Home > 바카라 확률 > Union fears vicforests move to hurt regions’ biodiversity, according to new study

Union fears vicforests move to hurt regions’ biodiversity, according to new study

Union fears vicforests move to hurt regions’ biodiversity, according to new study

This image shows the iconic and sacred, green, brown, red, white and blue colors of the Indian acacia. The ancient forest’s color patterns are linked to the presence of different species of acacia in that part of India. (Photo: Thinkstock)

SAN FRANCISCO – It would take about 30 years for the acacia, native to the forested area in which San Francisco is located, to die out, according to a study published online 슬롯 머신Monday by the Bulletin of Environmental Science and Technology.

That would put the species on the brink of extinction, potentially costing up to 30,000 acres and leading to an increase in plant death, according to an analysis by Stanford University researchers.

There is an estimated 14 million Acacia arabica trees on the U.S. with the number of native tree species believed to be about 2.5 billion, says David Stork, a professor in the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies at Stanford.

“It’s one of the most diverse, biologically abundant and globally important forest ecosystems in the world, and we’ve been very fortunate to have been ab수원출장안마le to preserve it,” he says.

Stork’s research shows that the loss of the tree could force native species, as well as animals in the local forest environment, to find other sources of food and refuge.

“The study makes one important point,” Stork says. “Ecologists who were working on endangered species have long pointed to this fact: if we don’t manage a species, those species might not survive. And that’s what’s happening to this species.”

The paper’s research, conducted by Stork, his professor of plant sciences at the College of the Holy Cross, and postdoctoral fellow John F. Hameroff, focuses on the acacia in California’s Central Valley. Acacias provide food for the large number of animals living in the forest, including the bobcat, bobcat-like animals who make their living by ru트럼프 카지노nning into shrubs and branches. Acacias also provide shelter for species such as the jaguar.

Stork and Hameroff used satellite imagery from the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCES) of the Earth as well as other data sets to evaluate the threat to the acacia population from forest disturbances.

“What they found is that the presence of acacias is associated with an increase in a particular type of disturbance that impact