"Eucalyptus plantations" refers to areas of land that are specifically designed and cultivated for the purpose of growing eucalyptus trees in an organized manner for commercial use. These plantations are set up to produce eucalyptus trees in large quantities for various purposes such as timber, paper production, or essential oil extraction.
Full definition
While he would like to see more data on the water use and fire impacts
of eucalyptus plantations, Binkley understands the tree's allure, he said.
During the colonization of Brazil in the 16th century, land was doled out entirely to Portuguese royal families, and, today, productive land in the lowland savanna has been swallowed up by cattle ranches, soybean farms, and
eucalyptus plantations run by powerful business interests.
There are plenty of them (drive the Sabie Waterfalls Route), not least because Sabie lies right in the middle of what is considered the world's largest man - made forest — vast pine and
eucalyptus plantations planted way back in the late 1870s when the local indigenous forests were being rapidly destroyed as the demand for wood increased during the gold rush.
Under the cover of theoretically reducing carbon dioxide emissions, for example, a
monoculture eucalyptus plantation that displaces indigenous residents of the rainforest can wreak enormous social and environmental damage.
Therefore, the vast farm land was taken from farmers to open up
eucalyptus plantations.
A tiny number of seedlings are almost assured to escape from
the eucalyptus plantations, Strauss said.
The authors believe that
the eucalyptus plantations, which have been used for decades -LSB-...]
Thus, the simplest way to reduce the global ecological overshoot, «by - the - numbers,» would be to devote large tracts of land to
Eucalyptus plantations, which have sequestration rates around 5 — 10 t C ha − 1 year − 1 in much of the tropics and subtropics, and can reach rates of up to 12 t C ha − 1 year − 1 in some areas [38].
How does
the eucalyptus plantations contribute to the carbon sink of nature?