction, shipbuilding, pottery). When deforestation occurs without proper replanting, local wood supplies become difficult to obtain near enough to remain competitive, leading to the city's abandonment, as happened repeatedly in Ancient [[Asia Minor]]. The combination of mining and metallurgy often{{Vague|date=September 2008}} went along this self-destructive path.
==Military rank==
In a number of post-caliphal states under [[Mongol]] or [[Turkic peoples|Turkic]] rule, there was a feudal type of military hierarchy, often decimal (mainly in larger empires), using originally princely titles ([[Khan (title)|Khan]], [[Malik]], [[Amir]]) as mere rank denominations.


Meanwhile most of the population remaining active in (or indirectly dependent on) the agricultural sector, the main pressure in most areas remained land clearing for crop and cattle farming; fortunately enough wild green was usually left standing (and partially used, e.g. to collect firewood, timber and fruits, or to graze pigs) for wildlife to remain viable, and the hunting privileges of the elite (nobility and higher clergy) often{{when}} protected significant{{Vague|date=September 2008}} woodlands.
In the [[Persian empire]], the rank of Sultan was roughly equivalent to a western [[Captain (OF-2)|Captain]], socially in the fifth rank class, styled 'Ali Jah


Major parts in the spread (and thus more durable growth) of the population were played by monastical 'pioneering' (especially by the benedictine and cistercian orders) and some feudal lords actively attracting farmers to settle (and become tax payers) by offering relatively good legal and fiscal conditions &ndash; even when they did so to launch or encourage cities, there always was an agricultural belt around and even quite some within the walls.
==Use in Western popular culture==
When on the other hand demography took a real blow by such causes as the [[Black Death]] or devastating warfare (e.g. [[Genghis Khan]]'s [[Mongol]] hordes in eastern and central Europe, [[Thirty Years' War]] in Germany) this could lead to settlements being abandoned, leaving land to be reclaimed by nature, even though the [[secondary forest]]s usually lacked the original [[biodiversity]].
The term Sultan is also used in modern pop vernacular to describe someone who has reached the peak of their profession, the elite of their class.

From 1100 to 1500 AD significant deforestation took place in [[Western Europe]] as a result of the [[overpopulation|expanding human population]]. The large-scale building of wooden sailing [[ship]]s by European (coastal) naval owners since the 15th century for exploration, [[Colonialism|colonisation]], [[slave trade]] &ndash; and other trade on the high seas and (often related) naval warfare (the failed invasion of England by the [[Spanish Armada]] in 1559 and the [[battle of Lepanto]] 1571 are early cases of huge waste of prime timber; each of Nelson's [[Royal navy]] war ships at Trafalgar had required 6000 mature oaks) and [[piracy]] meant that whole woody regions were over-harvested, as in Spain, where this contributed to the paradoxical weakening of the domestic economy since Columbus' discovery of America made the colonial activities (plundering, mining, cattle, plantations, trade ...) predominant.

In ''Changes in the Land'' (1983), [[William Cronon]] collected 17th century [[New England]] Englishmen's reports of increased seasonal flooding during the time that the forests were initially cleared, and it was widely believed that it was linked with widespread forest clearing upstream.

The massive{{Vague|date=September 2008}} use of [[charcoal]] on an industrial scale in [[Early Modern Europe]] was a new acceleration of the onslaught on western forests; even in Stuart England, the relatively primitive production of charcoal has already reached an impressive level. For ship timbers, Stuart England was so widely deforested that it depended on the [[Baltic region|Baltic]] trade and looked to the untapped forests of [[New England]] to supply the need. In France, [[Jean-Baptiste Colbert|Colbert]] planted [[oak]] forests to supply the French navy in the future; as it turned out, as the oak plantations matured in the mid-nineteenth century, the masts were no longer required.

[[Norman F. Cantor]]'s summary of the effects of late medieval deforestation applies equally well to Early Modern Europe:<ref>In closing ''The Civilization of the Middle Ages: The Life and Death of a Civilization'' (1993) pp 564f.</ref>
:"Europeans had lived in the midst of vast forests throughout the earlier medieval centuries. After 1250 they became so skilled at deforestation that by 1500 AD they were running short of wood for heating and cooking. They were faced with a nutritional decline because of the elimination of the generous supply of wild game that had inhabited the now-disappearing forests, which throughout medieval times had provided the staple of their carnivorous high-protein diet. By 1500 Europe was on the edge of a fuel and nutritional disaster, [from] which it was saved in the sixteenth century only by the burning of soft coal and the cultivation of potatoes and maize."

Specific parallels are seen in twentieth century deforestation occurring in many developing nations.

==Deforestation today==
[[Image:Lacanja burn.JPG|thumb|right|300px|Jungle burned for agriculture in southern Mexico.]]
Slash-and-burn is a method sometimes used by [[shifting cultivation|shifting cultivators]] to create short term yields from marginal soils. When practiced repeatedly, or without intervening fallow periods, the [[nutrient]] poor soils may be exhausted or eroded to an unproductive state. [[Slash-and-burn]] techniques are used by native populations of over 200 million people worldwide. Short-sighted, market-driven [[forestry]] practices are the leading causes of forest degradation.<ref>[http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/08/080805192729.htm Drivers Of Tropical Deforestation Are Changing, Say Scientists], ScienceDaily, August 7, 2008</ref> The principal human-related causes of deforestation are agriculture and livestock grazing, [[urban sprawl]], mining, and petroleum extraction. Growing worldwide demand for [[wood]] to be used for fire wood or in construction, paper and furniture - as well as clearing land for commercial and industrial development (including [[road construction]]) have combined with growing local populations and their demands for agricultural expansion and wood fuel to endanger ever larger forest areas.

Agricultural development programs in [[Indonesia]] ([[transmigration program]]) moved large populations into the [[rainforest]] zone, further increasing deforestation rates. One fifth of the world's tropical rainforest was destroyed between 1960 and 1990. Estimates of deforestation of tropical forest for the 1990s range from about 55,630 to 120,000 square kilometres each year. At this rate, all tropical forests may be gone by the year 2090.

The forests are being destroyed at an ever-quickening pace.<ref>[http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/thomas-marent-out-of-the-woods-417858.html Thomas Marent: Out of the woods], The Independent, 28 September 2006</ref> Around 150,000 km² of rainforest, equivalent to the size of England and Wales, is destroyed every year.<ref>[http://www.discoverychannel.co.uk/earth/fire/rainforest_fires/index.shtml Rainforest Fires], Discovery Channel</ref>

According to British environmentalist [[Norman Myers]], 5% of deforestation is due to [[cattle ranching]], 19% to over-heavy [[logging]], 22% to the growing sector of [[palm oil]] plantations, and 54% due to [[slash-and-burn]] farming.<ref>[http://news.mongabay.com/2008/0515-hance_myers.html Tropical deforestation is 'one of the worst crises since we came out of our caves']</ref>

===Australia===
[[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]] and [[NSW]]'s remnant [[red gum]] forests including the [[Murray River]]'s [[Barmah|Barmah-Millewa]], are increasingly being [[Clearfelling|clear-felled]] using mechanical harvesters, destroying already rare [[habitat]]. Macnally estimates that approximately 82% of fallen timber has been removed from the southern Murray Darling basin,<ref name="macnally">Macnally, R, Ballinger, A and Horrocks, G. (2002) Habitat change in River Red Gum Floodplains: Depletion of Fallen Timber and Impacts on Biodiversity. Victorian Naturalis, Volume 119(4). Pp. 107-113.</ref> and the Mid-Murray Forest Management Area (including the Barmah and Gunbower forests) provides about 90% of Victoria's red gum timber.<ref name="nre2002">NRE 2002 Forest Management Plan for the Mid-Murray Forest Management Area.</ref>

===Brazil===
{{main|Deforestation in Brazil}}
In [[Brazil]] the rate of deforestation is largely driven by [[commodity]] prices and world [[population growth]].<ref>[http://news.mongabay.com/2007/0516-ethanol_amazon.html U.S. ethanol may drive Amazon deforestation]</ref><ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/aug/13/conservation.forests Amazon rainforest threatened by new wave of oil and gas exploration], guardian.co.uk, August 13, 2008</ref> Recent development of a new variety of soybean has led to the displacement of beef ranches and farms of other crops, which, in turn, move farther into the forest.<ref>[http://www.mongabay.com/external/soybeans2003.htm Booming Soybean Business Means Continued Deforestation in the Amazon]</ref> Certain areas such as the [[Atlantic Rainforest]] have been diminished to just 7% of their original size.<ref>[http://www.panda.org/about_wwf/where_we_work/ecoregions/atlantic_forests.cfm WWF - Atlantic Forests - A Global Ecoregion]</ref> Although much conservation work has been done, few national parks or reserves are efficiently enforced.<ref>[http://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSN08284461 Brazil national parks mismanaged and raided-govt], Reuters</ref> In 2008, Brazil's Government has announced a record rate of deforestation in the Amazon.<ref>[http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/breaking/2008/0124/breaking22.html Record Amazon deforestation in Brazil]</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7206165.stm Brazil Amazon deforestation soars], [[BBC]]</ref> Deforestation jumped by 69% in 2008 compared to 2007's twelve
months, according to official government data.<ref>[http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,414063,00.html Amazon Destruction Jumps 69 Percent in Brazil], FOXNews.com, 30 August, 2008 </ref> Deforestation could wipe out or severely damage nearly 60% of the [[Amazon rainforest]] by 2030, says a new report from [[WWF]].<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2007/dec/06/conservation.endangeredhabitats More than half of Amazon will be lost by 2030, report warns], guardian.co.uk, December 6, 2007</ref>

===Canada===
One case of deforestation in [[Canada]] is happening in [[Ontario]]'s [[Taiga|boreal forests]], near [[Thunder Bay, Ontario|Thunder Bay]], where 28.9% of a 19,000 km² of forest area had been lost in the last 5 years and is threatening [[Migratory Woodland Caribou|woodland caribou]]. This is happening mostly to supply pulp for the [[facial tissue]] industry<ref>[http://www.greenpeace.org/canada/en/press/press-releases/new-report-reveals-rapid-defor Greenpeace | New report reveals rapid deforestation in Ontario as disposable products take toll]</ref>.

