logo
Tropical forests destroyed at fastest recorded rate last year

Tropical forests destroyed at fastest recorded rate last year

Yahoo21-05-2025

The world's tropical forests, which provide a crucial buffer against climate change, disappeared faster than ever recorded last year, new satellite analysis suggests.
Researchers estimate that 67,000 sq km (26,000 sq mi) of these pristine, old-growth forests were lost in 2024 – an area nearly as large as the Republic of Ireland, or 18 football pitches a minute.
Fires were the main cause, overtaking land clearances from agriculture for the first time on record, with the Amazon faring particularly badly amid record drought.
There was more positive news in South East Asia, however, with government policies helping to reduce forest loss.
Tropical rainforests store hundreds of billions of tonnes of carbon in soils and woody trunks. But this new global record raises further questions about their resilience on a warming planet.
Many researchers are concerned some forests, such as parts of the Amazon, may be approaching a "tipping point", beyond which they could fall into irreversible decline.
"The tipping point idea is, I think, increasingly the right one," said Prof Matthew Hansen, co-director of GLAD laboratory at the University of Maryland, which produces the data.
Prof Hansen described the new results as "frightening", and warned of the possible "savannisation" of the rainforest, where old-growth tropical forests die back and permanently switch to savanna.
"It's still a theory, but I think that that's more and more plausible looking at the data."
A separate study, published last week, made a similar warning of possible significant dieback of the Amazon if global warming exceeds the international target of 1.5C.
This would not only threaten the vibrant array of wildlife living in these most biodiverse habitats, but would also have serious ramifications for the global climate.
Until recently, the Amazon had been doing humanity a favour, absorbing more planet-warming carbon dioxide (CO2) than it released.
But the burning of these forests emits huge amounts of CO2 – adding to warming rather than limiting it.
In 2023-24, the Amazon experienced its worst drought on record, fuelled by climate change and the natural warming El Niño weather pattern.
Many fires are started deliberately to clear land for agriculture, making it difficult to disentangle the two.
But the drought provided ideal conditions for fires to spread out of control, with Brazil and Bolivia most badly affected.
While only a single year, it fits the expected pattern of more intense tropical fires in a warming world.
"I think we are in a new phase, where it's not just the clearing for agriculture that's the main driver," said Rod Taylor of the World Resources Institute (WRI), which is also behind the latest report.
"Now we have this new amplifying effect, which is a real climate change feedback loop, where fires are just much more intense and much more ferocious than they've ever been."
In total, the record loss of the world's old-growth (primary) tropical forests released 3.1 billion tonnes of planet-warming gases, the researchers estimate.
That's roughly the same as the emissions of the European Union.
Countries in South East Asia, however, bucked the global trend.
The area of primary forest loss in Indonesia fell by 11% compared to 2023, for example, despite drought conditions.
This was the result of a concerted effort by governments and communities working together to enforce "no burning" laws, according to Elizabeth Goldman, co-director of the Global Forest Watch project at WRI.
"Indonesia serves as a bright spot in the 2024 data," she said.
"Political will is a key factor of success - it's impossible otherwise," agreed Gabriel Labbate, head of climate change mitigation at the United Nations forests programme UNREDD, which was not involved in today's report.
Other countries, including Brazil, have seen success in the past with similar approaches, but started to see losses increase again in 2014 following a change in government policies.
Prof Hansen said that although the progress in South East Asia was positive, the fluctuations in forest loss in Brazil show that protection policies have to be consistent.
"The key we haven't seen yet is sustained success in reducing and maintaining low levels of conversion of these ecosystems and if you were interested in conserving the environment you have to win always and forever," he told BBC News.
The researchers agree that this year's UN climate summit COP30 - which is being hosted in the Amazon - will be critical for sharing and promoting forest protection schemes.
One proposal is to reward countries which maintain tropical forests through payments. The detail is still to be worked out but has promise, according to Rod Taylor.
"I think it's an example of an innovation that addresses one of the fundamental issues that at the moment there's more money to be made by chopping forests down than keeping them standing," he said.
Graphics by Erwan Rivault
A simple guide to climate change
Planet-warming gas levels rose more than ever in 2024
Tree loss drops after political change in Brazil and Colombia
Deforestation surges in 2022 despite pledges
Sign up for our Future Earth newsletter to keep up with the latest climate and environment stories with the BBC's Justin Rowlatt. Outside the UK? Sign up to our international newsletter here.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scientists deploy ‘mosquito STD' to fight malaria in bold biotech breakthrough
Scientists deploy ‘mosquito STD' to fight malaria in bold biotech breakthrough

