[Vwdiesel] Re: OT Ecosystem
Justin and Chelly Bennett
cjb at midrivers.com
Mon Feb 21 11:14:45 EST 2005
Another problem with preserving old growth forest from both logging and
fire is how much co2 is actually used. Young growing trees consume more
co2 then old trees. Also you will find most of your animal life in
either open timber stands or along the interface zone between the timber
and the clearings. The animals use the heavy timber for protection from
weather and prediators. So are we being good stewards of the land when
we are not allowing fires to burn or sensible timber harvest? Another
clear cut that people forget about is the miles of grasslands and timber
that have been lost to the interstate/highway system and the national
power grid system. I am also concerned about the amount of farm land
that is being lost every year to subdivisions. Here in Montana and
Idaho some of the best crop growing land is being lost to tracs of ticy
tak housing. I know people need a place to live, but put your house
someplace that isn't viable crop land. Do I have the answers? Probably
not, but I wonder if either side of the argument are good stewards of
the land. One side seems to favor strip it bare and leave and the other
wants it locked away, neither option seems viable concerning a living
system.
Justin
> Not positive
>but it seems I've read that rain forests aren't all that efficient at
>converting
>in an overall sense due to the huge canopy. Only the upper plants
>are really contributing. The lower ones are in shade enough that
>the CO2 --> O2 time isn't much more than the O2 --> CO2 time in
>all that shade and darkness.
>
>
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