The Vertical Farming Response to the Agricultural Tropical
Rainforest's Destruction
Xi Zhao
Ashland University, Ashland 44805, U.S.A.
Keywords: Tropical Rainforest, Deforestation, Agriculture, Vertical Farming.
Abstract: With economic development, agricultural expansion is gradually affecting the disruption of the tropical
rainforest ecosystem. This article summarizes that agricultural development poses varying degrees of threats
to the inorganic environment, organic environment, and climate change of tropical rainforests. To improve
efficiency, reduce pollution, and protect the tropical rainforest ecosystem destroyed by the development of
agriculture, this article proposes introducing vertical agriculture as a new agricultural production technology
into tropical rainforest areas. At the same time, combined with vertical agricultural technology in terms of
deforestation and pollution, the practical feasibility of replacing traditional agriculture with new technology
is discussed. The technology has advantages, including occupying less land area, being clean and organic,
saving water and energy, and being smart enough to achieve full control of crop planting efficiency. It
proposes possible solutions for mitigating the adverse effects to provide a direction/reference for the healthy
development of tropical rainforests. However, there are concerns about high costs, limited crop types, and
fewer employment opportunities. Therefore, scientific researchers must increase the application range of
this technology further and reduce costs.
1 INTRODUCTION
Currently, to develop the economy and improve the
poverty situation, expansion of agriculture in the
tropical rainforest is inevitable; however, this
development brings destruction to the tropical
rainforests, which would trigger serious
consequences. The tropical rainforests are vital to
the planet in many aspects. First, it is a colossal
carbon pool that stores a large amount of carbon on
the planet. Second, it could absorb a large amount of
carbon dioxide and release oxygen, regulating and
stabilizing the global climate. Third, it has the
richest biodiversity on the earth. Therefore, the
destruction of tropical rainforests will cause serious
consequences, such as breaking the carbon-oxygen
balance, exacerbating the greenhouse effect. It leads
to soil erosion and desertification of tropical
rainforests, leading to drought, high temperature,
and wildfire. It also destroys the habitats of animals
and plants, breaks the balance of the trophic cascade.
Furthermore, the production methods of traditional
agriculture are inefficient and have many impacts on
the tropical rainforest environment. Therefore, it is
imperative and urgent to develop an agricultural
technology that can improve production efficiency
while significantly reducing the impact on the
environment. Be advised that papers in a technically
unsuitable form will be returned for retyping. After
returned the manuscript must be appropriately
modified.
At present, there is a rare appropriate solution to
the destruction of tropical rainforests to develop
agriculture; a path that can lift local people out of
poverty and protect the rainforest environment at the
same time is still being explored. Some studies have
proposed using sociology theory and government
administrative means to interfere with rainforest
agriculture. For example, after experiments with the
theory of common-pool resources, it was found that
when the property rights of the land are fully granted
to the locals, deforestation can be effectively curbed
(Alencar, 2015). However, the implementation of
this measure is too much affected by human factors,
and it has certain obstacles to the local economic
development. Vertical farming is the practice of
growing crops on vertically stacked levels, vertically
inclined surfaces, or integrated with other structures,
such as skyscrapers, warehouses, or shipping
containers. The modern idea of vertical farming is to
1188
Zhao, X.
The Vertical Farming Response to the Agricultural Tropical Rainforest’s Destr uction.
DOI: 10.5220/0011382300003443
In Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Biomedical Engineering and Bioinformatics (ICBEB 2022), pages 1188-1194
ISBN: 978-989-758-595-1
Copyright
c
2022 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
use indoor breeding technology and controlled
environmental agricultural technology, in which all
environmental causes can be controlled. Compared
with traditional agriculture, vertical agriculture is
energy-saving, water-saving, fertilizer, herbicides,
and pesticides-free, pollution-free, clean, and
organic, with much less floor space, and has high
production efficiency. Therefore, it is of great help
to the condition of deforestation problem. However,
there is little relevant research yet, and vertical
farming technology is still an immature technology,
with the high cost and limited crops that can be
grown, so the solution proposed in this article has a
lot of research space.
This article summarizes the impact of
agricultural development on tropical rainforests from
the inorganic environment, organic environment,
and climate change. In addition, this artic proposes
possible solutions for mitigating the adverse effects
and discusses the feasibility of this technology to
provide a direction/reference for the healthy
development of tropical rain forests.
