Boreal Forests Store More Carbon than Tropical Forests
Report Calls for Global Climate Talks to Consider Boreal's Impact
"The Carbon the World Forgot" identifies the boreal forests of
"Past accounting greatly underestimated the amount and depth of carbon stored in and under the boreal forest," said
The boreal forest's status as the most intact forest left on earth also offers a unique opportunity for plants and animals forced to adapt to shifting habitats. Most other habitats today are highly fragmented by human activity, creating a variety of additional obstacles for species survival.
In light of these findings, today's report urges that international negotiations on carbon and forest protection consider ways to account for and protect the boreal.
"Any effective and affordable response to climate change should include preserving the world's remaining, carbon-rich old-growth forests," said Steve Kallick, director of the Pew Environment Group's International Boreal Conservation Campaign. "This report makes clear that nations must look not just at the tropics but at all the world's old-growth forests for climate change solutions."
"Keeping that carbon in place by protecting boreal forests is an important part of the climate equation," said
"The collision of climate disruption and massive human degradation of ecosystems is seriously worrying globally," said leading conservation biologist
"Conservation can be an important tool in the fight to mitigate climate change" said
As the world's largest remaining, intact forest, the boreal forest perhaps has the greatest potential to realize the resolution issued from the WILD9 conference that "large-scale nature conservation is a first-order climate change strategy for both mitigation and adaptation, and is necessary to address both the climate change and biodiversity extinction crises." http://www.wild.org/mensaje-de-merida/
More than 1,500 international scientists led by authors for the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change recommended in 2007 that at least half of Canada's boreal forest be protected from further disturbance - in large part to keep both the boreal forest carbon bank and internationally significant wildlife habitats intact. Despite the current lack of international protocol, several Canadian First Nation, provincial, and federal governments have taken important steps to protect hundreds of millions of acres of Canada's carbon rich boreal forest. In all, scientists are recommending that at least 300 million hectares be protected.
For further information: Larry Innes, Executive Director, Canadian Boreal Initiative, (416) 575-6776, (613) 230-4739 ext 226, [email protected]; Steve Kallick, Director, International Boreal Conservation Campaign (IBCC), Pew Environment Group, (206) 327-1184, [email protected]; Dr. Jeff Wells, science advisor to IBCC, (207) 458-8492, [email protected]; Dr. Stuart Pimm, Duke University, contact Sue Libenson, (907) 766-2841, [email protected]; Dr. Andrew Weaver, University of Victoria, contact Sue Libenson, (907) 766-2841, [email protected]; For interviews in French: Dr. Pascal Badiou, Dr. Marcel Darveau, Ducks Unlimited Canada, contact Suzanne Fraser, (613) 552-7277, [email protected]; For the full report and associated materials: http://www.borealbirds.org/carbonreport.shtml
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