There's enough oxygen in the air to last for millions of years, and the amount is set by geology rather than land use.
Fires
in the Amazon
rainforest have captured attention worldwide in recent days.
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who took office in 2019, pledged
in his campaign to reduce environmental protection and increase
agricultural development in the Amazon, and he appears to have
followed through on that promise.
The
resurgence of forest clearing in the Amazon, which had decreased more
than 80% following a peak in 2004, is alarming for many reasons.
Tropical
forests harbor many species of plants and animals found nowhere else.
They are important refuges for indigenous people, and contain
enormous stores of carbon as wood and other organic matter that would
otherwise contribute to the climate crisis.
Some
media accounts have suggested that fires in the Amazon also threaten
the atmospheric oxygen that we breathe.
French
President Emmanuel Macron tweeted on Aug. 22 that “the Amazon rain
forest – the lungs which produces 20% of our planet’s oxygen –
is on fire.”
The
oft-repeated claim that the Amazon rainforest produces 20% of our
planet’s oxygen is based on a misunderstanding.
In
fact nearly all of Earth’s breathable oxygen originated in the
oceans, and there is enough of it to last for millions of years.
There are many reasons to be appalled by this year’s Amazon fires,
but depleting Earth’s
oxygen supply is not one of them.
No comments:
Post a Comment