2 IMPACT OF AGRICULTURE
ON TROPICAL RAINFOREST
The tropical rainforests, also defined as lowland
equatorial evergreen rainforests, are mainly
distributed within 10 to 15 degrees on the two sides
of the equator, located mainly in western and central
Africa, southern and central America, and Malesian
botanical subkingdom. These areas have a typical
tropical rainforest climate, containing two sub-types:
rainy equatorial climate, controlled by the equatorial
low-pressure zone, and tropical oceanic climate
controlled by the humid trade wind. The main
characteristics of tropical rainforest climate include
high precipitation (around 60mm); High
temperature, and slight temperature variation. The
sun shines directly on the ground twice a year,
brings intense radiation and has little difference in
the day and night length. Most of the tropical
rainforests are distributes in developing countries.
The local people live their lives depending on the
exploitation and application of the rainforest
resources, usually with agriculture, which includes
cultivating crops suitable for growing in tropical
rainforests and rearing animals such as cattle.
Although agriculture could help reducing local
poverty, it could also bring serious harm to the
biophysical environment of tropical rainforests.
2.1 Impacts on the Inorganic
Environment
First, conventional agriculture inevitably uses
fertilizer to improve the survival rate of the young
crops or increase the crops' harvest. The rapidly
increased use of fertilizer in the rainforest areas
leads to a concerning consequence. Usually, the
crops can hardly absorb all the fertilizer; many
nutrients would be lost to the environment in several
ways. For example, if the rainwater flows through
the ground of the field, it would take the nutrient
into the physical environment of the rainforest
(Edwards, 1970). When the nutrients enter the water
body with the flow, it would have a chance to
produce a phenomenon defined as eutrophication;
The nutrient would harm the water quality by
triggering dense blooms of phytoplankton, reducing
the water's clarity, and producing a foul smell (D.
Pivoto, P.D. Waquil, E. Talamini, C.P.S. Finocchio,
V.F. Dalla Corte, G. de Vargas Mores). With the
outbreak reproduction of phytoplankton, the water
turns turbid and allows less light to penetrate
through. Meanwhile, the unwanted phytoplankton
consumes too much oxygen in the water, traps the
heat beneath the water's surface, makes the water
much warmer than clear ones, and changes the
water's chemical composition. Eventually,
eutrophication can cause considerable death of
aquatic and nearby terrestrial lives; The fertilizer
applied on the soil would decrease the pH level (H,
2005), disturb the soil enzyme activity and microbial
population (Rodriguez, 2004), and increase heavy
metal concentration (Chang, Chung, Tsai, 2020). In
Turkey, research has shown that after consistently
applying fertilizer for years to the tea plantation in
the province of Rize, soil acidification appears and
continuing to be more severe. 85% of the land has
been observed to decrease to pH 4 or below and
reach a critical level. Excessive fertilizer disrupts the
soil's balance of nutrients and negatively affects the
diversity of organisms like worms and soil mites (H,
2005).
Large-scale tropical rainforests have been
through slash-and-burn clearing, a way of
deforestation, to develop agriculture. Deforestation
leads to soil erosion, which would change the
tropical rainforest landscape, causing desertification
and high temperature. For example, the destruction
of primary forests of the Amazon region is rapid; In
2019, deforestation in Brazil, which contains more
than half of the Amazon Forest, spiked by around
30% to almost 10,000 km2. By 2020, Brazil's
rainforest has already shrunk around 15% compared
The Vertical Farming Response to the Agricultural Tropical Rainforest’s Destruction
1189
to 1970, and 19% of Brazil's Amazon tropical
rainforest's total area disappeared (Birkby, 2016).
Thus, deforestation making large land areas
vulnerable to erosion by wind, rain, and floods. In
addition, because tree roots hold the soil together
and retain water in the ecosystem, deforestation and
subsequent erosion cycles will destroy habitats.
Although agriculture replaces forests with crops, the
foundations of non-native plants such as cotton and
soybeans cannot keep rainforest soil in place. Once
the plant cover disappears, there will be no roots to
fix the soil during heavy tropical rains, and then
wash away the topsoil and regenerate nutrients
needed for future vegetation. As a result, the
deforested rainforest soil becomes dry and lacks
nutrients because there is no longer vegetation to
keep water and nutrients in place. Furthermore,
heavy rains have eroded the soil, and the eroded
sediments can even change rivers. For instance, the
Yangtze River in China has accumulated much
sediment due to deforestation (Liu, 2007). However,
the Yangtze River is not located in a tropical
rainforest region, and the geomorphological
principle remains the same. Another kind of
landscape changing is desertification, a possible
consequence of erosion caused by deforestation.
When plant cover is lost to the critical level, erosion
will take over (Jing, 2018), and the previously dense
rainforest can turn into an arid desert.