===Ethiopia===
{{main|Deforestation in Ethiopia}}

The main cause of deforestation in [[Ethiopia]], located in [[East Africa]], is a [[overpopulation|growing population]] and subsequent higher demand for agriculture, livestock production and fuel wood.<ref name="Sucoff">Sucoff, E. (2003). Deforestation. In Environmental Encyclopedia. (P.g.358-359). Detroit: Gale.</ref> Other reasons include low education and inactivity from the government,<ref>Mccann, J.C. (1999).Green land, Brown land, Black land: An environmental history of Africa 1800-1990. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann</ref> although the current government has taken some steps to tackle deforestation.<ref>Maddox, G.H. (2006). Sub-Saharan Africa: An environmental history. Santabarbara, CA: ABC-CLIO</ref> Organizations such as [http://www.farmafrica.org.uk/ Farm Africa] are working with the federal and local governments to create a system of forest management.<ref name="Parry">Parry, J. (2003).</ref> Ethiopia, the [[List of African countries by population|third largest country in Africa]] by population, has been hit by [[famine]] many times because of shortages of rain and a depletion of natural resources. Deforestation has lowered the chance of getting rain, which is already low, and thus causes erosion. Bercele Bayisa, an Ethiopian farmer, offers one example why deforestation occurs. He said that his district was forested and full of wildlife, but overpopulation caused people to come to that land and clear it to plant crops, cutting all trees to sell as fire wood.<ref>Haileselassie, A. Ethiopia's struggle over land reform. World press Review 51.4 (April 2004):32(2).Expanded Academic ASAP</ref>

Ethiopia has lost 98% of its forested regions in the last 50 years.<ref name="Parry"/> At the beginning of the 20th century, around 420,000 km² or 35% of Ethiopia's land was covered with forests. Recent reports indicate that forests cover less than 14.2%<ref name="Parry"/> or even only 11.9% now.<ref name"mongabay">{{cite web | publisher = Rhett A. Butler, mongabay.com | url = http://rainforests.mongabay.com/deforestation/2000/Ethiopia.htm | title = STATISTICS: Ethiopia | date = no date |accessdate = June 4 | accessyear = 2007}}</ref> Between 1990 and 2005, the country lost 14% of its forests or 21,000 km².

===Indonesia===
At present rates, tropical rainforests in [[Indonesia]] would be logged out in 10 years, [[Papua New Guinea]] in 13 to 16 years.<ref>[http://www.asianews.it/index.php?l=en&art=5728 China is black hole of Asia's deforestation], Asia News, 24 March, 2008</ref> There are significantly large areas of forest in [[Indonesia]] that are being lost as native forest is cleared by large multi-national pulp companies and being replaced by plantations. In [[Sumatra]] tens of thousands of square kilometres of forest have been cleared often{{when}} under the command of the central government in [[Jakarta]] who comply with multi national companies<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/6927890.stm Losing land to palm oil in Kalimantan], BBC News, 3 August 2007</ref> to remove the forest because of the need to pay off international debt obligations and to develop economically{{Fact|date=September 2008}}. In [[Kalimantan]], between 1991 and 1999 large areas of the forest were burned because of uncontrollable fire causing atmospheric [[pollution]] across South-East Asia.<ref>[http://news.mongabay.com/2006/1015-indonesia.html Forest fires result from government failure in Indonesia]</ref> Every year, forest are burned by farmers ([[slash-and-burn]] techniques are used by between 200 and 500 million people worldwide)<ref>[http://www.eoearth.org/article/Slash_and_burn Slash and burn], Encyclopedia of Earth</ref> and plantation owners. A major source of deforestation is the [[logging industry]], driven spectacularly by [[China]] and [[Japan]].<ref>[http://news.mongabay.com/2006/0710-itto.html Japan depletes Borneo's rainforests; China remains largest log importer]</ref>

===Madagascar===
Deforestation<ref>[http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1844474,00.html Saving the Wildlife of Madagascar], TIME, September 25, 2008</ref> with resulting [[desertification]], [[water crisis|water resource degradation]] and [[soil degradation|soil loss]] has affected approximately 94% of Madagascar's previously biologically productive lands. Since the arrival of humans 2000 years ago, [[Madagascar]] has lost more than 90% of its original forest.<ref>[http://www.nationalgeographic.com/wildworld/profiles/terrestrial/at/at0118.html Terrestrial Ecoregions -- Madagascar subhumid forests (AT0118)], National Geographic</ref> Most of this loss has occurred since independence from the French, and is the result of local people using [[slash-and-burn]] agricultural practises as they try to subsist.<ref>[http://news.mongabay.com/2007/0307-madagascar.html Deforestation causes species extinction in Madagascar]</ref> Largely due to deforestation, the country is currently unable to provide adequate food, fresh water and sanitation for its fast growing population.<ref>[http://kids.mongabay.com/lesson_plans/lisa_algee/deforestation.html What are rainforests?]</ref><ref>[http://www.american.edu/TED/projects/tedcross/xdefor21.htm Deforestation in Madagascar]</ref>

===Nigeria===
{{main|Deforestation in Nigeria}}
According to the FAO, Nigeria has the world's highest deforestation rate of primary forests. It has lost more than half of its primary forest in the last five years. Causes cited are logging, [[slash-and-burn|subsistence agriculture]], and the collection of fuel wood. Almost 90% of [[West Africa]]'s rainforest has been destroyed.<ref>[http://www.csupomona.edu/~admckettrick/projects/ag101_project/html/size.html Rainforests & Agriculture ]</ref>

===United States===
[[Image:Oldgrowth3.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Loss of [[old growth forest]] in the [[United States]]. <br>1620, 1850, and 1920 maps: '' William B. Greeley, The Relation of Geography to Timber Supply, Economic Geography, 1925, vol. 1, p. 1-11. Source of TODAY map: compiled by George Draffan from roadless area map in The Big Outside: A Descriptive Inventory of the Big Wilderness Areas of the United States, by Dave Foreman and Howie Wolke (Harmony Books, 1992)''. These maps represent only virgin forest lost. Some regrowth has occurred but not to the age, size or extent of 1620 due to population increases and food cultivation. See United States entry on left]]
Prior to the arrival of [[European-Americans]] about one half of the United States land area was forest, about 4 million square kilometers (1 billion acres) in 1600.<ref>[http://www.nationalatlas.gov/articles/biology/a_forest.html Forest Resources of the United States ]</ref> For the next 300 years land was cleared, mostly for agriculture at a rate that matched the rate of population growth.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/30/books/review/30EASTERB.html?pagewanted=print&position= 'Collapse': How Societies choose to Fail or Succeed], The New York Times</ref> For every person added to the population, one to two hectares of land was cultivated.<ref>American Forest A History of Resiliency and Recovery United States Forest Service</ref> This trend continued until the 1920s when the amount of crop land stabilized in spite of continued population growth. As abandoned farm land reverted to forest the amount of forest land increased from 1952 reaching a peak in 1963 of 3,080,000 km² (762 million acres). Since 1963 there has been a steady decrease of forest area with the exception of some gains from 1997. Gains in forest land have resulted from conversions from crop land and pastures at a higher rate than loss of forest to development. Because urban development is expected to continue, an estimated 93,000 km² (23 million acres) of forest land is projected be lost by 2050<ref>[http://www.fs.fed.us/pnw/pubs/gtr587.pdf Land Use Changes Involving Forestry in the United States: 1952 to 1997, Whit Projections to 2050<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>, a 3% reduction from 1997. Other qualitative issues have been identified such as the continued loss of old-growth forest,<ref>United Nations (2005) "Global Forest Resources Assessment"</ref> the increased fragmentation of forest lands, and the increased urbanization of forest land.<ref>U.S. Department of Agriculture "Forests on the Edge - Housing Development on America's Private Forests" (2005) http://www.fs.fed.us/projects/fote/reports/fote-6-9-05.pdf Retrieved Nov. 19 2006</ref>

