The number of trees on Earth has almost halved since the beginning of human civilisation, a new study has revealed.
There
are more than three trillion trees worldwide - around eight times more
than some previous estimates - according to research carried out by Yale
University.
But around 15 billion trees are currently being lost
each year as a result of deforestation, forest management and changes
in land use, the research warned.
Since the start of human
civilisation around 11,700 years ago the total number of trees has
fallen by around 46 per cent, it estimates.
The researchers
collected on-the-ground data for the number of trees in more than
400,000 plots of forest from all continents except Antarctica.
They
used satellite imagery to assess how the density of trees in the plots
was related to local characteristics such as the climate, vegetation,
soil conditions and the impacts of human activity, and used the
information to build models for the number of trees in various regions.
The global map generated suggests there are around 3.04 trillion trees, or around 422 for each person, on Earth
A
country-by-country breakdown reveals there are more than three billion
trees in the UK, or around 47 for each Briton, while in Ireland there
are some 709 million trees, equating to 154 for each person.
The
highest densities of trees are found in the forests of the sub-Arctic
regions of Russia, Scandinavia and North America, but the largest forest
areas were in the tropics, which are home to around 43 per cent of the
world's trees.
The information on tree populations will help
efforts to model global systems such as carbon storage, the changing
climate and the distribution of animal and plant species, the
researchers said.
Lead author Thomas Crowther, post-doctoral
fellow at Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, said:
'Trees are among the most prominent and critical organisms on Earth, yet
we are only recently beginning to comprehend their global extent and
distribution.
'They store huge amounts of carbon, are essential
for the cycling of nutrients, for water and air quality, and for
countless human services.
'Yet you ask people to estimate, within
an order of magnitude, how many trees there are and they don't know
where to begin,' he said, adding he was 'certainly surprised' to find
the estimate was in the trillions.
He said: 'We've nearly halved
the number of trees on the planet, and we've seen the impacts on climate
and human health as a result.
'This study highlights how much more effort is needed if we are to restore healthy forests worldwide.'
The
study was prompted by a request by Plant for the Planet, a youth
initiative leading the United Nations Environment Programme's 'billion
tree campaign', for baseline estimates of tree numbers to help set
targets for for tree-planting initiatives.
The previous global estimate was of just over 400 billion trees worldwide.
The study was published in Nature.
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