Environmental Science
AP Environmental Science
Unit 5: Land and Water Use
12th
Learning Objective:
Describe the effects of clearcutting on forests
Essential Knowledge Checklist:
Clearcutting can be economically advantageous but leads to soil erosion, increased soil and stream temperatures, and flooding
Soil erosion:
Caused by loss of stabilizing root structure
Removes soil organic matter & nutrients from the forest
Deposits sediments in local streams
Increased soil & stream temperature
Loss of tree shade increases soil temperature
Soil has a lower albedo than leaves of trees
Loss of tree shade along rivers & streams warms them
Erosion of sediments into rivers also warms them
Flooding & landslides
Logging machinery compacts the soil
increased sunlight dries out the soil
Loss of root structure = erosion of topsoil & O horizon
All of these factors decrease H20 holding capacity of soil causing flooding & landslides
Tree Plantations: Areas where the same tree species are repeatedly planted, grown, and harvested
Lowers Biodiversity:
Biodiverse, mature forests are replaced with single-species forests
less species diversity = lower resilience
Less habitat diversity for other organisms
All the same age:
All trees are planted at the same time = all the same age
Lowers biodiversity further (no dead trees for woodpeckers, insects, decomposers
Filtering of air pollutants
Stomata (leaf pores) remove VOCs, NO2, and PM from the air and store them in the tree
Removal & storage of CO2 from the atmosphere
Trees take in CO2, store carbon as sugar, wood, and other tissue & release O2
Habitat for Organisms
Many organisms live in forests (biodiversity, ecotourism)
Reduces air filtering and carbon-storing services
cutting trees down releases CO2 from decomposition of leftover organic material
Slash & Burn: Method of clearing land for agriculture by cutting trees & burning them releases CO2, N2O and water vapor into the atmosphere (all GHGs)