====Species extinctions in the Eastern Forest====
According to a report by Stuart L. Pimm the extent of forest cover in the Eastern United States reached its lowest point in roughly 1872 with about 48 percent compared to the amount of forest cover in 1620. Of the 28 forest bird species with habitat exclusively in that forest, Pimm claims 4 become extinct either wholly or mostly because of habitat loss, the [[passenger pigeon]], [[Carolina parakeet]], [[ivory-billed woodpecker]], and [[Bachman's Warbler]].<ref>[http://www.nicholas.duke.edu/people/faculty/pimm/publications/pimmreprints/173_Pimm_Annals_MBG_2002.pdf The Dodo went extinct (and other ecological myths) by Stuart L. Pimm at Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences]</ref>

== Environmental effects ==
=== Atmospheric pollution ===
Deforestation is often cited as one of the major causes of the enhanced [[greenhouse effect]]. According to the [[Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change]] deforestation, mainly in tropical areas, account for up to one-third of total [[anthropogenic]] [[carbon dioxide]] emissions.<ref name="IPCC deforestation">http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/assessment-report/ar4/wg1/ar4-wg1-chapter7.pdf
IPCC Fourth Assessment Report, Working Group I Report "The Physical Science Basis", Section 7.3.3.1.5 (p. 527)</ref> Trees and other plants remove [[carbon]] (in the form of [[carbon dioxide]]) from the [[Earth's atmosphere|atmosphere]] during the process of [[photosynthesis]]. Both the decay and burning of wood releases much of this stored carbon back to the atmosphere. Deforestation also causes carbon stores held in soil to be released. Forests are stores of carbon and can be either sinks or sources depending upon environmental circumstances. Mature forests can be net sinks of carbon dioxide (see [[Carbon dioxide sink]] and [[Carbon cycle]]).

The water cycle is also affected by deforestation. Trees extract groundwater through their roots and release it into the atmosphere. When part of a forest is removed, the region cannot hold as much water and can result in a much drier climate.

===Biodiversity===
Some forests are rich in [[biological diversity]]. Deforestation can cause the destruction of the [[habitat]]s that support this biological diversity, thus contributing to the ongoing [[Holocene extinction event]].
Numerous countries have developed [[Biodiversity Action Plan]]s to limit clear cutting and [[slash and burn]] agricultural practices as deleterious to [[wildlife]] and [[vegetation]], particularly when [[endangered species]] are present.

=== Water cycle and water resources ===
Trees, and plants in general, affect the [[water cycle]] significantly:
* their canopies intercept a proportion of [[precipitation (meteorology)|precipitation]], which is then evaporated back to the atmosphere ([[Interception (water)|canopy interception]]);
* their litter, stems and trunks slow down [[surface runoff]];
* their roots create macropores - large conduits - in the soil that increase [[infiltration (hydrology)|infiltration]] of water;
* they contribute to terrestrial evaporation and reduce [[Water content|soil moisture]] via [[transpiration]];
* their [[plant litter|litter]] and other organic residue change soil properties that affect the capacity of soil to store water.
As a result, the presence or absence of trees can change the quantity of water on the surface, in the soil or groundwater, or in the atmosphere. This in turn changes erosion rates and the availability of water for either ecosystem functions or human services.

The forest may have little impact on flooding in the case of large rainfall events, which overwhelm the storage capacity of forest soil if the soils are at or close to saturation.

Tropical rainforests produce about 30% of our planets fresh water.<ref>[http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/article664544.ece How can you save the rain forest. October 8,2006. Frank Field]</ref>

=== Soil erosion ===
Undisturbed forest has very low rates of soil loss, approximately 2 metric tons per square kilometre (6 short tons per square mile).{{Fact|date=April 2008}} Deforestation generally increases rates of soil [[erosion]], by increasing the amount of [[runoff]] and reducing the protection of the soil from tree litter. This can be an advantage in excessively leached tropical rain forest soils. Forestry operations themselves also increase erosion through the development of roads and the use of mechanized equipment.

China's [[Loess Plateau]] was cleared of forest millennia ago. Since then it has been eroding, creating dramatic incised valleys, and providing the sediment that gives the Yellow River its yellow color and that causes the flooding of the river in the lower reaches (hence the river's nickname 'China's sorrow').

Removal of trees does not always increase erosion rates. In certain regions of southwest US, shrubs and trees have been encroaching on grassland. The trees themselves enhance the loss of grass between tree canopies. The bare intercanopy areas become highly erodible. The US Forest Service, in Bandelier National Monument for example, is studying how to restore the former ecosystem, and reduce erosion, by removing the trees.

=== Landslides ===
Tree roots bind soil together, and if the soil is sufficiently shallow they act to keep the soil in place by also binding with underlying [[bedrock]]. Tree removal on steep slopes with shallow soil thus increases the risk of [[landslide]]s, which can threaten people living nearby. However most deforestation only affects the trunks of trees, allowing for the roots to stay rooted, negating the landslide.

==Controlling deforestation==
====Farming====
New methods are being developed to farm more intensively, such as high-yield [[Hybrid (biology)|hybrid]] crops, [[greenhouse]], [[autonomous building]] gardens, and [[hydroponic]]s. These methods are often dependent on massive{{Vague|date=September 2008}} chemical inputs to maintain necessary yields. In cyclic [[agriculture]], cattle are grazed on farm land that is resting and rejuvenating. Cyclic agriculture actually increases the fertility of the soil. Intensive farming can also decrease soil nutrients by consuming at an accelerated rate the trace minerals needed for crop growth.

====Forest management====
Efforts to stop or slow deforestation have been attempted for many centuries because it has long been known that deforestation can cause environmental damage sufficient in some cases to cause societies to collapse. In [[Tonga]], paramount rulers developed policies designed to prevent conflicts between short-term gains from converting forest to farmland and long-term problems forest loss would cause,<ref>Diamond, Jared ''Collapse: How Societies Choose To Fail or Succeed''; Viking Press 2004, pages 301-302</ref> while during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in [[Tokugawa shogunate|Tokugawa]] [[Japan]]<ref>Diamond, pages 320-331</ref> the shoguns developed a highly sophisticated system of long-term planning to stop and even reverse deforestation of the preceding centuries through substituting timber by other products and more efficient use of land that had been farmed for many centuries. In sixteenth century [[Germany]] landowners also developed silviculture to deal with the problem of deforestation. However, these policies tend to be limited to environments with ''good rainfall'', ''no dry season'' and ''very young [[soil]]s'' (through [[volcano|volcanism]] or [[glaciation]]). This is because on older and less fertile soils trees grow too slowly for silviculture to be economic, whilst in areas with a strong dry season there is always a risk of forest fires destroying a tree crop before it matures.

In the areas where "[[slash-and-burn]]” is practiced, switching to “[[slash-and-char]]” would prevent the rapid deforestation and subsequent degradation of soils. The [[biochar]] thus created, given back to the soil, is not only a durable carbon sequestration method, but it also is an extremely beneficial [[amendment]] to the soil. Mixed with [[biomass]] it brings the creation of [[terra preta]], one of the richest soils on the planet and the only one known to regenerate itself.

====Reforestation====
In the [[People's Republic of China]], where large scale destruction of forests has occurred, the government has in the past required that every able-bodied citizen between the ages of 11 and 60 plant three to five trees per year or do the equivalent amount of work in other forest services. The government claims that at least 1 billion trees have been planted in China every year since 1982. This is no longer required today, but March 12 of every year in China is the [[Planting Holiday]]. Also, it has introduced the [[Green Wall of China]]-project which aims to halt the expansion of the Gobi-desert through the planting of trees. However, due to the large percentage of trees dying off after planting (up to 75%), the project is not very successful and regular carbon ofsetting through the [[Flexible Mechanisms]] might have been a better option. In western countries, increasing consumer demand for wood products that have been produced and harvested in a sustainable manner are causing forest landowners and forest industries to become increasingly accountable for their forest management and timber harvesting practices.
The [http://www.arborday.org/ Arbor Day Foundation's] Rain Forest Rescue program is a charity that helps to prevent deforestation. The charity uses donated money to buy up and preserve rainforest land before the lumber companies can buy it. The Arbor Day Foundation then protects the land from deforestation. This also locks in the way of life of the primitive tribes living on the forest land. Organizations such as [[Community Forestry International]], [[The Nature Conservancy]], [[World Wide Fund for Nature]], [[Conservation International]], [[African Conservation Foundation]] and [[Greenpeace]] also focus on preserving forest habitats. Greenpeace in particular has also mapped out the forests that are still intact and published this information unto the internet. <ref>[http://www.intactforests.org World Intact Forests campaign by Greenpeace]</ref>. [[HowStuffWorks]] in turn, made a more simple thematic map showing the amount of forests present just before the age of man (8000 years ago) and the current (reduced) levels of forest. [http://www.intactforests.org/publications/intactforests_poster_preview.pdf This Greenpeace map] thus created, as well as [http://maps.howstuffworks.com/world-forest-cover-map.htm this thematic map from howstuffworks] marks the amount of afforestation thus again required to repair the damage caused by man.

