Photo credit: Mickey Z.
Mickey Z. -- World News Trust
Dec. 11, 2013
“For me, trees have always been the most penetrating preachers. I revere them when they live in tribes and families, in forests and groves. And even more I revere them when they stand alone."
- Hermann Hesse
I’d like to tell you about a place called Bialowieza Forest. It’s the last remaining part of an immense primeval forest, which once covered much of Europe. This enduring vestige survived largely intact for nearly 600 years because it was first a royal then a tsar hunting preserve.
(insert deep sigh here)
Bialowieza Forest is divided between Poland (40 percent) and Belarus (60 percent) and is home to an amazing display of biodiversity -- including the wisent (European bison), the largest and the heaviest surviving mammal on the continent.
Some of the towering oaks in Bialowieza even have names, e.g. Great Mamamuszi, The King of Nieznanowo, and The Guardian of Zwierzyniec.
Fascinating stuff, for sure, but why would anyone except The Lorax care about a bunch of old trees with unpronounceable names?
For starters, as the folks at Greenpeace remind us, ancient forests maintain the balance of life on Earth: “They house around two-thirds of the world’s land-based species of plants and animals. The remaining tracts of forests influence day-to-day weather.”
If that’s not enough to induce a wave of global tree hugging, fear not, as I have a bunch more crucial reasons to start appreciating trees right now:
Trees Provide Oxygen (and reduce climate change)
The equation is rather fundamental: During photosynthesis, a tree “inhales” CO2 from the air and then separates the carbon from the oxygen molecules. The carbon is absorbed by the tree, which then “exhales” pure oxygen back into the air for us to breathe. In the process just described, trees also serve as carbon sinks (absorbing carbon dioxide while releasing the oxygen back into the atmosphere) and thus offset carbon dioxide emissions and reduce climate change.
Trees Provide Food
Almost as basic as #1, trees offer food like nuts and fruits for humans (and other creatures). Leaves are favored by animals like elephants, koalas, and giraffes while monkeys usually opt for flowers, and nectar is high on the menu of birds, bats, and many insects. Plus, when animals indulge in fruits, they end up as mobile distributors of seeds.
Trees Provide Homes
From nearly microscopic insects to camouflaged reptiles to feathered friends to wily primates and beyond, each tree is a vast, thriving eco-system in and of itself. The destruction of even a single small tree not only disrupts natural cycles, it also sentences countless creatures to death.
Trees Provide Medicine
For 5.1 billion people -- 85 percent of the world’s population -- herbs are the primary source for medicines.
Trees Provide Shade and Protection
Due to ozone depletion, we earthlings now have to endure increased amounts of potentially dangerous ultraviolet radiation. Thanks to our tree friends, we get some shade and protection and thus (we hope) less skin cancer.
Trees Provide Pollution Reduction
Trees absorb pollutants like sulfur dioxide, ozone, and nitrogen oxides through the stomates in the surface of their leaves. Up to a 60 percent reduction in street level particulates has been found on tree-lined streets and roadways. Trees also muffle urban noise pollution.
Trees Provide Erosion and Flood Prevention
Deforestation negatively impacts the amount of water in the soil and groundwater and the moisture in the atmosphere. Without tree roots to hold soil in place and fight erosion, we are seeing more runoff and less sediment deposit after storms. This result in higher levels of chemicals in our water along with far more flooding. On a related note, mangrove trees protect coastal areas from ocean waves and work in smooth symbiosis with coral reefs.
Trees Provide Soil Enrichment
Fallen leaves make excellent compost that enriches soil. Here’s how the USDA Forest Service explains it: “Needles and leaves that fall are not wasted. They decompose and restock the soil with nutrients and make up part of the spongy humus layer of the forest floor that absorbs and holds rainfall. Fallen leaves also become food for numerous soil organisms vital to the forest ecosystem.”
Trees Provide Beauty and Natural “Wealth”
Some people look at trees and see only lumber and profits as the sound of chainsaws echo in their clouded heads. Sane people, on the other hand, look at trees and see kindred spirits, fellow travelers, and eons of wisdom from which we have so much more to learn.
Despite all this, we humans have seen fit to destroy 18 million acres of trees -- 4,500 acres per hour -- each year. Today, in what National Geographic calls a “forest holocaust,” 80 percent of the world’s forests are already gone.
Are you ready to start some serious tree hugging?
I’m talking about a wide range of stuff from planting trees and simple lifestyle changes like using tree-free paper to far more important lifestyle changes like switching to eating habits that don’t require deforestation/livestock grazing. From there, way more of us can embrace tactics like tree-sitting and other forms of direct action... and, oh yeah, dismantling industrial civilization.
We’re linked. Like it or not, everything is linked. The future of life on Earth depends infinitely more on things like forest conservation than, say, profit margins. The sooner we realize this -- and act accordingly and decisively -- the better chance we have of creating a softer place to land.
Quite simply, the choice is ours… but time, my fellow earthlings, is not on our side.
#shifthappens
Note: To continue conversations like this, come see Mickey Z. in person on Jan. 11 at Bluestockings Bookstore in NYC.
***
Mickey Z. is the author of 11 books, most recently the novel Darker Shade of Green. Until the laws are changed or the power runs out, he can be found on a couple of obscure websites called Facebook and Twitter. Anyone wishing to support his activist efforts can do so by making a donation here.
© WorldNewsTrust.com -- Share and re-post this story. Please include this copyright notice and a link to World News Trust.