Sociology, asked by mohanbabumuvvala1981, 4 months ago

can forests and vegetation help in reducing at droughts?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
18

Answer:

Answer:Forests can retain excess rainwater, prevent extreme run-offs and reduce the damage from flooding. They can also help mitigate the effects of droughts. Forests can soak up excess rainwater, preventing run-offs and damage from flooding. ...

Answered by ayushthegreat47
7

Answer:

Hey mate the below is your answer:-

Explanation:

Trees help rain seep into soil because living and decaying roots make soil porous by creating a network of well-connected, minuscule channels in the soil. Rainwater seeps into soil with such channels several hundred times faster than it seeps through soil without channels.

Trees help rain seep into soil because living and decaying roots make soil porous by creating a network of well-connected, minuscule channels in the soil. Rainwater seeps into soil with such channels several hundred times faster than it seeps through soil without channels.Additionally, when plant debris falls on the soil and starts to organically degrade, it helps soil maintain integrity and form small aggregated clumps. These clumps also ensure that soil is porous.

Trees help rain seep into soil because living and decaying roots make soil porous by creating a network of well-connected, minuscule channels in the soil. Rainwater seeps into soil with such channels several hundred times faster than it seeps through soil without channels.Additionally, when plant debris falls on the soil and starts to organically degrade, it helps soil maintain integrity and form small aggregated clumps. These clumps also ensure that soil is porous.Thus, land under tree cover is more capable of absorbing rainwater. This reduces the volume of water flowing over the surface after a rain event, and thus reduces the volume of water entering rivers and streams. Computational models show that if reforesting is done in 20-35% of the river’s catchment, a 10-15% reduction is seen in flood peak heights after 25 years of forest growth.

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