UNBC research shows importance of tropical forests
PRINCE GEORGE – A UNBC researcher has shown just how important vertebrates in tropical forests are for the planet’s health.
The latest study by University of Northern British Columbia researchers was published in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment.
Led by post-doctoral fellow Dr. Rajeev Pillay, the researchers used mapping technology to quantify the number of terrestrial vertebrates that live in tropical forests around the world. Tropical forests play a central role in biodiversity conservation and in climate regulation, as they are both carbon sinks and key sources of oxygen for the entire planet.
Through human activity, these forests are shrinking and some species are going extinct, making it all the more important to determine how many terrestrial mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians live in these rapidly vanishing ecosystems.
