In rural China, overlogging is related to the need for firewood as fuel.[4] Overlogging is often associated with attempts at reducing the "Third world debt," although it is not restricted to developing countries.[5]
In central Japan, forests located closer to power plants were found to be more vulnerable to overlogging.[6]
Effects
With the developed world's growing demand for pulp and paper, overlogging is an imminent threat to Earth's forests.[3]
Overlogging has caused significant damage to dipterocarp forests in Southeast Asia,[1] including in Vietnam.[7] In the Philippines, overlogging has created brushlands comprising relict trees, shrubs, and grasses.[8] As of 1994, overlogging had led to the loss of 1.2 million hectares of Russia's forests.[9]
The restoration of overlogged forests can be important to the conservation of biodiversity or the availability of natural resources like water and carbon for local populations.[1]
The effects of overlogging can be mitigated by setting aside profits for forest rehabilitation, a practice which is also economically profitable.[14]Enrichment planting, or planting trees in degraded forests, is a form of artificial regeneration that has been employed in East Kalimantan and South Kalimantan, Indonesia.[1] A logging quota was established in China in 1987; it has stopped deforestation and degradation but has not led to forest regeneration.[15]
In 1996, in response to activism regarding overlogging by corporations in Malaysia, the primary industries minister led a forestry mission to see the impact.[16]
Representations
The works of Frederic Edwin Church, a 19th-century American painter who often portrayed the progress of industrialization in his landscapes, indicate that he was "aware that overlogging led to erosion and the pollution of streams."[17]
^ ab"Pulp and paper". WWF. Paper products are crucial to society, as they have enabled literacy and cultural development. However, without changing current paper production and consumption practices, growing demand for paper adds pressure on the Earth's last remaining natural forests and endangered wildlife.
^Yong'an, Shen Fengge Wang. "On Strategic Choice of Energy in Rural Sustainable Development." Journal of Beijing Forestry Management Staff College (2002).
^Ut, Ngo, and Tran Van Con. "The evaluation and classification of rehabilitated forest site after over logging in east-southern Vietnam." Science and Technology Journal of Agriculture and Rural Development (2009).
^Li, R., Werger, M.J.A., During, H.J. et al. Biennial variation in production of new shoots in groves of the giant bamboo Phyllostachys pubescens in Sichuan, China. Plant Ecology135, 103–112 (1998). doi:10.1023/A:1009761428401