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Thanks for your compliments, Diane. Let me deal it with Imp and Greenpeace. If you want, you can see another post on the mahogany illegal trade El oro rojo de Madre de Dios . Sorry but it´s only in the language of Cervantes because I am not mastered in English, yet. erreka. Tambopata river, Madre de Dios (photo: Frans Lanting). Look at this map about forest loss. If the net forest loss of all territories between 1990 and 2000 is summed, 31% occurred in South America, and 21% was in Asia Pacific. Worldwide, territories with net forest loss lost 1.33 million km2 of forest over this ten year period. Despite this, South America was the region with the largest forested area in the world in 2000. The more forest area there is, the more it is possible to lose. Japan is unexceptional, having neither forest loss nor forest growth from 1990 to 2000. The area of Africa covered by forest was reduced by 550 000 km2 in the 1990s. This includes the loss of forests that covered 11.4% of Zambian land. Territory size shows the proportion of worldwide net forest loss that occurred there between 1990 and 2000. "Indonesia is blessed with some of the most extensive and biologically diverse tropical forests in the world. But the tragedy is that Indonesia has one of the highest rates of tropical forest loss in the world." E.G. Togu Manurung, 2006 Worldmapper: The world as you´ve never seen it before |