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Rainforest Life Faces Double Threat to Existence

Deforestation in the Amazon Rainforest. Red areas correspond to tree cover, green areas are of herbaceous cover, and blue areas indicate bare ground.
(Image credit: NASA Earth Observatory.)

It's a case of pick your poison for nearly half of all the plants and animals living in tropical forests. By the end of the century, either climate change, deforestation, or a combination may force them to adapt, move or die, a new study suggests.

Tropical forests hold more than half of all the plant and animal species on Earth. But by 2100, only 18 to 45 percent of the plants and animals in tropical forests may exist as they are today, according to the first study to look at how logging and climate change will impact the humid tropical forests worldwide.

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Brett Israel was a staff writer for Live Science with a focus on environmental issues. He holds a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry and molecular biology from The University of Georgia, a master’s degree in journalism from New York University, and has studied doctorate-level biochemistry at Emory University.