You would all be dead from global warming.
Thank god, about 4,017,600.
I would have to say the Amazon, it's lost over 15% of it's trees since the past 30 years.
The Amazon Rainforest has lost approximately 17% of its forest cover over the past 50 years due to deforestation, primarily for agriculture, logging, and mining activities. Each year, an estimated 7,500 square kilometers of the Amazon Rainforest are lost, leading to serious environmental consequences.
There is no mining in the rainforest. It is a registered World Heritage listed sight as of 1988. Once leases were given to mine Tin, however, if that happened many plant and animal species would be lost forever. This is the oldest rainforest on our planet and the only one to survive the Ice Age. The Daintree is older than the Amazon Rainforest, and we have learned the value of the Amazon, haven't we?
China, Amazon Rainforest, New Zealand and many, many other countries.
Around 10,000 square miles of the Amazon rainforest are lost each year due to deforestation, primarily for agriculture, logging, and infrastructure development. This loss of forest cover has significant impacts on biodiversity, climate change, and indigenous communities that depend on the rainforest for their livelihoods.
south west of Brazil
we would still have slavery and then we would have lost world war II
we would be in slavery
The Amazon rainforest is losing approximately 1.5 acres every second due to deforestation and other human activities. This alarming rate contributes significantly to biodiversity loss and climate change, as the rainforest plays a crucial role in absorbing carbon dioxide. Efforts to combat deforestation and promote sustainable practices are essential to protect this vital ecosystem.
Lost Secret of the Rainforest - 1993 VG was released on: USA: 1993
Experts estimates that we are losing 137 plant, animal and insect species every single day due to rainforest deforestation. That equates to 50,000 species a year, now that's a BIG amount.There were an estimated 10 million Indians living in the Amazon Rainforest five centuries ago but today there are less than 200,000.Just calculate and estimate from this- if the entire Amazon were burned, we would be losing a large percent of the world's oxygen producers, and would worsen greenhouse effects along with it.