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Scientists deploy ‘mosquito STD' to fight malaria in bold biotech breakthrough

Scientists have flipped the script on mosquitoes, turning their mating rituals into a lethal weakness. In a striking twist on pest control, researchers have engineered a sexually transmitted fungus that strikes during sex, infecting and killing mosquitoes from within. This microscopic assassin offers fresh hope in the fight against malaria, a disease that kills more than 600,000 people each year, most of them young children in sub-Saharan Africa. The fungus targets female mosquitoes, the ones that bite and spread the disease, delivering a fatal blow at the moment they mate. And unlike chemical sprays or bed nets, which mosquitoes have learned to dodge, this approach hijacks their most basic instinct—ensuring the fungus spreads naturally, one deadly encounter at a time. 'It's essentially an arms race between the mosquitoes and us,' said study co-author Raymond St. Leger, a university professor of Entomology at the University of Maryland, in a release. 'Just as they keep adapting to what we create, we have to continuously develop new and creative ways to fight them.'Mosquitoes' remarkable ability to adapt has long frustrated disease-control efforts. As indoor repellents like bed nets and insecticide sprays improved, mosquitoes shifted tactics, moving outdoors and striking at new times to avoid human defenses. To counter these evasive pests, the team enhanced a naturally occurring fungus called Metarhizium, equipping it to produce insect-specific neurotoxins that kill once inside a female mosquito's body. Instead of direct application, the fungus rides into action via infected male mosquitoes, which are dusted with fungal spores and released. When they mate, they pass the killer fungus directly to their partners. In real-world field trials in Burkina Faso, nearly 90 percent of female mosquitoes that mated with fungus-laden males died within two weeks compared to just 4 percent in the control group. Crucially, while deadly to mosquitoes, the modified Metarhizium poses no threat to humans. 'What makes this fungus particularly promising is that it works with existing mosquito behavior rather than against their natural habits,' St. Leger said. 'Unlike pesticides or other chemical control methods that mosquitoes can develop resistance to, this method uses the mosquitoes' own biology to deliver the control agent.' Researchers also discovered that infected males could continue transmitting the fungus for up to 24 hours after initial exposure, enabling each male to infect multiple females over time. 'Interestingly, we noticed that the presence of the fungus did not deter female mosquitoes from mating with infected males. Mating rates stayed the same, which makes this fungus a very powerful mosquito population control tool,' St. Leger said. 'And the fungus additionally made infected mosquitoes less able to sense insecticides, and much more susceptible to them, so it's really a double blow against them.' With Metarhizium already widely used in agriculture for pest control, scientists believe this mosquito-specific adaptation could be a game changer, especially when paired with existing methods. While hurdles remain to scale up the 'mosquito STD' for widespread use, the study marks a major leap forward in the long battle against mosquito-borne diseases. 'Mosquitoes are the world's deadliest animal. It's believed that they alone, by transmitting disease, have killed half of all human beings who have ever lived,' St. Leger noted. 'Being able to eliminate mosquitoes quickly and effectively will save people all over the world.' The study has been published in Scientific Reports.

Carbon dioxide levels usually peak in May, but 2025's reading was like no other
Carbon dioxide levels usually peak in May, but 2025's reading was like no other

