Are all forests created equal? As abandoned farmland in the tropics reverts to nature, scientists debate whether saving primeval rain forest is as urgent as once thought.

AuthorRosenthal, Elisabeth
PositionENVIRONMENT

The land in Chilibre, Panama, where Marta Ortega de Wing once raised hundreds of pigs, is now being overtaken by galloping jungle filled with palm trees, lizards, and ants. Instead of farming, she now shops at the supermarket and her grown children and grandchildren live in places like Panama City and New York. "There is far more forest here than there was 30 years ago," says Ortega de Wing, who remembers fields of mango trees and banana plants.

Around the globe, farmland is reverting to nature as jobs and opportunities for a better life lure people to fast-growing dries, and advances in agricultural technology mean that fewer farmers are needed to feed the world's growing population.

As a result, "secondary" forests are emerging in Latin America, Asia, and other tropical regions at such a fast pace that there's now a serious debate about whether saving primeval, or original, rain forest--a longtime environmental cause--may be less urgent than once thought. By one estimate, for every acre of rain forest cut down each year, more than 50 acres of new forest are growing in the tropics on land that was once farmed, logged, or ravaged by natural disaster.

Some scientists say the new forests could blunt the effects of rain-forest destruction by absorbing carbon dioxide--the leading heat-trapping gas linked to global warming--one crucial role that rain forests play. They could also, to a lesser extent, provide habitat for endangered species.

"Biologists were ignoring these huge population trends and acting as if only original forest has conservation value, and that's just wrong," says Joe Wright, a scientist for the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., who thinks that new forests could substantially compensate for rain-forest destruction. Wright is also concerned that overzealous concern with rain forests robs attention--and money--from other ways to fight global warming, like eliminating coal-burning power plants.

Others disagree. "Yes, there are forests growing back, but not all forests are equal," says Bill Laurance, another Smithsonian scientist, who has worked extensively in the

Amazon, where the original rain forest makes up a complete ecosystem. He calls Ortega de Wing's overgrown land a caricature of a rain forest: "There's no canopy, there's too much light, there are only a few species."

Everyone, including Wright, agrees that large-scale rainforest destruction in the Amazon, Borneo, and other tropical areas should be limited...

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