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Hope for Jungles
Things are not entirely bleak for the jungles, however. In the early 1990s, the world finally came together to stop the destruction. The need for timber harvesters to start using sustainable practices was made crystal clear by huge boycotts by consumers of tropical woods. By the end of the decade, more than 36 million acres of jungle had been certified sustainable by the international Forest Stewardship Council. What's more, certified timber sells for more.
Other arguments have also been used to protect the jungles. Their ability to absorb carbon dioxide, for instance, helps to fight the greenhouse effect and global warming. There is also the hidden pharmaceutical and biodiversity value of jungles. Nature has spent millions of years making a dizzying array of jungle organisms, which produce an innumerable number of complex bioactive compounds that could do wonders for human health — if only we had time to discover and study them.
Finally, there is inherent value in primordial jungle for itself. The fantastic array of life found in jungles, however unwelcome to most humans, offers something no human creation can ever match — the most complex show of interacting life on the planet. To many, that is not only intellectually stimulating and spiritually refreshing, but far too rich a treasure and too long in the making to be sacrificed for a few more cords of timber.