==== Forest plantations ====
To meet the worlds demand for wood it has been suggested by forestry writers Botkins and [[Sedjo]] that high-yielding forest [[plantations]] are suitable. It has been calculated that plantations yielding 10 cubic meters per hectare annually could supply all the timber required for international trade on 5 percent of the world's existing forestland. By contrast natural forests produce about 1-2 cubic meters per hectare, therefore 5 to 10 times more forest land would be required to meet demand. Forester Chad Oliver has suggested a forest mosaic with high-yield forest lands interpersed with conservation land.<ref>No Man's Garden Daniel B. Botkin p 246-247</ref>

According to an international team of scientists, led by [[Pekka Kauppi]], professor of environmental science and policy at [[Helsinki University]], the deforestation already done could still be reverted by tree plantings (eg [[Flexible Mechanisms|CDM & JI afforestation/reforestation]] projects) in 30 years. The conclusion was made, through analysis of data acquired from [[FAO]]. <ref>[http://environment.guardian.co.uk/conservation/story/0,,1947182,00.html Report by Pekka Kauppi stating that the deforestation can be undone by tree planting in 30 years]</ref>

Reforestation through tree planting (trough eg the noted CDM & JI A/R-projects), might take advantage of the changing precipitation due to climate change. This may be done through studying where the precipitation is perceived to be increased (see [http://globalis.gvu.unu.edu/ the globalis thematic map of the 2050 precipitation]) and setting up reforestation projects in these locations. Especially areas such as Niger, Sierra Leone and Liberia are important candidates; in huge part because they also suffer from an expanding desert (the Sahara) and decreasing biodiversity (while being an important [[biodiversity hotspot]]).

==Military context==
[[Image:Attack on bloody ridge.jpg|thumb|American [[M4 Sherman|Sherman tanks]] knocked out by Japanese artillery on Okinawa.]]While the preponderance of deforestation is due to demands for agricultural and urban use for the human population, there are some examples of military causes. One example of deliberate deforestation is that which took place in the [[U.S.]] [[Allied Occupation Zones in Germany|zone of occupation]] in [[Germany]] after [[World War II]]. Before the onset of the [[Cold War]] defeated Germany was still considered a potential future threat rather than potential future ally. To address this threat, attempts were made to [[Industrial plans for Germany|lower German industrial potential]], of which forests were deemed an element. Sources in the U.S. government admitted that the purpose of this was the "ultimate destruction of the war potential of German forests." As a consequence of the practice of clear-felling, deforestation resulted which could "be replaced only by long forestry development over perhaps a century."<ref>Nicholas Balabkins, "Germany Under Direct Controls; Economic Aspects Of Industrial Disarmament 1945-1948, Rutgers University Press, 1964. p. 119. The two quotes used by Balabkins are referenced to respectively; U.S. office of Military Government, ''A Year of Potsdam: The German Economy Since the Surrender'' (1946), p.70; and U.S. Office of Military Government, ''The German Forest Resources Survey'' (1948), p. II. For similar observations see G.W. Harmssen, ''Reparationen, Sozialproduct, Lebensstandard'' (Bremen: F. Trujen Verlag, 1948), I, 48</ref>

[[War]] can also be a cause of deforestation, either deliberately such as through the use of [[Agent Orange]]<ref>"Encyclopedia of World Environmental History". Routledge, 2004. ISBN 0415937337</ref> during the [[Vietnam War]] where, together with bombs and bulldozers, it contributed to the destruction of 44 percent of the forest cover,<ref>Patricia Marchak, "[http://books.google.com/books?id=Oi-xLllDK8oC&pg=PA157&dq=deforestation+%22agent+orange%22&sig=CiHOq-9TslQ688z1sWvKYDCcUmc Logging the Globe]" p. 157</ref> or inadvertently such as in the 1945 [[Battle of Okinawa]] where bombardment and other combat operations reduced the lush tropical landscape into "a vast field of mud, lead, decay and maggots".<ref>[http://www.nyc-shorinryu.com/okinawa.html Okinawan History and Karate-do<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

==References==
{{reflist|2}}
===General references===
* BBC 2005 TV series on the history of geological factors shaping human history (name?)
* ''A Natural History of Europe'' - 2005 co-production including BBC and ZDF
* Whitney, Gordon G. (1996). ''From Coastal Wilderness to Fruited Plain : A History of Environmental Change in Temperate North America from 1500 to the Present''. [[Cambridge University Press]]. ISBN 0-521-57658-X
* Williams, Michael. (2003). ''Deforesting the Earth''. University of Chicago Press, Chicago. ISBN 0-226-89926-8
* Wunder, Sven. (2000). ''The Economics of Deforestation: The Example of Ecuador''. [[Macmillan Publishers|Macmillan Press]], London. ISBN 0-333-73146-8
* FAO&CIFOR report: [http://www.fao.org/docrep/008/ae929e/ae929e00.htm Forests and Floods: Drowning in Fiction or Thriving on Facts?]
*<!-- Fe -->{{wikicite|id=idFenical1983|reference={{citebook
|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=g6RfkqCUQyQC&pg=PA147&dq=oxygen+percent+algae+plants&sig=4tJv81njIlr7qsWD95pHcuRlffc#PPA147,M1
|title=Plants: the potentials for extracting protein, medicines, and other useful chemicals (workshop proceedings)|year=1983|month=September|chapter=Marine Plants: A Unique and Unexplored Resource|last=Fenical|first=William|page=147|isbn=1428923977|publisher=DIANE Publishing}}}}
===Ethiopia deforestation references===
* Parry, J. (2003). Tree choppers become tree planters. Appropriate Technology, 30(4), 38-39. Retrieved November 22, 2006, from ABI/INFORM Global database. (Document ID: 538367341).
* Hillstrom, K & Hillstrom, C. (2003). Africa and the Middle east. A continental Overview of Environmental Issues. Santabarbara, CA: ABC CLIO.
* Williams, M. (2006). Deforesting the earth: From prehistory to global crisis: An Abridgment. Chicago: The university of Chicago Press.
* Mccann. J.C. (1990). A Great Agrarian cycle? Productivity in Highland Ethiopia, 1900 To 1987. Journal of Interdisciplinary History, xx: 3,389-416. Retrieved November 18, 2006, from JSTOR database.


==See also==
==See also==
{{commons|Deforestation}}
Other Islamic titles
<div class="references-small" style="-moz-column-count:2; column-count:2;">
* [[Emir]] (Amir)
* [[Atabeg]]
* [[Assarting]]
* [[Bey]]
* [[Biochar]]
* [[Flexible Mechanisms|CDM & JI A/R projects]]
* [[Caliph]]
* [[Deforestation during the Roman period]]
* [[Datu]]
* [[Desertification]]
* [[Khan (title)|Khan]], [[Ilkhan]] and [[Khakhan|Khaqan]]
* [[Malik]]
* [[Ecoforestry]]
* [[Mir (title)|Mir]]
* [[Forestry]]
* [[Padishah]]
* [[Illegal logging]]
* [[Shah]] and [[Shahanshah]]
* [[Land use, land-use change and forestry]]
* [[Moisture recycling]]
Further
* [[Mountaintop removal]]
* [[HMS Sultan]] (Royal Navy)
* [[Neolithic]]
* ''Sultan'', a [[GWR Iron Duke Class]] steam locomotive
* [[Overpopulation]]
* [[Sultanism]] (despotism)
* [[Sultans of Swing]]
* [[Rainforest]]
* [[Richard St. Barbe Baker]]
* [[Slash-and-burn]]
* [[Slash-and-char]]
* [[Terra preta]]
* [[Wilderness]]
</div>


== External links ==
==Sources and references==
*[http://preventdeforestation.com/ Prevent Deforestation]
{{commonscat|Sultans}}
* [http://www.eoearth.org/article/Deforestation_in_Amazonia Encyclopedia of Earth: Deforestation in Amazonia]
* [http://www.4dw.net/royalark/Persia/persia-glossary.htm RoyalArk - see each modern nation, e.g. here the former Persian Empire]
* [http://www.fao.org/forestry/site/fra2005/en/ Global Forest Resources Assessment 2005] by the [[FAO]] Comprehensive assessment of forests and forestry. Includes 350 page report and 15 page summary
* [http://www.worldstatesmen.org/ WorldStatesmen - see each present nation]
*[http://earthwatch.unep.net/emergingissues/forests/forestloss.php#WRI/WCMC/WWF.%201997. United Nations EarthWatch]
{{reflist}}
* [http://ec.europa.eu/comm/agriculture/fore/index_en.htm EU Forestry].
* [http://www.un.org/esa/forests United Nations Forum on Forests]
* [http://www.rcfa-cfan.org/english/issues.12-3.html CFAN] - [[CIDA]] Forestry Advisory Network DEFORESTATION: Tropical Forests in Decline
*[http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&ie=UTF8&z=8&ll=-10.81712,-62.199097&spn=4.153702,6.635742&t=k&om=1 Amazon Deforestation (Google maps)]
*[http://www.greenpeace.org/china/en/campaigns/forests/our-disappearing-forests/ Our disappearing forests - Greenpeace China]


===In the media===
*March 14, 2007, ''[[The Independent|Independent Online]]'': [http://news.independent.co.uk/environment/article2355962.ece Destruction of forests in developing world 'out of control']


{{global warming}}
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[[Category:Arabic words and phrases]]
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[[Category:Titles in Afghanistan]]
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Revision as of 01:16, 13 October 2008

File:Deforestationriobranco.jpg
A NASA satellite observation of illegal deforestation near Rio Branco in Brazil observed July 28 2000
Djouce Mountain, along with the island of Ireland, was systematically clear-felled during the 17th and 18th centuries, in order to obtain wood mainly for shipbuilding.

