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October 2010
362
MASHONALAND CALENDAR
Sunday 17th October: Outing to Mfuti
We shall be visiting Anita and Peter Vorster's place, Mfuti. The last
time we visited here was in the winter (21 June 2009) and we had an interesting
walk and found some interesting trees – for example, a colony of
Albizia versicolor.
Directions: Proceed along the Mutoko Road. At about 18km, turn right into
Cromlet Road (Pig Industries Board). After 4 and a half km, signpost on
right to Mfuti.
We shall meet at 9:30 am. Please bring a chair and your lunch.
Saturday 23rd October: Haka Game Park
One of our regular haunts. We hope to see trees in flower, and we will
also look at the spring flush of herbaceous plants which should be appearing.
There will be an entrance fee, the amount of which is not known, so please
come prepared.
Directions: Take the Mutare Road out past Jaggers. Turn first left after
the "Danhiko" sign on the left, which is also the Cleveland
dam turning. Follow the pine avenue with humps to a sign "Haka"
on the left, which brings you to the entrance gate of the game park. We
will meet at 2.30pm.
Thursday 14 October: A talk about Dick Petheram
The Mashonaland Branch of the History Society of Zimbabwe will be holding
a talk on the life and achievements of Richard (Dick, Pete) Petheram.
Dick Petheram was a senior civil servant in the Ministry of Lands and
Natural Resources.
He combined his official career with a great personal interest in and
knowledge of trees, wildlife and natural resources in general. He retired
in 1968 and his contribution to our country is possibly not well known
and this talk will be an opportunity to hear more about a dedicated civil
servant. He was one of a group of civil servants of that era who were
driven by commitment, enthusiasm, and optimism. He was also Chairman of
the Tree Society from about 1980-81.
The speakers will be his daughters Edone Ann Logan and Jill Frow. Jill
will be coming from South Africa for the occasion. Edone Ann has contributed
a number of papers to the Society journal Heritage, and has herself an
interest in history and the outdoors.
The talk will be held at Prince Edward School at 5.30 p.m. on Thursday
14 October.
???
SEEING THE WOOD
Daybreak is a heavenly time to look on the Amazonian canopy. From a Brazilian
research tower high above it, a fuzzy grey sylvan view emerges from the
thinning gloom, vastly undulating, more granular than a cloud. It is mind-bendingly
beautiful. Chirruping and squawking, a few early risers—collared
puffbirds, chestnut-rumped woodcreepers and the tautologous curve-billed
scythebill—open up for the planet’s biggest avian choir.
In a slick of molten gold, dawn breaks and the trees awaken. In every
leaf, chlorophyll molecules are seizing the day for photosynthesis. Using
sunlight to ship electrons, they split water molecules and combine the
resulting hydrogen with carbon dioxide extracted from the air. This produces
carbohydrates that the trees turn into sugars, to be burnt off in respiration
or, by another chemical process, turned into new plant-matter. The main
waste product, oxygen, they emit through their stomata in a watery belch.
Hence the rainforest’s high level of humidity, visible from the
observation tower in diaphanous cloudlets drifting over the canopy.
That plants emit oxygen has long been known—since 1774, in fact,
when Joseph Priestley, a British chemist, found a mouse not too “inconvenienced”
by being trapped inside a bell-jar with a mint plant. Yet the importance
of plants’ ability to store carbon in making the planet habitable
is still not widely appreciated. On two previous occasions when the atmosphere
contained very high levels of carbon dioxide, the early Carboniferous
and Cretaceous periods, beginning about 350m and 150m years ago respectively,
they were reduced by the expansion of carbon-sequestering plants. Industrial
burning of the fossil fuels laid down in the Carboniferous period, in
the form of decaying plant-matter, is the main reason why there is now
more carbon in the atmosphere than there has been for 4m years.
Carbon calculations
This is the latest reason—and it is a big one—why destroying
forests is a bad idea. Roughly half the dry weight of a tree is made up
of stored carbon, most of which is released when the tree rots or is burned.
For at least the past 10,000 years man has been contributing to this process
by hacking and burning forests to make way for agriculture. About half
the Earth’s original forest area has been cleared. Until the 1960s,
by one estimate, changes in land use, which mostly means deforestation,
accounted for most historic man-made emissions. And its contribution to
emissions is still large: say 15-17% of the total, more than the share
of all the world’s ships, cars, trains and planes.
But this underestimates the damage done by the clearance. It also discounts
a geological-time-honoured way to sequester carbon. That growing forests,
natural or planted, do this is obvious. But there is increasing evidence
to suggest that primary, or old-growth, forests are seizing the opportunity
of a carbon-heavy atmosphere to suck up more carbon than they did previously,
a process known as “carbon fertilisation”. By one estimate
the Amazon rain- forest is sequestering an additional 1.3 gigatonnes a
year, roughly matching the recent annual emissions produced by clearing
it. Across the world, forests and the soil beneath them absorb about a
quarter of all carbon emissions.
