Why is this forest biodiversity so vital?
In both low- and high-income countries, communities that live within forests rely directly on forest biodiversity for their lives and livelihoods, using products derived from forest resources for food, fodder, shelter, energy, medicine, and income generation.
Forest biodiversity benefits much of humanity as a whole through its role in the carbon, water, and nutrient cycles and through its links with food production, including seed dispersal and crop pollination.
Nevertheless, forests and their biodiversity are under threat from deforestation and forest degradation, which still continue at alarming rates.