Deforestation is the conversion of forested areas to non-forest land for use such as arable land, pasture, urban use, logged area, or wasteland. Since the tropical rainforests are the most diverse ecosystems on earth[1][2] and about 80% of the world's known biodiversity could be found in tropical rainforests[3][4] removal or destruction of significant areas of forest cover has resulted in a degraded[5] environment with reduced biodiversity[vague] [6] In a few countries, massive[which?][7] deforestation is ongoing and is shaping climate and geography. Deforestation results from removal of trees without sufficient reforestation, and results in declines in biodiversity. [8]

From about the mid-1800s, around 1852, the planet has experienced an unprecedented[which?] rate of change of destruction of forests worldwide [citation needed]. Forests in Europe are adversely affected by acid rain[9] and large areas of Siberia have been harvested since the collapse of the Soviet Union.[10] In the last two decades, Afghanistan has lost over 70% of its forests throughout the country.[11] However, it is in the world's great tropical rainforests[12] where the destruction is most pronounced at the current time and where clearcutting is having an adverse effect on biodiversity and contributing to the ongoing Holocene mass extinction.[13][14]

About half of the mature tropical forests, between 7.5 million to 8 million square kilometres (2.9 million to 3 million sq mi) of the original 15 million to 16 million square kilometres (5.8 million to 6.2 million sq mi) that until, 1947 [15][when?] covered the planet have been cleared.[16] The forest loss is already acute in Southeast Asia,[17] the second of the world's great biodiversity hot spots.[18] More than 40% of the animal and plant species in Southeast Asia could be wiped out in the 21st century.[19] Much of what remains is in the Amazon basin, where the Amazon Rainforest covered [when?] more than 6 million square kilometres. The forests are being destroyed at a pace tracking the rapid pace of human population growth.[20] Unless significant[vague] measures such as: seeking out and protecting old growth forests that haven't been disturbed[21], are taken on a worldwide basis to preserve them, by 2030 there will only be ten percent remaining [22][16] with another ten percent in a degraded condition.[22] 80 percent will have been lost and with them the irreversible loss of hundreds of thousands of species.[22]

Many tropical countries, including Mexico, Brazil, India, Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand, Myanmar, Malaysia, Bangladesh, China, Sri Lanka, Laos, Nigeria, Congo, Liberia, Guinea, Ghana and the Cote d'lvoire have lost large areas of their rainforest.[23][24] Rainforests 50 years ago covered 14% of the worlds land surface, they now only cover 6%.[25] 90% of the forests of the Philippine archipelago have been cut.[26] In 1960 Central America still had 4/5 of its original forest; now it is left with only 2/5. Madagascar has lost 95% of its rainforests. Brazil has lost 90-95% of its Mata Atlântica forest.[27] Half of the Brazilian state of Rondonia's 243,000 km² have been destroyed or severely degraded in recent years.[28] As of 2007, less than 1% of Haiti's forests remain.[29] Between 1990 and 2005, Nigeria lost 81% of its old-growth forests.[30] Several countries,[31] notably the Brazil, have declared their deforestation a national emergency.[32]

Impact on the environment

Orbital photograph of human deforestation in progress in the Tierras Bajas project in eastern Bolivia. Photograph courtesy NASA.

The removal or destruction of significant areas of forest cover has resulted in a degraded environment with reduced biodiversity.[33] In developing countries, deforestation is ongoing and is shaping climate and geography.[34][35]

Deforestation is a contributor to global warming,[36][37] The worlds rain forests are widely believed by laymen to contribute a significant amount of world's oxygen [38] although it is now accepted by scientists that rainforests contribute little net oxygen to the atmosphere and deforestation will have no effect whatsoever on atmospheric oxygen levels.[39][40]. However, the incineration and burning of forest plants in order to clear land releases tonnes of CO2 which contributes to global warming.[37]

Deforestation reduces the content of water in the soil and groundwater as well as atmospheric moisture.[41] Deforestation reduces soil cohesion, so that erosion, flooding and landslides ensue.[42][43] Forests support biodiversity, providing habitat for wildlife;[44] moreover, forests foster medicinal conservation.[45] Forests enhance the recharge of aquifers in some locales however forests are a major source of aquifer depletion on most locales [46]. With forest biotopes being irreplaceable source of new drugs (like taxol), deforestation can destroy genetic variations (such as crop resistance) irretrievably.[47]

Shrinking forest cover lessens the landscape's capacity to intercept, retain and transport precipitation[citation needed]. Instead of trapping precipitation, which then percolates to groundwater systems, deforested areas become sources of surface water runoff, which moves much faster than subsurface flows[citation needed]. That quicker transport of surface water can translate into flash flooding and more localized floods than would occur with the forest cover. Deforestation also contributes to decreased evapotranspiration, which lessens atmospheric moisture which in some cases affects precipitation levels down wind from the deforested area, as water is not recycled to downwind forests, but is lost in runoff and returns directly to the oceans. According to one preliminary study[which?], in deforested north and northwest China, the average annual precipitation decreased by one third between the 1950s and the 1980s[vague] .

Longterm gains can be obtained by managing forest lands sustainably to maintain both forest cover and provide a biodegradable renewable resource. Forests are also important stores of organic carbon, and forests can extract carbon dioxide and pollutants from the air, thus contributing to biosphere stability. Deforestation (mainly in tropical areas) account for up to one-third of total anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions.[48] Forests are also valued for their aesthetic beauty and as a cultural resource and tourist attraction.

Experts[which?] estimate that we are losing 137 plant, animal and insect species every single day due to rainforest deforestation, which equates to 50,000 species a year.[49]

“Reducing emissions from tropical deforestation and forest degradation (REDD) in developing countries has emerged as new potential to complement ongoing climate policies. The idea consists in providing financial compensations for the reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from deforestation and forest degradation”. [50]

Economic impact

Historically utilization of forest products, including timber and fuel wood, have played a key role in human societies, comparable to the roles of water and cultivable land. Today, developed countries continue to utilize timber for building houses, and wood pulp for paper. In developing countries almost three billion people rely on wood for heating and cooking.[51] The forest products industry is a large part of the economy in both developed and developing countries. Short-term economic gains made by conversion of forest to agriculture, or over-exploitation of wood products, typically leads to loss of long-term income and long term biological productivity (hence reduction in nature's services). West Africa, Madagascar, Southeast Asia and many other regions have experienced lower revenue because of declining timber harvests. Illegal logging causes billions of dollars of losses to national economies annually.[52]

The new procedures to get amounts of wood are causing more harm to the economy and over powers the amount of money spent by people employed in logging.[53] According to a study, "in most areas studied, the various ventures that prompted deforestation rarely generated more than US$5 for every ton of carbon they released and frequently returned far less than US $1." The price on the European market for an offset tied to a one-ton reduction in carbon is 23 euro (about $35).[54]

Characterization

Throughout most of history[when?], humans were hunter gatherers who hunted within forests. In most areas, such as the Amazon, the Tropics, Central America, and the Carribean[55],only after shortages of wood and other forest products are policies implemented to ensure forest resources are used in a sustainable manner. In developed countries, as urbanization and economic development increases, land previously used for farming is abandoned and reverted to forests.[56] Today, in the developed world, most countries are experiencing forest restoration and most losses in forest land are primarily driven by expanding urban areas.[57]

In developing countries, human-caused deforestation and the degradation of forest habitat is primarily due to expansion of agriculture, slash and burn practices (instead of slash-and-char), urban sprawl, illegal logging, over harvest of fuel wood, mining, and petroleum exploration.[58][59]

Deforestation trends could follow the Kuznets curve[60] however even if true this is problematic in so-called hot-spots because of the risk of irreversible loss of non-economic forest values for example valuable habitat or species loss.[61][62]

The effects of human related deforestation can be mitigated through environmentally sustainable practices that reduce permanent destruction of forests or even act to preserve and rehabilitate disrupted forestland (see Reforestation and Treeplanting). These methods help the cause and provide a sustainable growth of forests and allow lumber to become a renewable resource

Definitions of deforestation

Deforestation is the conversion of forested areas to non-forest land for use such as arable land, pasture, urban use, logged area, or wasteland. Generally, the removal or destruction of significant areas of forest cover has resulted in a degraded environment with reduced biodiversity. In many countries, deforestation is ongoing and is shaping climate and geography. Deforestation results from removal of trees without sufficient reforestation, and results in declines in habitat and biodiversity, wood for fuel and industrial use, and quality of life. Environmental effects

Atmospheric pollution Deforestation is one of the major causes of the enhanced greenhouse effect.[63] According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, deforestation, mainly in tropical areas, accounts for up to one-third of total anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions.[14] Trees and other plants remove carbon (in the form of carbon dioxide) from the atmosphere during the process of photosynthesis. Both the decay and burning of wood releases much of this stored carbon back to the atmosphere. Deforestation also causes carbon stores held in soil to be released. Forests are stores of carbon and can be either sinks or sources depending upon environmental circumstances. Mature forests can be net sinks or net sources of carbon dioxide (see Carbon dioxide sink and Carbon cycle).

