THE LAND WE LIVE ON:
Servant or Master?
May 14, 2025
We walk on it. We build on it. We grow food in it. We live on it. We are served with our livelihood by it. We take it for granted … Then, it becomes our master. It serves us only as well as we have served it: The land of the Earth …
The land performs various functions as we live our every days while hardly taking notice of those functions that sustain our very lives … until we exploit it to an extent that those functions are no longer able to serve us well. But, there are things we can do to mitigate that; and better yet, prevent that.
HOW THE LAND CONTRIBUTES TO SUSTAINING HUMAN LIFE
  1. Provides soil for growing food (agriculture)
  2. Provides ecosystems (forests and wetlands) to remove carbon and other gases from the air that would be harmful to humans
  3. Provides the livelihood for nearly 1 in 5 people in the world
  4. Provides the solid ground under our feet to walk on it, to build on it, to live on it
And yet, many human activities modify the effectiveness of these roles—from personal habits to large‑scale industrial undertakings—continuing to exploit our land. For the purpose of industrial development, we are cutting down trees (destroying forests) and digging up vegetative biomass (destroying wetlands)… besides being destroyed and losing their ability to serve humans through their natural qualities, both of these release their stored carbon into the atmosphere when disturbed or eliminated by humans.
THE ESSENCE
THE DETAILS
But, there are more details about what really happens under our feet in the land we walk on, every day. Becoming familiar with these details can open eyes and minds …
⚉⚉⚉
the nitty‑gritty
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EXPLOITED LAND (by humans) AND CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Erosion Through Eradicating Human Activities:
      destroying tree root systems, understory vegetation (e.g. grass, moss) ⟹ damages the land’s ability to absorb water, to have enough land nutrients, and to grow food in it. Soil erosion also exacerbates flooding, and reduces availability of medicines derived from forest plants.
    • Through Using Nitrogen‑Based Fertilizers:
      biggest source of carbon in agriculture ⟶ avoid them; use organic farming practices
    • Wetland = Ecosystem, where water covers the soil. Aquatic or terrestrial species (shrubs, trees, other plants) are submerged understory the water level.
    • Benefits of Wetlands:
      water purification, stabilization of shorelines, storm protection, flood control, being carbon sinks (i.e. they store large amounts of carbon to prevent it from being released into the air, and therefore, from causing harm to humans).
    • Wetlands’ capacity to store carbon is remarkable due to it being: water-logged, dark, very productive. They store carbon in vegetation both above and below ground, in sediment beneath live plants, and even in dead plants (e.g leaf litter).
    • Example of Harmful Exploitation of Wetlands by Humans:
      peatlands are drained for agricultural or industrial purposes ⟹ destroys its habitat ⟹ removes its capacity to store carbon in the present or the future
      AND
      exposes the inner carbon to the air that accumulated in the past over hundreds or thousands of years ⟹ the exposed carbon decomposes, turns into harmful carbon dioxide (CO2) ⟹ exacerbates global warming.
      (Peat = an accumulation of partially decayed vegetation or organic matter)
    • The cut‑down trees release their stored carbon into the atmosphere that accumulated in the past over hundreds or thousands of years
      AND
      lose their carbon‑sequestration (i.e. carbon‑removing) ability to remove harmful gases from the air in the present or in the future ⟹ those gases increase the greenhouse effect ⟹ temperatures rise ⟹ exacerbates global warming
      (Greenhouse Effect = Trapping the Sun’s heat, and stopping it from leaking back into space. This is a long‑term effect)
    • The increased levels of carbon (and other gases) are soaked up more and more by the ocean (and seas) ⟹ the water becomes more acidic ⟹ affects fish life
    • Disturbance in The Balance of Human‑Plants‑Animals Habitat:
      Logging and deforestation breaks down the balance among people, animals, and plants ⟶ some useful species in the forests become extinct, and some harmful species thrive (e.g. mosquitos, ticks) and carry diseases to humans
    • Causes of Deforestation:
      • Industrial logging and deforestation—far the largest driver
      • Sea‑level rise (due to climate change): Surrounds the roots of trees with salt water ⟹ damages or kills trees
      • Forest fires (due to climate change): drier‑, warmer‑, more flammable air ⟹ hotter, longer‑lasting fires
    • As large swaths of forests are eliminated, or any parts of the various ecosystems of the Earth are disturbed and destroyed, many people who worked at those become unemployed. Such actions don’t just carry future environmental effects, but also immediate misery for those directly affected by those events.
      • ⟶ next
      • ⟵ back
      • ⟹ consequently
      • ⟸ as said before
WHAT CAN YOU DO ABOUT IT?
The ‘feel‑good’ sense that most of us—as individuals—have no hand in the growing climate change can be quite deceiving. So, what is it that you can do about it?
Paper Products
Use fewer or less voluminous paper products (e.g. ask for a plate/ napkin/ small bag instead of a cake box, at the pastry shop; use only one napkin; decline unneeded paper‑ or plastic shopping bags at the clothing‑ or grocery store, etc.).
If available, buy products locally in order to prevent cardboard box waste and carbon emission due to shipping.
Less Shipping
Natural Farming Practices
If you have a garden or farm, use natural farming practices (e.g. no artificial fertilizers).
Pay attention to what’s happening in your local area, and stand up against initiatives that intend to expoit the land by destroying natural vegetation.
Your Immediate Environment
CITE THIS PIECE
You may use the
text
content of this piece under the Creative Commons
CC BY‑NC‑ND 4.0
license. That means, you may copy and distribute it in any medium or format in unadapted form only, for noncommercial purposes only, and only so long as attribution is given to GlobeMentum.
Everything else is copyright protected.
AP:
COPY
This is the AP
APA:
COPY
This is the APA
MLA:
COPY
This is the MLA
SOURCES and * DEFINITIONS
SOURCES USED FOR INFORMATION ON THIS PAGE:
⚉⚉⚉
While we believe that climate change is real, the related information is not an exact science in every instance. Therefore, some data or statistics might differ in different sources, even as they point to the same phenomenon of a changing climate. While we make sufficient effort to collect valid information, GlobeMentum is not responsible for the precision (or lack thereof) of data or information published on this site. You are encouraged to do your own research.
USE OF THIS SITE CONSTITUTES ACCEPTANCE OF THE AND THE .