Satellite Images Show Rapid Loss of New Guinea Rainforest
June 4th, 2008 at 2:10 pm

Since 1972, the Papua New Guinea Rainforest has disappeared at an alarming rate, even in protected areas. New satellite images show the extent of the damage. In 2001, The Odyssey visited PNG and talked to one of the forests’ protectors first-hand.

The New Guinea Rainforest is important for a number of reasons–it’s home to 6-7% of the Earth’s species, many of them undiscovered–vital to maintaining the earth’s biodiversity. Even in terms of human inhabitation, the country hosts thousands of villages, home to 12% of the languages spoken on the planet.

One of the culprits may have been exported, illegally-logged merbau for flooring for the American and Japanese markets, and a story from 2006 even tied deforestation to new construction for the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

While logging has been a source of revenue for the country, PNG’s prime minister in March 2008 proposed to eliminate all logging in the country by 2010.

  • Share
  • print
  • no comments

Tags: , , , ,


COMMENTS
no comments yet

POST A COMMENT




Your Privacy Matters
Please note that the Thirteen/WNET editorial staff reserves the right to not post comments it deems to be inappropriate and/or malicious in nature, as well as edit comments for length, clarity and fairness. No solicitations or advertisements will be allowed. Users may link to other Web sites relevant to discussion, but most often links to commercial Web sites will not be permitted.


scroll up scroll down Get schedule by email
Weekly Press Digest, August 15-21
Selected press items from the period Friday, August 15 through Thursday, August 21. The Toronto Globe and...
Scenes from the City: Filmmaking in New York
From King Kong climbing the Empire State Building to the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man lumbering through Columbus Circle, New York...
Harbor Conservatory for the Performing Arts
Harbor Conservatory for the Performing Arts was the subject of the PBS documentary “Mi Mambo” which was aired on CANTOS...

from our blogs
connect with thirteen and PBS facebook YouTube iTunes