Wiki User
∙ 10y agofog
Wiki User
∙ 10y ago750 trees were damaged.
Obviously trees occupy the 10 percent of earth but it's not correct as a earth surface measurement metric unit. Water occupies the 71 percent and land the 29 percent.
20 trees
Over 240 million is a guesstimated number of pine trees in Scotland. The booklet Scotland's Trees, Woods and Forests, released with the approval of Allan Wilson, Deputy Minister for Environment and Rural Development April 2, 2002, lists a total of 2 billion trees over 1.3 million hectares (3,212,369.96 acres), with a yearly increase by 10,000 hectares (24,710.54 acres) through new plantings and through replantings from harvested lands. The booklet mentions pine as accounting for 12 percent of that figure and as predominating in the Highlands.
25 million trees are 25 million trees.
As they provide a natural source of oxygen for the planet meanwhile they absorb carbon dioxide
Palm trees do absorb carbon. However, they absorb much less carbon and ozone than other trees because of the slender size of their leaves.
Wood is renewable if new trees are grown to replace those that were cut down. The new trees absorb the CO2 from the atmosphere that the burning process produces.
well yeah.
No, trees do not absorb CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons). CFCs are synthetic compounds used as refrigerants that are primarily broken down in the atmosphere by sunlight. Trees primarily absorb carbon dioxide, not CFCs.
All trees absorb water through their roots, as roots are specialized to take up water and nutrients from the soil. This process is essential for tree growth and survival.
Trees absorb Carbon Dioxide (CO2)
trees absorb water and it trees are cut down, then the trees can't absorb water so the water gets absorbed by the ground but that isn't enough so the water just travels causing floods
Yes, most do. Trees, plants, they absorb the Co2 from the air and turn it into Oxygen.
Trees and other plants absorb carbon dioxide.
35 percent of the forest is covered with trees but this is for pine trees. But you could searh it up if you mean a different type of forest.In Africa you get like 0.1 percent :)
Yes, they do absorb light. They transfer the light-energy to chemical energy by a proces called fotosynthesis.