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Forest | Definition, Ecology, Types, Trees, Examples, Facts | Britannica A forest is a complex ecological system in which trees are the dominant life-form A forest is nature’s most efficient ecosystem, with a high rate of photosynthesis affecting both plant and animal systems in a series of complex organic relationships
Forest Forest team partners with a real-tree-planting organization, Trees for the Future, to plant real trees on the earth When our users spend virtual coins they earn in Forest on planting real trees, Forest team donates our partner and create orders of planting
Forêt — Wikipédia Il remplace à partir du XIIe siècle, sous la forme forest « vaste étendue de terrain peuplée d'arbres » 7, l'ancien français selve, du latin silva, « forêt »
Forest Biome - Education The word forest broadly describes an area that has a large number of trees There are three general types of forest that exist: temperate, tropical, and boreal
Forests - WWF According to the UN, we lose 100,000 sq km of natural forest globally every year – that's an area of forest the size of London lost every week, or roughly one football pitch every 2 seconds - usually for agriculture, for timber, or industrial development
Forest - New World Encyclopedia Forests are differentiated from woodlands by the extent of canopy coverage: in a forest the branches and foliage of separate trees often meet or interlock, although there can be gaps of varying sizes within an area referred to as forest
Forests Promoting regional and international cooperation on the sustainable use, development and management of forest genetic resources Improving forest communication and forest education to increase understanding and appreciation of forests and forestry, including for a new generation of foresters
Importance of Forests | WWF Human health is inextricably linked to forest health Deforestation has serious consequences on the health of people directly dependent on forests, as well as those living in cities and towns, as it increases the risk of diseases crossing over from animals to humans
Why do forests matter? | UNEP - UN Environment Programme Addressing this challenge requires a multifaceted approach, as outlined by UNEP, focusing on enhancing knowledge, creating enabling conditions, and securing finance for forest protection and sustainable management