Close

Hmmm, you are using a Gmail.com email address...

Google has declared war on the independent media and has begun blocking emails from NaturalNews from getting to our readers. We recommend GoodGopher.com as a free, uncensored email receiving service, or ProtonMail.com as a free, encrypted email send and receive service.

That's okay. Continue with my Gmail address...

L.A. residents wiped out 55% of their own urban forest in just one decade


Sunny California has become known for its expansive policies geared towards environmental protection and conservation. And yet, research shows that in Los Angeles alone, residents have managed to destroy over 50 percent of the city’s greenery in just 10 years. Apparently, in the “City of Angels,” trees are only worth saving when they aren’t in your own backyard. California continues to show that it’s really not all it’s cracked up to be.

Researchers from the University of California’s Spatial Sciences Institute say that preventing the removal of trees and other greenery to pave the way for bigger homes and nicer driveways would likely go a lot further than planting trees alone. Using aerial images, the scientists have discovered that the rate of what they call “de-greening” has reached a high of 55 percent in some areas of the Los Angeles region — meaning over half of the trees and other plant life in some neighborhoods are long gone.

Ironically, a notable amount of these green space losses occurred while the city was in the midst of launching its 2007 “Million Trees” campaign to increase tree planting. Clearly, the planting effort couldn’t keep up with the rate of deforestation in such an urbanized area. [Read more stories about environmental concerns at Environ.news]

The Baldwin Park area reportedly led the L.A. Basin in terms of de-greening, boasting a 55 percent decline in green spaces during the 10-year period. Sources say, “Other areas in the study that had at least 20 percent loss in cover included Pomona, Downey, Sylmar, Compton, and San Pedro/Port of Los Angeles.”

To conduct their research, the team from U.C.’s Spatial Sciences Institute used digitized high-resolution aerial images, which were graciously provided by the Los Angeles Region-Imagery Acquisition Consortium. After classifying what was observed in the images into six different categories of land cover, the team compared changes in the images from different points in time. Images from 2000 and 2009 were used for comparison purposes.

While not every area has had a rate of greenery destruction as high as Baldwin Park, it is clearly a growing problem in California. USC Dornsife and USC School of Architecture assistant professor, Travis Longcore, commented, “We are losing tree shade across economic areas. Wealthy areas might generally have more trees to start with, but all single-family areas are losing across the board.”

Urban forests have suffered, according to Longcore, due to the increasing size of single-family homes and the desire to have more paved and developed surfaces. Sidewalks, pools and other accouterments also play a role in the chopping down of valuable trees and other greenery.

In addition to the woes of the Los Angeles area, the entire state of California has been losing trees at a record pace. In late 2016, it was reported that approximately 62 million trees had died in the Golden State in just one year. Trees residing on federal, state and private land were all part of this devastating loss. And when compared to 2015’s loss of 29 million, it’s clear that 2016 was a frighteningly bad year for trees in California; the tree death rate increased by 114 percent.

Cameron Barrows, an assistant research ecologist who is coordinating the U.C. Riverside Center for Conservation Biology’s Desert Studies Initiative, commented,”This is pretty shocking. This is something we should really be concerned about.”

Sources:

ScienceDaily.com

SBSun.com

Receive Our Free Email Newsletter

Get independent news alerts on natural cures, food lab tests, cannabis medicine, science, robotics, drones, privacy and more.



Comments
comments powered by Disqus

RECENT NEWS & ARTICLES