The water cycle is also affected by deforestation. Trees extract groundwater through their roots and release it into the atmosphere. When part of a forest is removed, the region cannot hold as much water and can result in a much drier climate.[64]

Biodiversity Most forests (including the Amazon, Carribean forests, and many in Central America) are rich in biological diversity. Deforestation can cause the destruction of the habitats that support this biological diversity, thus contributing to the ongoing Holocene extinction event. Numerous countries in the America's and Africa have developed Biodiversity Action Plans to limit clear cutting and slash and burn agricultural practices as deleterious to wildlife and vegetation, particularly when endangered species are present.

Landslides Tree roots bind soil together, and if the soil is sufficiently shallow they act to keep the soil in place by also binding with underlying bedrock. Tree removal on steep slopes with shallow soil thus increases the risk of landslides, which can threaten people living nearby. However most deforestation only affects the trunks of trees, allowing for the roots to stay rooted, negating the landslide. Controlling deforestation Farming New methods are being developed to farm more intensively, such as high-yield hybrid crops, greenhouse, autonomous building gardens, and hydroponics. These methods are often [when?] dependent on massive[vague] chemical inputs to maintain necessary yields. In cyclic agriculture, cattle are grazed on farm land that is resting and rejuvenating. Cyclic agriculture actually increases the fertility of the soil[citation needed]. Intensive farming can also decrease soil nutrients by consuming at an accelerated rate the trace minerals needed for crop growth.

Forest management Efforts to stop or slow deforestation have been attempted for many centuries because it has long been known around the 1970's [when?] that deforestation can cause environmental damage sufficient in some cases to cause societies to collapse[citation needed][65]. In Tonga, paramount rulers developed policies designed to prevent conflicts between short-term gains from converting forest to farmland and long-term problems forest loss would cause,[49] while during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in Tokugawa Japan[50] the shoguns developed a highly sophisticated system of long-term planning to stop and even reverse deforestation of the preceding centuries through substituting timber by other products and more efficient use of land that had been farmed for many centuries. In sixteenth century Germany landowners also developed silviculture to deal with the problem of deforestation. However, these policies tend to be limited to environments with good rainfall, no dry season and very young soils (through volcanism or glaciation). This is because on older and less fertile soils trees grow too slowly for silviculture to be economic, whilst in areas with a strong dry season there is always a risk of forest fires destroying a tree crop before it matures. Historical causes Further information: Timeline of environmental events {| class="wikitable"

Use of the term deforestation

It has been argued [who?] that the lack of specificity in use of the term deforestation distorts forestry issues.[66] The term deforestation is used to refer to activities that use the forest, for example, fuel wood cutting, commercial logging, as well as activities that cause temporary removal of forest cover such as the slash and burn technique, a component of some shifting cultivation agricultural systems or clearcutting. It is also used to describe forest clearing for annual crops and forest loss from over-grazing. Some definitions of deforestation include activities such as establishment of industrial forest plantations that are considered afforestation by others. It has also been argued that the term deforestation is such an emotional term that is used "so ambiguously that it is virtually meaningless" unless it is specified what is meant.[67] More specific terms terms include forest decline, forest fragmentation and forest degradation, loss of forest cover and land use conversion.

The term also has a traditional legal sense of the conversion of Royal forest land into purlieu or other non-forest land use.

Historical causes

Prehistory

Prehistory Deforestation has been practiced by humans for tens of thousands of years before the beginnings of civilization[68]. Fire was the first tool that allowed humans to modify the landscape. The first evidence of deforestation appears in the Mesolithic period.[69] It was probably used to convert closed forests into more open ecosystems favourable to game animals[70]. With the advent of agriculture, fire became the prime tool to clear land for crops. In Europe there is little solid evidence before 7000 BC. Mesolithic foragers used fire to create openings for red deer and wild boar. In Great Britain shade tolerant species such as oak and ash are replaced in the pollen record by hazels, brambles, grasses and nettles. Removal of the forests led to decreased transpiration resulting in the formation of upland peat bogs. Widespread decrease in elm pollen across Europe between 8400-8300 BC and 7200-7000 BC, starting in southern Europe and gradually moving north to Great Britain, may represent land clearing by fire at the onset of Neolithic agriculture.

An array of Neolithic artifacts, including bracelets, axe heads, chisels, and polishing tools.

The Neolithic period saw extensive deforestation for farming land.[71][72] Stone axes were now[when?] being made not just from flint, but from a wide variety of hard rocks from across Britain and North America as well[vague]

Easter Island has suffered from heavy soil erosion in recent centuries, aggravated by agriculture and deforestation.[73] Jared Diamond gives an extensive look into the collapse of the ancient Easter Islanders in his book Collapse. The disappearance of the island's trees seems to coincide with a decline of its civilization around the 17th and 18th century.[74][75]

The famous silting up of the harbor for Bruges, which moved port commerce to Antwerp, also follow a period of increased settlement growth (and apparently[vague] of deforestation) in the upper river basins. In early medieval Riez in upper Provence, alluvial silt from two small rivers raised the riverbeds and widened the floodplain, which slowly buried the Roman settlement in alluvium and gradually moved new construction to higher ground; concurrently the headwater valleys above Riez were being opened to pasturage.

A typical progress trap is that cities were often built in a forested area providing wood for some industry (e.g. construction, shipbuilding, pottery). When deforestation occurs without proper replanting, local wood supplies become difficult to obtain near enough to remain competitive, leading to the city's abandonment, as happened repeatedly in Ancient Asia Minor. The combination of mining and metallurgy often[vague] went along this self-destructive path.

Meanwhile most of the population remaining active in (or indirectly dependent on) the agricultural sector, the main pressure in most areas remained land clearing for crop and cattle farming; fortunately enough wild green was usually left standing (and partially used, e.g. to collect firewood, timber and fruits, or to graze pigs) for wildlife to remain viable, and the hunting privileges of the elite (nobility and higher clergy) often[when?] protected significant[vague] woodlands.

Major parts in the spread (and thus more durable growth) of the population were played by monastical 'pioneering' (especially by the benedictine and cistercian orders) and some feudal lords actively attracting farmers to settle (and become tax payers) by offering relatively good legal and fiscal conditions – even when they did so to launch or encourage cities, there always was an agricultural belt around and even quite some within the walls. When on the other hand demography took a real blow by such causes as the Black Death or devastating warfare (e.g. Genghis Khan's Mongol hordes in eastern and central Europe, Thirty Years' War in Germany) this could lead to settlements being abandoned, leaving land to be reclaimed by nature, even though the secondary forests usually lacked the original biodiversity.

From 1100 to 1500 AD significant deforestation took place in Western Europe as a result of the expanding human population. The large-scale building of wooden sailing ships by European (coastal) naval owners since the 15th century for exploration, colonisation, slave trade – and other trade on the high seas and (often related) naval warfare (the failed invasion of England by the Spanish Armada in 1559 and the battle of Lepanto 1571 are early cases of huge waste of prime timber; each of Nelson's Royal navy war ships at Trafalgar had required 6000 mature oaks) and piracy meant that whole woody regions were over-harvested, as in Spain, where this contributed to the paradoxical weakening of the domestic economy since Columbus' discovery of America made the colonial activities (plundering, mining, cattle, plantations, trade ...) predominant.

In Changes in the Land (1983), William Cronon collected 17th century New England Englishmen's reports of increased seasonal flooding during the time that the forests were initially cleared, and it was widely believed that it was linked with widespread forest clearing upstream.

The massive[vague] use of charcoal on an industrial scale in Early Modern Europe was a new acceleration of the onslaught on western forests; even in Stuart England, the relatively primitive production of charcoal has already reached an impressive level. For ship timbers, Stuart England was so widely deforested that it depended on the Baltic trade and looked to the untapped forests of New England to supply the need. In France, Colbert planted oak forests to supply the French navy in the future; as it turned out, as the oak plantations matured in the mid-nineteenth century, the masts were no longer required.

Norman F. Cantor's summary of the effects of late medieval deforestation applies equally well to Early Modern Europe:[76]

"Europeans had lived in the midst of vast forests throughout the earlier medieval centuries. After 1250 they became so skilled at deforestation that by 1500 AD they were running short of wood for heating and cooking. They were faced with a nutritional decline because of the elimination of the generous supply of wild game that had inhabited the now-disappearing forests, which throughout medieval times had provided the staple of their carnivorous high-protein diet. By 1500 Europe was on the edge of a fuel and nutritional disaster, [from] which it was saved in the sixteenth century only by the burning of soft coal and the cultivation of potatoes and maize."

