10
facts about the amazon
Vassiliki Apostolou Anais Galani B1
1.
Around 80% of the food we eat originally came from rainforests. Some of the
more popular examples include coffee, chocolate, rice, tomatoes, potatoes,
bananas, black pepper, pineapples and corn. At The Inside Track we basically
live on coffee. That’s reason enough to save the rainforest!
2.
Tropical rainforests only cover about 6% of the Earth’s surface, but they are
home to more than half the world’s total plant and animal species.
3. The
forest floor is almost completely dark – with less that 1% of the available
sunlight making it through the tree canopy above.
4.
There are around 3000 fruits found in rainforests, and in the west we make use
of around 200 of them. However, indigenous tribes make use of over 2000!
5. The
rainforests have begun to be destroyed in the last 100 years to make way for
farm land. Today, the rainforests are being destroyed by 1.5 acres every
second. That’s not a
typo.
6. With
deforestation continuing at such a fast rate, we’ve created the most rapid
extinction rate in the history of the world. 137 rainforest species are
exterminated completely every single day.
7. Over
a quarter of the medicines we use today have their origins in the rainforests –
and that’s after only about 1% of rainforest plants have been examined for
their medicinal properties. Imagine what else could be there? It’s not
outlandish to think that our best chance of curing the diseases that plague our
world could lie within the rainforest. But with so many species exterminated
every day, we may never find out.
8. We
often think that the soil in the rainforest is really fertile to support such a
huge range of plant and animal life. But rainforest land is not really any good
for farming. Once cleared, the soil is of such low quality that it can hardly
be used to grow anything. After a year or two of farming, the land is totally
bereft of nutrients – leaving a useless patch of land.
9. Some
people call the rainforests ‘the world’s lungs’, but decomposition of plant
matter absorbs as much oxygen as the trees produce. It’s probably more accurate
to think of them as having a cooling effect on the global climate, as they
absorb a huge amount of heat from the sun. About 30% of our carbon emissions
come from one thing – burning the rainforests.
10. If
deforestation continues, we’ll completely lose the rainforests within the next
40 years.
Source: https://www.onthegotours.com/blog/2012/11/top-10-facts-about-the-amazon-rainforest/
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