China alone accounts for 25 per cent of the global net increase in leaf area with only 6.6 per cent of global vegetated area.
India
and China are leading the global greening effort, which is quite
contrary to the general perception worldwide, a latest NASA study
said Monday, observing that the world is a greener place than it was
20 years ago.
The
NASA
study based on data received and analysed from its satellite said
that India and China are leading in greening on land. "China and
India account for one-third of the greening but contain only 9 per
cent of the planet's land area covered in vegetation," said lead
author Chi Chen of Boston University.
"That
is a surprising finding, considering the general notion of land
degradation in populous countries from over exploitation," he
said.
The
study published on February 11, in the journal Nature Sustainability
said that recent satellite data reveal a greening pattern that is
strikingly prominent in China and India and overlaps with croplands
world-wide.
China
alone accounts for 25 per cent of the global net increase in leaf
area with only 6.6 per cent of global vegetated area.
The
greening in China is from forests (42 per cent) and croplands (32 per
cent), but in India it is mostly from croplands (82 percent) with
minor contribution from forests (4.4 per cent), the NASA study said.
China
is engineering ambitious programmes to conserve and expand forests
with the goal of mitigating land degradation, air pollution and
climate change.
Food
production in China
and India has increased by over 35 per cent since 2000 mostly
owing to an increase in harvested area through multiple cropping
facilitated by fertiliser use and surface- and/or groundwater
irrigation.
When
the greening of the Earth was first observed, we thought it was due
to a warmer, wetter climate and fertilization from the added carbon
dioxide in the atmosphere, said Rama Nemani, a research scientist at
NASA's Ames Research Center and a co-author of the study.
This
study was made possible thanks to a two-decade-long data record from
the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) instruments
on NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites. Now with the MODIS data, we see
that humans are also contributing, she said.
Observing
that once people realise there is a problem, they tend to fix it,
Nemani said in the 1970s and 80s in India and China, the situation
around vegetation loss was not good.
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