Specific parallels are seen in twentieth century deforestation occurring in many developing nations.

Deforestation today

Jungle burned for agriculture in southern Mexico.

Slash-and-burn is a method sometimes used by shifting cultivators to create short term yields from marginal soils. When practiced repeatedly, or without intervening fallow periods, the nutrient poor soils may be exhausted or eroded to an unproductive state. Slash-and-burn techniques are used by native populations of over 200 million people worldwide. Short-sighted, market-driven forestry practices are the leading causes of forest degradation.[77] The principal human-related causes of deforestation are agriculture and livestock grazing, urban sprawl, mining, and petroleum extraction. Growing worldwide demand for wood to be used for fire wood or in construction, paper and furniture - as well as clearing land for commercial and industrial development (including road construction) have combined with growing local populations and their demands for agricultural expansion and wood fuel to endanger ever larger forest areas.

Agricultural development programs in Indonesia (transmigration program) moved large populations into the rainforest zone, further increasing deforestation rates. One fifth of the world's tropical rainforest was destroyed between 1960 and 1990. Estimates of deforestation of tropical forest for the 1990s range from about 55,630 to 120,000 square kilometres each year. At this rate, all tropical forests may be gone by the year 2090.

The forests are being destroyed at an ever-quickening pace.[78] Around 150,000 km² of rainforest, equivalent to the size of England and Wales, is destroyed every year.[79]

According to British environmentalist Norman Myers, 5% of deforestation is due to cattle ranching, 19% to over-heavy logging, 22% to the growing sector of palm oil plantations, and 54% due to slash-and-burn farming.[80]

Australia

Victoria and NSW's remnant red gum forests including the Murray River's Barmah-Millewa, are increasingly being clear-felled using mechanical harvesters, destroying already rare habitat. Macnally estimates that approximately 82% of fallen timber has been removed from the southern Murray Darling basin,[81] and the Mid-Murray Forest Management Area (including the Barmah and Gunbower forests) provides about 90% of Victoria's red gum timber.[82]

Brazil

In Brazil the rate of deforestation is largely driven by commodity prices and world population growth.[83][84] Recent development of a new variety of soybean has led to the displacement of beef ranches and farms of other crops, which, in turn, move farther into the forest.[85] Certain areas such as the Atlantic Rainforest have been diminished to just 7% of their original size.[86] Although much conservation work has been done, few national parks or reserves are efficiently enforced.[87] In 2008, Brazil's Government has announced a record rate of deforestation in the Amazon.[88][89] Deforestation jumped by 69% in 2008 compared to 2007's twelve months, according to official government data.[90] Deforestation could wipe out or severely damage nearly 60% of the Amazon rainforest by 2030, says a new report from WWF.[91]

Canada

One case of deforestation in Canada is happening in Ontario's boreal forests, near Thunder Bay, where 28.9% of a 19,000 km² of forest area had been lost in the last 5 years and is threatening woodland caribou. This is happening mostly to supply pulp for the facial tissue industry[92].

Ethiopia

The main cause of deforestation in Ethiopia, located in East Africa, is a growing population and subsequent higher demand for agriculture, livestock production and fuel wood.[93] Other reasons include low education and inactivity from the government,[94] although the current government has taken some steps to tackle deforestation.[95] Organizations such as Farm Africa are working with the federal and local governments to create a system of forest management.[96] Ethiopia, the third largest country in Africa by population, has been hit by famine many times because of shortages of rain and a depletion of natural resources. Deforestation has lowered the chance of getting rain, which is already low, and thus causes erosion. Bercele Bayisa, an Ethiopian farmer, offers one example why deforestation occurs. He said that his district was forested and full of wildlife, but overpopulation caused people to come to that land and clear it to plant crops, cutting all trees to sell as fire wood.[97]

Ethiopia has lost 98% of its forested regions in the last 50 years.[96] At the beginning of the 20th century, around 420,000 km² or 35% of Ethiopia's land was covered with forests. Recent reports indicate that forests cover less than 14.2%[96] or even only 11.9% now.[98] Between 1990 and 2005, the country lost 14% of its forests or 21,000 km².

Indonesia

At present rates, tropical rainforests in Indonesia would be logged out in 10 years, Papua New Guinea in 13 to 16 years.[99] There are significantly large areas of forest in Indonesia that are being lost as native forest is cleared by large multi-national pulp companies and being replaced by plantations. In Sumatra tens of thousands of square kilometres of forest have been cleared often[when?] under the command of the central government in Jakarta who comply with multi national companies[100] to remove the forest because of the need to pay off international debt obligations and to develop economically[citation needed]. In Kalimantan, between 1991 and 1999 large areas of the forest were burned because of uncontrollable fire causing atmospheric pollution across South-East Asia.[101] Every year, forest are burned by farmers (slash-and-burn techniques are used by between 200 and 500 million people worldwide)[102] and plantation owners. A major source of deforestation is the logging industry, driven spectacularly by China and Japan.[103]

Madagascar

Deforestation[104] with resulting desertification, water resource degradation and soil loss has affected approximately 94% of Madagascar's previously biologically productive lands. Since the arrival of humans 2000 years ago, Madagascar has lost more than 90% of its original forest.[105] Most of this loss has occurred since independence from the French, and is the result of local people using slash-and-burn agricultural practises as they try to subsist.[106] Largely due to deforestation, the country is currently unable to provide adequate food, fresh water and sanitation for its fast growing population.[107][108]

Nigeria

According to the FAO, Nigeria has the world's highest deforestation rate of primary forests. It has lost more than half of its primary forest in the last five years. Causes cited are logging, subsistence agriculture, and the collection of fuel wood. Almost 90% of West Africa's rainforest has been destroyed.[109]

United States

File:Oldgrowth3.jpg
Loss of old growth forest in the United States.
1620, 1850, and 1920 maps: William B. Greeley, The Relation of Geography to Timber Supply, Economic Geography, 1925, vol. 1, p. 1-11. Source of TODAY map: compiled by George Draffan from roadless area map in The Big Outside: A Descriptive Inventory of the Big Wilderness Areas of the United States, by Dave Foreman and Howie Wolke (Harmony Books, 1992). These maps represent only virgin forest lost. Some regrowth has occurred but not to the age, size or extent of 1620 due to population increases and food cultivation. See United States entry on left

Prior to the arrival of European-Americans about one half of the United States land area was forest, about 4 million square kilometers (1 billion acres) in 1600.[110] For the next 300 years land was cleared, mostly for agriculture at a rate that matched the rate of population growth.[111] For every person added to the population, one to two hectares of land was cultivated.[112] This trend continued until the 1920s when the amount of crop land stabilized in spite of continued population growth. As abandoned farm land reverted to forest the amount of forest land increased from 1952 reaching a peak in 1963 of 3,080,000 km² (762 million acres). Since 1963 there has been a steady decrease of forest area with the exception of some gains from 1997. Gains in forest land have resulted from conversions from crop land and pastures at a higher rate than loss of forest to development. Because urban development is expected to continue, an estimated 93,000 km² (23 million acres) of forest land is projected be lost by 2050[113], a 3% reduction from 1997. Other qualitative issues have been identified such as the continued loss of old-growth forest,[114] the increased fragmentation of forest lands, and the increased urbanization of forest land.[115]

Species extinctions in the Eastern Forest

According to a report by Stuart L. Pimm the extent of forest cover in the Eastern United States reached its lowest point in roughly 1872 with about 48 percent compared to the amount of forest cover in 1620. Of the 28 forest bird species with habitat exclusively in that forest, Pimm claims 4 become extinct either wholly or mostly because of habitat loss, the passenger pigeon, Carolina parakeet, ivory-billed woodpecker, and Bachman's Warbler.[116]

Environmental effects

Atmospheric pollution

Deforestation is often cited as one of the major causes of the enhanced greenhouse effect. According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change deforestation, mainly in tropical areas, account for up to one-third of total anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions.[48] Trees and other plants remove carbon (in the form of carbon dioxide) from the atmosphere during the process of photosynthesis. Both the decay and burning of wood releases much of this stored carbon back to the atmosphere. Deforestation also causes carbon stores held in soil to be released. Forests are stores of carbon and can be either sinks or sources depending upon environmental circumstances. Mature forests can be net sinks of carbon dioxide (see Carbon dioxide sink and Carbon cycle).

The water cycle is also affected by deforestation. Trees extract groundwater through their roots and release it into the atmosphere. When part of a forest is removed, the region cannot hold as much water and can result in a much drier climate.

Biodiversity

Some forests are rich in biological diversity. Deforestation can cause the destruction of the habitats that support this biological diversity, thus contributing to the ongoing Holocene extinction event. Numerous countries have developed Biodiversity Action Plans to limit clear cutting and slash and burn agricultural practices as deleterious to wildlife and vegetation, particularly when endangered species are present.

