Own report: What do you think when you hear the name of the forest? Dense jungle, covered with green. But, recently a forest has been created which is changing the definition. Scientists have compared this forest to a ghostly conch. This ‘ghost forest’ is spreading in America. Those who look almost dead! The stalks are dry and gray in color. These trees have no branches or leaves. Apad head is lifeless. But how then are they growing? This haunted forest has become a matter of concern to environmentalists around the world. They also claim that it is very scary to see and hear the haunted forest. The trees are lifeless, yet how is this forest spreading?
Environmentalists are interpreting this as the cause of climate change. Spooky forests occupy 11 percent of North Carolina’s alligator riverine wildlife.
Because what
Emily Uri, lead researcher in biology and ghost forest research at Duke University in North Carolina, says the desert forest is expanding as sea levels rise. Wildlife trees on the banks of the Alligator River are getting a lot of sea salt. Due to this the seeds and roots present in the soil are getting extra salt. That is why the trees are drying up and becoming lifeless.
21,000 acres of forest has now become a ghost forest. Hurricane Irene struck in 2011. Since then, the forest has become increasingly lifeless due to sea water.