This is an indispensable contribution to life as we know it, and forests
offer many others, too. They house more than half the world’s species
of animals, birds and insects. In the Amazon rainforest this biodiversity
is staggering: even its small gullies and runnels often have unique sub-species
of monkeys, birds, creatures of all kinds. Forests are also the source
of most staple foods and many modern medicines. They provide livelihoods,
wholly or partly, for about 400m of the world’s poorest people.
They have always touched the imaginations of more privileged ones: “A
culture is no better than its woods,” wrote W.H. Auden. Indeed,
the more that people learn about forests, the more perilous their mismanagement
seems.
They also make rain
That forests regulate water run-off, mitigating risks of flooding and
drought, has been recognised since ancient times. The ancients also understood
that trees can increase rainfall and deforestation can reduce it. Cutting
down trees leads to a reduction in evapotranspiration, which results in
less downwind precipitation. In the case of the Amazon rainforest this
has huge implications for the agriculture of the whole of the Americas.
That of southern Brazil, northern Argentina and Paraguay, in particular,
depends for rainfall on the moist Atlantic trade winds, which cross the
Amazon basin and then are deflected southwards by the Andes. There are
also indications that the American Midwest is watered from the same source,
by the moisture deflected northwards. The forest, by recycling the water
that falls on it through evapotranspiration, plays an important part in
this system.
Between a quarter and half of the water molecules that fall in the western
Amazon have previously fallen on the rainforest. In its absence, it would
be reasonable to expect a corresponding decrease in regional precipitation,
which would be calamitous, but the actual effect could be much worse.
Two Russian physicists, Victor Gorshkov and Anastassia Makarieva, claim
that forests, not temperature, are the main drivers of winds. They base
this on the previously unconsidered drop in pressure that occurs when
water passes from gas to liquid state in condensation. So ecosystems that
maintain a moist atmosphere—as rainforest does—draw in air
and moisture from elsewhere. This could explain the curious fact that
precipitation in the western Amazon is higher than it is upwind, despite
leakage in run-off at every revolution of the local water cycle.
The theory caused a stir in Western academia last year when it was put
forward in the journal Biosphere and is considered farfetched by many.
But it should reinforce the point that, on hydrological grounds alone,
conserving forest is often essential.
And still they are being chopped down. According to the main compiler
of forest data, the UN’S Food and Agriculture Organisation, about
4 billion hectares (10 billion acres) of forest remain, covering 31% of
the Earth’s land surface. Only a third is primary. Much of the rest
is seriously degraded: the FAO’S definition of a forest takes in
areas with as little as 10% tree cover.
Almost half of the forest that remains is in the tropics, mostly as rainforest
which, by almost any measure, is most precious of all. Nearly a third
of that rainforest is in Brazil, which has two-thirds of the Amazon basin;
and a fifth is in Congo and Indonesia. The second-biggest forest area,
about a third of the total, is in the boreal, or taiga, biome: a belt
of spruce, birch, fir and aspen that encircles the far northern hemisphere,
mostly in Russia, Scandinavia, Finland, Canada and a small part of America.
Just 11% of forest is in the temperate zone, dominated by America, which
cleared almost half its massive forests in the 19th century, and Europe
and China, which ate into theirs much earlier. Europe razed almost half
its temperate oak-, beech- and birch- woods in the Middle Ages, an onslaught
only briefly reversed by an outbreak of bubonic plague in the 14th century.
Now temperate forests are creeping back. Over 7m hectares a year are currently
being planted or allowed to regrow, according to the FAO, mostly in China
and America.
A tropical problem
The current onslaught is mainly in the tropics. In the past six decades
the rainforest has been reduced by over 60% and two- thirds of what remains
is fragmented, which makes it even more liable to be cleared. And despite
many campaigns by NGOs, vigils and rock concerts for the rain-forest and
efforts to buy it, lease it, log it and not log it, the destruction proceeds
at a furious clip. In the past decade, the FAO records, around 13m hectares
of the world’s forests, an area the size of England, have been lost
each year. Most of this was tropical forest, razed for agriculture. But
Russia, which has more forest than any other country, also lost a lot,
which the FAO’s figures do not capture because its clearance did
not involve a permanent change in land use. Between 2000 and 2005 some
144,000 sq km (55,000 square miles) of Russian forest—14% of the
total—was incinerated or felled, much of it illegally.
This represents progress, of a sort. In the 1990s, when the candle-holding
for the rainforest was at its height, over 16m hectares a year were lost.
