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Canada's Boreal Forest: Why Does it Need Protection?

Media Coverage
Canada's Boreal Forest: Why Does it Need Protection?

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  • Steven Kallick

    Steven Kallick

    Director, International Boreal Conservation Campaign

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Publication Name

Ecopolitology

Author(s)

Evan Fischer

If you’re wondering what a boreal forest is, you’re probably not alone. It is comprised of forested lands in the northern hemisphere that contain mainly coniferous trees and reside just south of the frozen tundra region near the pole. These forests are also referred to as taiga. In layman terms, it is one of the largest areas of forested land on the planet; sparsely populated, full of wildlife, and largely appreciated for its natural beauty.

It is also the largest repository of fresh water in the world (according to a recent report issued by the Pew Environment Group) and it houses a hefty store of Earth-bound carbon deposits (nearly a fourth of what is currently estimated to be on the Earth’s surface). And until recently, it needed no protection.

...

Unfortunately, the foibles of man have begun to take their toll on even this immense woodland region, which is estimated at well over a billion acres in size and is said to account for approximately a third of the world’s boreal forest.

Read the full article, Canada’s Boreal Forest: Why Does it Need Protection?, on the Ecopolitology website.

 

Related News and Resources

  • Editorial: Quebec's Front-Line Forests

    • Media Coverage
    • May 02, 2012

    (New York Times) In April, the government of Premier Jean Charest introduced a bill in the Quebec National Assembly that seeks to protect nearly 150 million acres — half of northern Quebec, an area the size of France — from industrial development, including logging, mining and petroleum exploration.

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