A team of British and 
 
Brazilian scientists have 
 
warned that a widespread 
 
drought in the Amazon 
 
rainforest during 2010 
 
was even worse than the 
 
“once-in-a-century” 
 
dry spell of 2005.
 
 
In a new study published 
 
in the journal “Science,” 
 
they evaluated rainfall 
 
data collected via satellite 
 
during the prolonged 
 
2010 dry season, 
 
as well as information 
 
from trees in throughout 
 
the Amazon. 
 
The scientists found 
 
an alarming 60% increase 
 
over 2005 in the regions 
 
covered by dead trees 
 
along with 
 
more intense drought. 
 
As the renowned 
 
“lungs of the Earth,” 
 
the Amazon rainforest 
 
normally absorbs 
 
over 25% of the world's 
 
greenhouse gas emissions, 
 
or some 1.5 billion tons 
 
of CO2. 
 
But the billions of trees 
 
that perished in the 
 
drought this past year, 
 
scientists say the Amazon 
 
is now forecast to release 
 
5 billion tons 
 
in the coming years, 
 
potentially leading to 
 
runaway climate change. 
 
Moreover, 
 
global climate models 
 
forecast more frequent 
 
Amazon droughts, 
 
further aggravating 
 
potential risks. 
 
Research leader 
 
Dr. Simon Lewis of 
 
the University of Leeds 
 
in the United Kingdom 
 
cautioned, “We can't just 
 
wait and see because 
 
there is no going back. 
 
We won't know we have 
 
passed the point where 
 
the Amazon turns 
 
from a sink to a source 
 
until afterwards, 
 
when it will be too late.” 
 
We thank Dr. Lewis and 
 
colleagues for sharing 
 
these critical findings that 
 
foretell the predicament 
 
of not only the Amazon 
 
region but also the globe. 
 
Let us heed 
 
such disturbing changes 
 
by swiftly adopting 
 
the most eco-friendly 
 
lifestyles to protect 
 
the treasured Amazon 
 
and indeed the planet. 
 
During an April 2009 
 
videoconference,
 
Supreme Master Ching Hai 
 
emphasized the need 
 
to tread more lightly 
 
in the ecosphere 
 
to ensure the survival
 
of the Earth 
 
and all her inhabitants.
 
Saving the world's 
 
tropical forests, 
 
the lungs of the Earth, 
 
is one of the very 
 
important priorities. 
 
Because when the 
 
tropical rainforests are 
 
destroyed, there are many 
 
frightening side effects. 
 
It's not just 
 
the permanent changes to 
 
the world's temperature, 
 
rainfall, and 
 
weather patterns which 
 
the forests regulate. 
 
It's not just about 
 
the millions of people 
 
who might lose 
 
their livelihoods that 
 
depend on the forests. 
 
The rainforests 
 
themselves normally 
 
are our protectors, but as 
 
the climate gets warmer, 
 
instead of absorbing CO2 
 
to protect our planet's 
 
climate, they will be 
 
emitting back CO2 as well.
 
They will not be helping us, 
 
the rainforests, 
 
if the climate gets warmer. 
 
But instead, 
 
they will be worsening 
 
the global warming problem.
 
Stop the livestock 
 
industry - that would be 
 
the most effective way 
 
to halt global warming 
 
and restore our planet. 
 
It will save 
 
our precious forests.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/special-report-catastrophic-drought-in-the-amazon-2203892.html http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-12356835http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/feb/03/tree-deaths-amazon-climatehttp://news.discovery.com/earth/amazon-drought-of-2010-sign-of-forest-fatigue.html
http://www.ouramazingplanet.com/amazon-drought-2010-climate-change-110203-1059/