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Mangrove forests are healing after decades of human destruction
Key takeaways
- Matt Mc Grath & Esme Stallard, BBC Climate & Science Getty Images.
- For decades these swampy trees had been declining rapidly as they were cleared for fish farms and housing.
- The researchers say the key factor though is the remarkable capacity of these forests to regenerate naturally once humans stop chopping them down.
Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.
Matt Mc Grath & Esme Stallard, BBC Climate & Science Getty Images. The world's coastal mangrove forests, which protect millions of people from storms - and soak up vast amounts of planet-warming gases - are staging an unexpected comeback, scientists find.
For decades these swampy trees had been declining rapidly as they were cleared for fish farms and housing.
But a new study shows that since 2010 the world has been gaining more mangroves than it has been losing - driven by stronger legal protections and increased public awareness of their importance, sparked by disasters such as the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.
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