Forest act as a buffer will u agree?
Studies explain that the prejudice against the traditional use of forest have no basis justify it?
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Answers
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Forest Buffers
Streamside trees and shrubs prevent pollution from entering waterways, stabilize stream banks, provide food and habitat to wildlife and keep streams cool during hot weather.
Produced by Steve Droter
Overview
The trees, shrubs and other plants that grow next to streams and rivers are critical to the health of the Chesapeake Bay. These forest buffers prevent pollution from entering waterways, stabilize stream banks, provide food and habitat to wildlife and keep streams cool during hot weather.
What are forest buffers?
Forest buffers are the trees, shrubs and other plants that grow next to streams and rivers. Forest buffers are also called riparian or streamside buffers.
Why are forest buffers important?
Forest buffers are critical to clean water: they prevent pollution from entering waterways and stabilize stream banks. Also vital to wildlife, they provide critters with food and habitat and shade streams to the benefit of sensitive aquatic species.
Capturing pollution
Without forest buffers, polluted runoff from farms and developed areas would flow directly into rivers and streams. Forest buffers are a waterway’s last line of defense against pollution that washes off the land.
Trees and shrubs slow the flow of stormwater runoff, trapping sediment and allowing polluted water to soak into the forest floor’s sponge-like soil.
Plant roots absorb nutrient pollution and store it in plant leaves and limbs.
Stabilizing stream banks
The deep root systems of streamside trees and shrubs hold soil in place, stabilizing stream banks and reducing the amount of sand, silt and sediment that can wash into waterways. Forest buffers also protect those on land from rising floodwaters by deflecting heavy river flow during large storms.
Food and habitat for wildlife
The trees, shrubs and other plants that make up forest buffers form layers of diverse habitats between land and water. More than half of the Chesapeake Bay region’s native species—including wood ducks, bald eagles, turtles and amphibians—depend on forest buffers for food, shelter and access to water at some point in their lives. Forest buffers also offer safe migration paths for wildlife, creating forest “corridors” that are critical to many species.
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