Save trees & save the Future
- dhanrajmonu
- May 27, 2024
- 3 min read
Finally we are facing global warming now. We are not saving trees.
We breathe in oxygen and breathe out carbon dioxide. Trees do just the reverse. They use up carbon dioxide in the process of photosynthesis and give out oxygen. If we do not save trees we will not have a constant and abundant supply of oxygen for all life forms to breathe and live.
We should all strive to save our home, which is the planet. Even planting one tree can save so many lives. It is high time that we take action and save the natural beauty of the planet which nourishes all living and breathing creatures. When saving trees they save lives and inevitably save the planet.
Earth's 70% of land animal and plants species belong to
forests. • According to researches, more than twenty-five thousand
creatures live on trees. • Trees are air purifiers because they absorb pollutant gases
and odours. • Soil erosion, flooding, desertification, the rise of greenhouse gases are some of the problems caused by deforestation other than
climate change.
Plant more trees.
Minimise the use of paper.
Buy recycled paper products.
Use cloth products.
Increase plantation awareness in your community.
Volunteer yourself to trees plantation.
Start an online campaign to save trees.
Without trees, survival is impossible as there will be no food for animals or human beings. We simply cannot live without trees. Trees are like the lungs of the earth. They consume carbon dioxide and provide us with fresh oxygen to breathe.
Trees ought to be spared as they furnish us with food to live. Trees and profound timberlands are the sinks of Carbon Dioxide – an ozone harming substance and the makers of Oxygen without which life on earth can't support. Trees give us cover.
Trees purify our air and combat climate change. ...
Trees provide housing to millions of species that protect us from disease. ...
Trees cool our streets and cities. ...
Trees protect against floods and water pollution. ...
Trees ease the mind during stressful times.
As trees grow, they help stop climate change by removing carbon dioxide from the air, storing carbon in the trees and soil, and releasing oxygen into the atmosphere. Trees provide many benefits to us, every day. They offer cooling shade, block cold winter winds, attract birds and wildlife, purify our air, prevent soil erosion, clean our water, and add grace and beauty to our homes and communities.
People breathe out carbon dioxide, trees breathe in carbon dioxide. It’s one of the first things children learn about the carbon cycle, the paths carbon takes as it moves among the living and nonliving things that make up the planet. That might be part of the reason trees and forests have long been a focal point of the carbon sequestration conversation. Dozens of companies have committed to planting and protecting trees as part of their efforts to counteract greenhouse gas emissions, and by 2030 the Trillion Trees Campaign is aiming to increase the number of trees in the world by one third.
Despite these disturbances and the slower process of decay, earth’s forests remain a net-sink for carbon dioxide. The planet is currently home to about 4 billion hectares of forest, which collectively emit 8.1 billion metric tons of carbon each year and absorb 16 billion metric tons. The net absorption of 7.6 billion metric tons is more than the United States emits in a year and about 30% of the amount the world emits in a year.
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