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deforestation
[dee-fawr-uh-stey-shuhn, for-]
noun
the clearing or severe thinning of a forest or other wooded area, leaving few or no trees.
Most of the world’s deforestation is happening in Brazil.
deforestation
The cutting down and removal of all or most of the trees in a forested area. Deforestation can erode soils, contribute to desertification and the pollution of waterways, and decrease biodiversity through the destruction of habitat.
deforestation
The process of destroying a forest and replacing it with something else. The term is used today to refer to the destruction of forests by human beings and their replacement by agricultural systems.
Word History and Origins
Origin of deforestation1
Example Sentences
Brazil came up with a face-saving idea of roadmaps on deforestation and fossil fuels that would exist outside the COP.
He has also pointed to his record in slashing rates of deforestation in the Amazon rainforest.
The new draft also weakened language around tackling deforestation.
Some had proposed that agricultural runoff or nutrients released by rainforest deforestation were responsible.
An African negotiator from a cocoa-exporting country said the EU's paused deforestation regulations -- requiring proof commodities don't come from recently cleared land -- were another major worry.
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