USA Today

time4 hours ago

  • USA Today

Carbon dioxide levels usually peak in May, but 2025's reading was like no other

Carbon dioxide levels usually peak in May, but 2025's reading was like no other Show Caption Hide Caption How President Trump impacted climate change policy so far Since taking office, President Trump has abandoned efforts to reduce global warming. It could 'take a generation or more to repair the damage." An observatory high on Hawaii's Mauna Loa volcano that measures carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has reported its highest ever seasonal peak concentration of the greenhouse gas. For the first time, the May average exceeded 430 parts per million, reported scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Mauna Loa Observatory and the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego. "Another year, another record," said Ralph Keeling, director of the Scripps CO2 Program. "It's sad." Carbon dioxide and other gases function like a blanket around the Earth, holding in heat and warming the atmosphere above the surface, scientists say. A broad consensus of international scientists say the rise in carbon dioxide concentrations is responsible for the globe's changing climate, helping to make natural weather events such as rainfall, drought and heat waves more extreme. While carbon dioxide is naturally present in Earth's atmosphere, scientists say the problem is the rate at which it's increasing, driven by fossil fuel emissions. Geoscientists at the University of Utah, who participated in a 2023 study with more than 90 scientists in 16 countries, previously stated that CO2 levels in the atmosphere are higher than they've been in human history and highest in at least 14 million years. Climate change policy: Shifting rapidly under Trump administration Last year, the average level of carbon dioxide rose faster over the previous year than at any other point since the recordings began, Scripps reported in January. The average readings for the 12 months was 3.58 parts per million higher than the previous year's average, breaking a record set in 2016. In both years, the climate pattern El Niño played a role, Keeling said in January. "Although this El Niño event ended early in 2024, it is often the case that El Niño events are associated with higher than normal CO2 growth extending into the northern hemisphere summer following the El Niño event." The historic 67-year-old laboratory at elevation 11,141 feet is the global benchmark location for monitoring carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Its measurements represent the average state of the atmosphere in the northern hemisphere. Scripps scientist Charles David Keeling, Ralph Keeling's father, began monitoring CO2 concentrations there in 1958. He was the first to realize CO2 levels peak in May in the northern hemisphere, fall during the growing season and rise again after plants die in the fall, according to Scripps. The fluctuations were presented in a record that became known as the Keeling Curve, which demonstrated carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere were increasing every year. NOAA initiated daily measurements at Mauna Loa in 1974 and has maintained a complementary, independent measurement record ever since. A global network that includes NOAA and Scripps, forms a dataset used by climate scientists internationally. Eruptions at Mauna Loa caused an interruption to power at the observatory in 2022, NOAA said. Scientists established a temporary measurement site at Mauna Kea nearby. Dinah Voyles Pulver, a national correspondent for USA TODAY, covers climate change, wildlife and the environment. Reach her at dpulver@ or @dinahvp on Bluesky or X or dinahvp.77 on Signal.

La Nina's role explained in Atlantic hurricane season
La Nina's role explained in Atlantic hurricane season

UPI

time21 hours ago

  • UPI

La Nina's role explained in Atlantic hurricane season

1 of 3 | Large parts of New Orleans were flooded weeks after several levees failed in the wake of Hurricane Katrina in September 2005. That hurricane occurred around the onset of La Niña conditions. File Photo by Bob McMillan/FEMA Photo for UPI | License Photo Most people associate La Niña with warmer winters or drought in the southern United States, but its influence stretches far beyond the winter months. When La Niña sets in during hurricane season, it has the potential to dramatically increase both the number and strength of tropical storms and hurricanes in the Atlantic basin. La Niña is part of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) cycle and is defined by lower-than-average sea-surface temperatures in the eastern Pacific Ocean near the equator. Although the phenomenon originates far from the Atlantic Ocean, it disrupts global weather patterns in a way that suppresses wind shear across much of the tropical Atlantic. This matters because vertical wind shear -- the change in wind speed or direction with height - tends to prevent tropical systems from organizing. When shear is reduced, clusters of showers and thunderstorms are more likely to organize, strengthen and turn into tropical storms and hurricanes. "La Niña increases the number of hurricanes that develop and allows stronger hurricanes to form," said AccuWeather Lead Hurricane Expert Alex DaSilva. "It also raises the chances for the continental U.S. and the Caribbean Islands to experience a hurricane." During La Niña years, meteorologists often observe more named storms, more major hurricanes and higher accumulated cyclone energy (ACE), a measure of the strength and duration of storms over time. The odds of U.S. landfalls also increase, particularly for the Gulf Coast and Southeast. Two of the most active hurricane seasons in modern history occurred around the onset of La Niña conditions: 2005 and 2020. In 2005, Hurricane Katrina devastated the Gulf Coast, and the official storm naming list was exhausted for the first time, prompting the use of Greek letters. In 2020, the Atlantic basin experienced a record-breaking 11 storms that made direct landfall on U.S. soil, including Hurricane Laura. As for 2025, La Niña is not expected during the early part of the hurricane season. However, forecasters are watching for signs that it could emerge later in the year. "If we trend toward La Niña late in the hurricane season, we could see an active end to the season, similar to what we saw last year," DaSilva said. Complicating matters is the presence of unusually warm water in the Atlantic Ocean, which increases the risk of rapid intensification -- a dangerous trend in which storms gain strength quickly just before landfall. One of the biggest factors for tropical development in 2025 is the abundance of warm water available to fuel storms. "The water temperatures across most of the Atlantic are above average for this time of the year," DaSilva said. "They're not quite as warm as what we saw last year and in 2023, but they're still well, well above average." If La Niña arrives in the second half of the season and combines with this ocean heat, the Atlantic could be primed for a particularly volatile stretch during the peak hurricane months of September through November. La Niña doesn't guarantee an above-average season, but it dramatically shifts the odds in that direction. And for coastal communities, that makes understanding its influence more important than ever.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store