Most of the slowdown is because of reduced rates of clearance in the world’s
biggest deforesters, Brazil and Indonesia, and to some degree this reflects
their former gluttony: both have masses of cleared land to spare. But
in both countries efforts to reduce the destruction have also helped,
especially in Brazil, which has a fast-growing agricultural sector and
is increasingly worried about deforestation. Over the past decade it has
given protected status to 500,000 sq km of the Amazon rainforest. According
to a recent report by the Royal Institute of International Affairs, a
British think-tank, illegal logging has been greatly reduced in Brazil,
Indonesia and Cameroon.
A few smaller rainforest countries are also showing more regard for their
trees. Costa Rica, which in the late 1980s lost around 4% of its forest
each year, has reduced its deforestation almost to zero. Gabon and Guyana,
almost three-quarters of which are covered by trees, say that, with foreign
help, they would be happy to keep it that way. Western consumers, increasingly
sensitive to the notion of sustainability, have a small hand in these
improvements. Alarmed by their bad press, Canadian timber companies announced
in May this year that they would work with greens to improve the management
of 72m hectares of boreal forest.
Yet such progress tends to be exaggerated, and even if it were real it
would be insufficient because of two huge threats to the forest. The first
is climate change, which is expected to redraw the map of forest ecosystems.
The boreal forest will creep northwards, for example, as the permafrost
thaws and carbon fertilisation increases. By one estimate, Finland’s
forests could grow 44% faster as a result. But that is nothing to celebrate,
because melting permafrost will release billions of tonnes of methane,
an especially potent greenhouse gas. It will also be offset by an increase
in forest dieback elsewhere, caused by rising aridity, drought, pests
and fires—all symptoms of global warming. Deforestation, which causes
local warming, exacerbates this. All this could make much of the current
forest area inhospitable to trees.
Such damage is already more common than most climate models had predicted,
with the boreal belt especially hard hit. Between 2000 and 2005 it lost
351,000 sq km of forest, mostly to fire and pests. Again, this loss does
not show up in the FAO’s figures, and the resulting emissions are
considered to be natural, not man-made. But the distinction is getting
blurred. Setting aside its reforestation efforts, Canada, the world’s
third-most-forested country, lost 5.2% of its tree cover in that five-year
period. This was partly because of a plague of bark-beetles in its temperate
and boreal zones, a record number of which have been surviving the recent
mild winters. By 2009 they had devastated over 16m hectares of Canadian
pine forest.
The outlook for the Amazon is also grave. Recent modelling suggests that
the mutually reinforcing effects of increasing temperatures and aridity,
forest fires and deforestation could bring the rainforest far closer than
previously thought to “tipping points” at which it becomes
ecologically unviable. So far 18% of the rainforest has been cleared.
The loss of another 2%, according to a World Bank study last year, could
start to trigger dieback in the forest’s relatively dry southern
and south-eastern parts. A global temperature increase of 3.5%, comfortably
within the current range of estimates for the end of this century, would
put paid to half the rainforest. This would release much of the 50 gigatonnes
of carbon it is estimated to contain—equivalent to ten years of
global emissions from burning fossil fuels.
Too many hungry mouths
The second great threat is human. The Earth’s population is expected
to increase by half over the next four decades, to around 9 billion, and
most of the additional 3 billion-odd hungry mouths will be in developing
countries, especially tropical ones. The population of Congo, now 70m,
will double in that time. Demand for food in these countries will also
double, which, at their current low levels of agricultural productivity,
will drive up demand for forest land.
As in most central African countries, Congo’s deforestation is currently
minor, caused largely by small-scale shifting cultivation and over-harvesting
of wood for fuel. At present the country has little commercial agriculture
or logging because of the state of its infrastructure, ruined by war and
misrule. Indeed, the decay of Congo’s Belgian-built roads, which
in 1960 ran to over 100,000km, must rank as one of the greatest boons
to forests since the Black Death. In the thick forest-savannah mosaic
of northern Congo, many days’ walk from any tarmac, your correspondent
unearthed a milestone, half-buried in the leaf-litter, pointing to the
small town of Badai, 15km to the east. Buried deeper was the gravel highway
that once led there.
But Africa is an outlier. Most tropical deforestation is the result of
expanding commercial ranching and agriculture, driven by rocketing domestic
and global demand for food, fibre and biofuel. In Indonesia, oil palm,
a productive source of cooking oil and biodiesel, offers the biggest reason
to clear. Between 2000 and 2006 Indonesia planted roughly half a million
hectares of oil palm a year, mostly on recently deforested land. The clearance
in Brazil, which is mostly illegal, is mainly for pasture; the Amazonian
cattle-herd has grown by over 40m head in the past two decades. The explosive
recent growth in the cultivation of another oil seed, soyabean, has led
to an onslaught on Brazil’s dryland cerrado savannah, which is often
disregarded as a forest, though it contains two-thirds as much carbon
as the rainforest, mostly in its roots. By moving northwards into the
Amazon basin, soya farmers are also driving ranchers deeper into the rainforest.
