answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

then there would be no air and we could not breath because all the trees in the world would be gone and all the air in the world will be gone so we would all die and belive me the answer beor was then there woukld be no trees in the world simple as that pathedic

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago

Oddly enough, this has happened in the history of the Earth at least one other time. Approximately 66 million years ago, a little rock hit the Earth (an estimated seven miles wide), some scientists believe off the Yucatan Peninsula (others believe it was one of several such strikes). The resultant concussive wave raced across much of the globe, dragging behind it a fire storm. An estimated 75% (minimum) of animal and plant-life was wiped out.

Anything short of another such ELE (extinction level event) is unlikely to reproduce anything remotely similar. While human activity is deforesting large areas, there is no measurable reduction of oxygen levels in recent years. Two reasons for this are that at a slightly lower rate tree plantings elsewhere replace some of what is lost, and more importantly, forests and terrestrial plant-life produce only a small portion of atmospheric oxygen; most atmospheric oxygen is produced by phytoplankton and other waterborne plant-life.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago

If all the trees in the world were gone we would slowly run out of Oxygen and die because trees (unlike humans) breathe in carbon dioxide and breathe out Oxygen when we breathe in Oxyen and out carbon dioxide. Most animals in the world would become extinct as they eat the leaves on trees.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago

Forests are cleared all around the world for a number of reasons, including:

Harvesting of timber to produce wood and paper products

Clearing land for farms, cash-crop plantations, and cattle ranching

Clearing land for urban development, including homes and roads.

Forests are also being destroyed by acid rain resulting from our pollution-causing activities and through the introduction of disease and invasive species. Deforestation is a very real environmental threat. Our once vast forests are disappearing. All around the world, trees are being cut down too quickly for earth to regenerate new forests.

What happens when forests are cleared?

Floods and soil erosion

Erosion

The roots of a tree make gaps in the soil so that when it rains the water can sink in before being absorbed by the soil. These spaces also allow air and water to reach the roots of the plants. When trees removed using heavy machinery, the soil is pushed down and the gaps fill in. Because all plants and trees need that water and air to reach roots, the conditions become unfriendly for new growth.

Because the soil no longer can absorb the water, when it rains the water remains on the top of the soil and this can result in floods. The moving water also can completely wash away the top layer of the soil. This is called soil erosion. Without the top layer of soil, which is full nutrition, plants are not fed and find it hard to grow.

What we lose: About 24 billion tons of agricultural topsoil (the top layer of soil) wash or blow away each year.

Drought

Forests help produce rainfall. The more trees, the more water gets absorbed into clouds and the more rain falls. If the forests disappear, there will be less rain resulting in dryer conditions that eventually lead to drought. Once this happens, the damage is extensive making it difficult to plant more trees or plants later because the soil is so hard and dry.

Greenhouse gases and acid rain

Extra! Extra!

Read all about it!

Learn about how the polar bear's habitat is being affected by climate change and to learn more about acid rain, play the Acid Lake game.

The earth's atmosphere contains a number of greenhouse gases. Greenhouse gases trap the heat from the sun inside the atmosphere. Some greenhouse gases are carbon dioxide (CO2), methane and water vapour. We need these gases in small amounts, but they can be harmful at high levels.

Forests help remove large amounts of CO2 from the air. They absorb the gas during photosynthesis. However, more CO2 is produced than all the trees can absorb when fossil fuels are burned, for example and when forests are cut down, even less CO2 is being absorbed leaving it trapped in the atmosphere.

As greenhouse gases build up, more of the sun's heat gets trapped and that can lead to climate change (the disruption of the delicate balance of the earth's ecosystems). The added pollution in the atmosphere can also lead to acid rain when the gases mix with water in clouds. When this is deposited on forests it can damage the trees and the ecosystem as a whole.

Species extinction

The grizzly bear is at risk due to subalpine forest habitat loss.

Another harmful result of deforestation is the extinction of animal and plant species. They disappear because their environment and life cycles have been disturbed and they are unable to adapt to the changes. When species disappear, it is called extinction. Essential habitat is lost when forests are cut down; wildlife species lose their homes, their food sources and their place in the web of life. Even though extinction is part of life, it is happening far too quickly now.

It is estimated that as many as 150-200 species around the world go extinct every day!

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

8y ago

If all trees on earth were gone , then that would lead to less oxygen. That would also lead to less humans as well. But if all the plants in the world were gone, then all the humans to be gone as well because plants are the ones to make oxygen.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago

the oxygen would run low within 72 hours and we would all sufficate or all the herbivores would die, then the carmivores, then the omnivores. we would die either way

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago

if all the trees in the world were destroyed we would have a 90% chance of dieing due to know oxygen.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

We will all die from lack of oxygen.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago

People would die

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What will happen if all forest disappear?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What will happen if the forests disappear?

If the forests disappear, forest animals will disappear as well which can disrupt the whole food chain.


What happens if forest disappear?

forest disappear


What will happen if forests and grasslands disappear?

we will all die because trees give oxygen and if there is no forest there is no trees which means there is no oxygen and then we will die because we have no oxygen


What will happen if plants and animals disappear from Earth?

We will all die!


What would happen to the food chain if the alligators disappear?

all the animal would die


What would happen if a forest habitat if all removed all top carnivores?

what happens in a forest habitat without top carnivores


When and where did Jimmy Hoffa disappear?

When did it happen?


What will happen if resources will disappear?

We die


What will happen if all rain forest plants die?

All animals will die in the forests


What do you think will happen when there are no more forest for birds and no more birds in the forest?

Well obliviously they'll all die


What will happen to the world if all brown hare disappear from earth?

I don't think anything will happen I mean its just brown hair its not such a big deal.


What happen if water resource will disappear?

We die