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Usually negatively.

  • People need homes. The more population there is, the more homes that need to be built. This means the destruction of environments such as forests for building on.

  • People also need food. The land a forest stands upon is usually very fertile due to the decomposing organic matter (compost). That means forests are prime targets for agricultural development in some countries. The trees are removed and the land farmed on.

  • Pollution and the effects of pollution, such as smog and acid rain, can decimate an entire forest. More population means more demand for commercial products and more jobs. Which in turn means more pollution.

  • Higher population also means a greater need for wood and paper. That means more deforestation. Even if the developed world completely eradicated their reliability on paper by replacing it with digital products, the developing and underdeveloped world outnumbers the developed world. So there will still be too many people using paper because they don't have the technological advancements to not need it any more.

  • Human weathering and destruction is another issue of high population. Humans enjoy walking in forests, which means the land is physically weathered and there is greater chance of destruction to the forests by immature behaviour (tree climbing), forest fires (camping gone wrong) and toxic waste leakages from human waste and abandoned plastic products.

  • If the population was environmentally conscious, the increase in population may be beneficial for the forest because of the close proximity of a theoretically infinite carbon dioxide source (and in turn a theoretically infinite oxygen source). However if there is too much pollution, it negates this advantage.



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10y ago

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