Water cycle and water resources

Trees, and plants in general, affect the water cycle significantly:

  • their canopies intercept a proportion of precipitation, which is then evaporated back to the atmosphere (canopy interception);
  • their litter, stems and trunks slow down surface runoff;
  • their roots create macropores - large conduits - in the soil that increase infiltration of water;
  • they contribute to terrestrial evaporation and reduce soil moisture via transpiration;
  • their litter and other organic residue change soil properties that affect the capacity of soil to store water.

As a result, the presence or absence of trees can change the quantity of water on the surface, in the soil or groundwater, or in the atmosphere. This in turn changes erosion rates and the availability of water for either ecosystem functions or human services.

The forest may have little impact on flooding in the case of large rainfall events, which overwhelm the storage capacity of forest soil if the soils are at or close to saturation.

Tropical rainforests produce about 30% of our planets fresh water.[117]

Soil erosion

Undisturbed forest has very low rates of soil loss, approximately 2 metric tons per square kilometre (6 short tons per square mile).[citation needed] Deforestation generally increases rates of soil erosion, by increasing the amount of runoff and reducing the protection of the soil from tree litter. This can be an advantage in excessively leached tropical rain forest soils. Forestry operations themselves also increase erosion through the development of roads and the use of mechanized equipment.

China's Loess Plateau was cleared of forest millennia ago. Since then it has been eroding, creating dramatic incised valleys, and providing the sediment that gives the Yellow River its yellow color and that causes the flooding of the river in the lower reaches (hence the river's nickname 'China's sorrow').

Removal of trees does not always increase erosion rates. In certain regions of southwest US, shrubs and trees have been encroaching on grassland. The trees themselves enhance the loss of grass between tree canopies. The bare intercanopy areas become highly erodible. The US Forest Service, in Bandelier National Monument for example, is studying how to restore the former ecosystem, and reduce erosion, by removing the trees.

Landslides

Tree roots bind soil together, and if the soil is sufficiently shallow they act to keep the soil in place by also binding with underlying bedrock. Tree removal on steep slopes with shallow soil thus increases the risk of landslides, which can threaten people living nearby. However most deforestation only affects the trunks of trees, allowing for the roots to stay rooted, negating the landslide.

Controlling deforestation

Farming

New methods are being developed to farm more intensively, such as high-yield hybrid crops, greenhouse, autonomous building gardens, and hydroponics. These methods are often dependent on massive[vague] chemical inputs to maintain necessary yields. In cyclic agriculture, cattle are grazed on farm land that is resting and rejuvenating. Cyclic agriculture actually increases the fertility of the soil. Intensive farming can also decrease soil nutrients by consuming at an accelerated rate the trace minerals needed for crop growth.

Forest management

Efforts to stop or slow deforestation have been attempted for many centuries because it has long been known that deforestation can cause environmental damage sufficient in some cases to cause societies to collapse. In Tonga, paramount rulers developed policies designed to prevent conflicts between short-term gains from converting forest to farmland and long-term problems forest loss would cause,[118] while during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in Tokugawa Japan[119] the shoguns developed a highly sophisticated system of long-term planning to stop and even reverse deforestation of the preceding centuries through substituting timber by other products and more efficient use of land that had been farmed for many centuries. In sixteenth century Germany landowners also developed silviculture to deal with the problem of deforestation. However, these policies tend to be limited to environments with good rainfall, no dry season and very young soils (through volcanism or glaciation). This is because on older and less fertile soils trees grow too slowly for silviculture to be economic, whilst in areas with a strong dry season there is always a risk of forest fires destroying a tree crop before it matures.

In the areas where "slash-and-burn” is practiced, switching to “slash-and-char” would prevent the rapid deforestation and subsequent degradation of soils. The biochar thus created, given back to the soil, is not only a durable carbon sequestration method, but it also is an extremely beneficial amendment to the soil. Mixed with biomass it brings the creation of terra preta, one of the richest soils on the planet and the only one known to regenerate itself.

Reforestation

In the People's Republic of China, where large scale destruction of forests has occurred, the government has in the past required that every able-bodied citizen between the ages of 11 and 60 plant three to five trees per year or do the equivalent amount of work in other forest services. The government claims that at least 1 billion trees have been planted in China every year since 1982. This is no longer required today, but March 12 of every year in China is the Planting Holiday. Also, it has introduced the Green Wall of China-project which aims to halt the expansion of the Gobi-desert through the planting of trees. However, due to the large percentage of trees dying off after planting (up to 75%), the project is not very successful and regular carbon ofsetting through the Flexible Mechanisms might have been a better option. In western countries, increasing consumer demand for wood products that have been produced and harvested in a sustainable manner are causing forest landowners and forest industries to become increasingly accountable for their forest management and timber harvesting practices. The Arbor Day Foundation's Rain Forest Rescue program is a charity that helps to prevent deforestation. The charity uses donated money to buy up and preserve rainforest land before the lumber companies can buy it. The Arbor Day Foundation then protects the land from deforestation. This also locks in the way of life of the primitive tribes living on the forest land. Organizations such as Community Forestry International, The Nature Conservancy, World Wide Fund for Nature, Conservation International, African Conservation Foundation and Greenpeace also focus on preserving forest habitats. Greenpeace in particular has also mapped out the forests that are still intact and published this information unto the internet. [120]. HowStuffWorks in turn, made a more simple thematic map showing the amount of forests present just before the age of man (8000 years ago) and the current (reduced) levels of forest. This Greenpeace map thus created, as well as this thematic map from howstuffworks marks the amount of afforestation thus again required to repair the damage caused by man.

Forest plantations

To meet the worlds demand for wood it has been suggested by forestry writers Botkins and Sedjo that high-yielding forest plantations are suitable. It has been calculated that plantations yielding 10 cubic meters per hectare annually could supply all the timber required for international trade on 5 percent of the world's existing forestland. By contrast natural forests produce about 1-2 cubic meters per hectare, therefore 5 to 10 times more forest land would be required to meet demand. Forester Chad Oliver has suggested a forest mosaic with high-yield forest lands interpersed with conservation land.[121]

According to an international team of scientists, led by Pekka Kauppi, professor of environmental science and policy at Helsinki University, the deforestation already done could still be reverted by tree plantings (eg CDM & JI afforestation/reforestation projects) in 30 years. The conclusion was made, through analysis of data acquired from FAO. [122]

Reforestation through tree planting (trough eg the noted CDM & JI A/R-projects), might take advantage of the changing precipitation due to climate change. This may be done through studying where the precipitation is perceived to be increased (see the globalis thematic map of the 2050 precipitation) and setting up reforestation projects in these locations. Especially areas such as Niger, Sierra Leone and Liberia are important candidates; in huge part because they also suffer from an expanding desert (the Sahara) and decreasing biodiversity (while being an important biodiversity hotspot).

Military context

American Sherman tanks knocked out by Japanese artillery on Okinawa.

While the preponderance of deforestation is due to demands for agricultural and urban use for the human population, there are some examples of military causes. One example of deliberate deforestation is that which took place in the U.S. zone of occupation in Germany after World War II. Before the onset of the Cold War defeated Germany was still considered a potential future threat rather than potential future ally. To address this threat, attempts were made to lower German industrial potential, of which forests were deemed an element. Sources in the U.S. government admitted that the purpose of this was the "ultimate destruction of the war potential of German forests." As a consequence of the practice of clear-felling, deforestation resulted which could "be replaced only by long forestry development over perhaps a century."[123]

War can also be a cause of deforestation, either deliberately such as through the use of Agent Orange[124] during the Vietnam War where, together with bombs and bulldozers, it contributed to the destruction of 44 percent of the forest cover,[125] or inadvertently such as in the 1945 Battle of Okinawa where bombardment and other combat operations reduced the lush tropical landscape into "a vast field of mud, lead, decay and maggots".[126]

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  123. ^ Nicholas Balabkins, "Germany Under Direct Controls; Economic Aspects Of Industrial Disarmament 1945-1948, Rutgers University Press, 1964. p. 119. The two quotes used by Balabkins are referenced to respectively; U.S. office of Military Government, A Year of Potsdam: The German Economy Since the Surrender (1946), p.70; and U.S. Office of Military Government, The German Forest Resources Survey (1948), p. II. For similar observations see G.W. Harmssen, Reparationen, Sozialproduct, Lebensstandard (Bremen: F. Trujen Verlag, 1948), I, 48
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  126. ^ Okinawan History and Karate-do

General references

Ethiopia deforestation references

  • Parry, J. (2003). Tree choppers become tree planters. Appropriate Technology, 30(4), 38-39. Retrieved November 22, 2006, from ABI/INFORM Global database. (Document ID: 538367341).
  • Hillstrom, K & Hillstrom, C. (2003). Africa and the Middle east. A continental Overview of Environmental Issues. Santabarbara, CA: ABC CLIO.
  • Williams, M. (2006). Deforesting the earth: From prehistory to global crisis: An Abridgment. Chicago: The university of Chicago Press.
  • Mccann. J.C. (1990). A Great Agrarian cycle? Productivity in Highland Ethiopia, 1900 To 1987. Journal of Interdisciplinary History, xx: 3,389-416. Retrieved November 18, 2006, from JSTOR database.

See also

External links

In the media