Grim climate predictions and recent food-price inflation have led to growing
fears for food security, adding to the pressure. Foreign governments and
investors are increasingly on the lookout to buy cheap, well-watered tropical
land. Last year the Saudi Binladin Group tried, unsuccessfully, to secure
land in Indonesia’s island of Papua where it wanted to invest $4.3
billion in rice cultivation. China, which has agreed to build and renovate
6,000km of roads in Congo, reportedly wants to cultivate oil palm there
on a massive scale. It is the world’s biggest importer of palm oil
and global demand for the stuff is soaring, even before much is getting
converted into biodiesel, as increasingly it will. And wherever there
is such demand for tropical agribusiness, forests are being razed to meet
it. Securing a licence to clear rainforest is often easier than buying
up and consolidating smallholdings.
What hope of survival have forests, especially the tropical sort, most
precious and most threatened? Large-scale defences are now being marshalled
by governments, NGOs, scientists and investors, chief among them an international
endeavour known as Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation,
or REDD. Launched with $4.5 billion, it is based on the idea that rich
countries should pay poorer ones not to cut down trees. Yet there is a
big risk that REDD will deliver much less than is required. The Earth’s
need for forests to soak up carbon emissions is almost limitless. Saving
the forest that is left should therefore be considered a modest aim. But
even that will require huge improvements in forest management, such as
reforming land registries and tightening up law enforcement. Above all,
it will require governments to prize forest very much more highly than
they do now. Otherwise there will be no chance of the many reforms required
outside the forestry sector: in land-use planning and rural development,
in agriculture, energy and infrastructure policies, and much else. It
will also require politicians to get serious about climate change. All
that amounts to a revolution, which is a lot to hope for. But if anything
can help bring it about, forests might.
They are crucial in all sorts of ways because of the manifold services
they provide. Western taxpayers need the Amazon rainforest to control
their climate. Brazil needs it to help feed its rivers and generate hydro-power.
Amazonian soya farmers need it to guarantee them decent rainfall. Yet
policies at every level conspire to wreak its destruction. Changing them,
in Brazil and across the tropical world, is a daunting task. But it is
not impossible—and it must be done. The cost of failure would simply
be too great.
James Astill
[This, the first in a series on the same theme, is reprinted in the interests
of science from The Economist.]
FOLLOW-UP ON HILLSIDE DAMS
The Bulawayo Hillside Dams Facebook page has now been relaunched. It contains
archival photographs, the newly launched "Visitor Cam", Boma
News and much more available all via the new Facebook profile. Share your
thoughts, suggestions and upload your photos, videos and memories onto
the page as well. Fully interactive. Use this link to open the new page:
http://www.facebook.com/hillsidedams.
Please avoid the old Hillside Dams profile as this is no longer maintained,
and the Administrator cannot be located. The new profile page is clearly
marked "The Official Facebook Page."
From the Hillside Dams webmaster: webmaster@hillsidedams.com.
BOOKS BY LYN MULLIN FOR SALE
The Tree Society is holding stocks of two of Lyn Mullin’s books
for sale. These sales benefit the Society by contributing to its funds.
The available books are as follows:
Historic Trees of Zimbabwe by Lyn Mullin.
This is a perennial best-seller with its splendid pictures and fascinating
text. It would make an excellent Christmas present. The books are available
in three different formats as follows:
Paperback US$ 20
Hardback US$ 40
Leather-bound US$ 60
A Checklist of Zimbabwean Vernacular Plant Names by Lyn Mullin
A comprehensive list of the vernacular names of Zimbabwe plants. Available
for US$ 5.
If anyone is interested in buying, please contact the Chairman, Mark Hyde,
who holds the books.
Contact details are given below.
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY
Not that I want to be a god or a hero. Just to change into a tree, grow
for ages, not hurt anyone. - Czeslaw Milosz, poet and novelist (1911-2004)
COMMITTEE MEMBERS’
CONTACT TEL. NUMBERS
Harare
Mark Hyde Home 745263
Cell 0912-233751
Ruth Evans Home 331198
Terry Fallon Home 481076
J-P Felu Home 304916
Bill Clarke Cell 0912-252720
Richard Oulton Home 870540
Mimi Rowe Home 882719
Tree Life Editor Home 302812
or bkinsey@mango.zw
The Tree Society’s e-mail address is
petra@mango.zw (Ruth Evans)
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