2.2 Impacts on the Organic
Environment
Agriculture expansion profoundly impacts the
biological environment of tropical rainforests, from
the most micro-ecological environment to the most
macro-ecological environment.
Soil organisms are one of the most diverse
biological communities on the planet (Baragwanath,
2020), and it is the same in the tropical rainforest.
Bacteria, fungi, actinomycetes, and algae constitute
the soil microbial community. They carry out
oxidation, nitrification, ammonification, nitrogen
fixation, sulfidation, and other processes in the soil
to promote the decomposition of organic matters in
the soil and the conversion of nutrients. Thus, the
soil microbial community is the most fundamental
part of the ecological cycle. However, overusing
fertilizer causes heavy metal concentration in the
soil, which has adverse effects on the activity and
the amount of soil microbial community. Heavy
metal ions can inhibit micro-organisms; Various
metabolisms denature proteins, inhibit cell division
or make cells; The membrane ruptures change the
specificity of the enzyme, destroys cell function and
the DNA structure (Benke, 2017). Thus, the
activities and population size of soil microbial
communities of the tropical rainforests were reduced
and destroyed. This phenomenon would directly
impact the upper niches of biology.
Applying herbicides and pesticides to enhance
the crops' efficiency in conventional intensive
agricultural production activities is very common.
However, herbicides and pesticides have intense
negative impacts on the organisms in the tropical
rainforests. Pesticides and herbicides may affect
micro-organisms populations, directly or indirectly
of soil invertebrates by limiting their living
essentials (L. Gibson, T.M. Lee, L.P. Koh, B.W.
Brook, T.A. Gardner, J. Barlow, C.A. Peres, C.J.A.
Bradshaw, W.F. Laurance, T.E. Lovejoy, N.S.
Sodhi), affect plants and animals at different
nutritional levels. For example, there are numerous
insects, spiders, ticks, earthworms, nematodes, and
other invertebrates in tropical nature. At the same
time, pesticides and herbicides have significant
direct elimination effects on these animals' growth,
reproduction, and survival. Thus, the loss of these
arthropods would lead to the loss of upper predators,
like birds and frogs; In the same way, the loss of
secondary consumers would cause the loss of top
predators. Therefore, pesticides and herbicides will
change the species composition and structure of
tropical rainforest organism communities and reduce
the tropical rainforest biodiversity (L.R. Vargas
Zeppetello, L.A. Parsons, J.T. Spector, R.L. Naylor,
D.S. Battisti, Y.J. Masuda, N.H. Wolff).
Studies have shown that deforestation has
adverse effects on tropical biodiversity and primary
forests are no substitute for maintaining tropical
nature biodiversity (SharathKumar, Heuvelink,
Marcelis, 2020). Nonetheless, agricultural
deforestation, for example, the slash-and-burn
clearing and the cut-down clearing, also changes the
ecological environment of the tropical rainforests by
destroying the habitat, breaking the food web, and
reducing biodiversity. For instance, only 40% of the
forest-based plant and insect species could also be
found in the tropical rainforest conventional cocoa
plantation (Chislock, Doster, Zitomer, Wilson,
2013). With the significant area loss of habitat, a
large scale of organisms is suffering local extinction.
Numerous species, even some top predators, for
example, the tiger, which used to spread widely over
Asia, have been observed gradually functional
extinct. Tigers have only been found in just 7% of
their original geographical distribution range (P.
Shukla, J. Skea, 2019).
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2.3 Impacts on Global Climate
A large scale of deforestation on tropical rainforests
would directly cause the phenomenon of global
warming. In 2019, the IPCC issued a report about
climate and land, pointing out the causal relations
between tropical rainforests and global cycles of
energy, water, and carbon. This report indicates that
tropical deforestation is one of the climate change
issues threatening the most prominent land-based
carbon pools on earth (Savci, 2012). For example,
from 2003 to 2018, deforestation in Southeast Asia
reached 11% of the total area of tropical rainforests.
Furthermore, studies have shown that 65% of areas
where the temperature has risen by 5 °C have
experienced deforestation. The same thing happens
in Amazon; 5 ◦C has risen, while deforestation is
just 4% of the total rainforest area. Study shows that
this warming amount is nearly equal to around a
hundred years of greenhouse gas emission induced
climate change (Gbarakoro, 2013).
3 VERTICAL FARMING
Vertical farming is a plantation way to grow
considerably more crops in the same area than
traditional, horizontal farming. The types of vertical
farms model have different shapes and sizes, from
simple two-story or wall-mounted systems to large
warehouses with several stories high. Vertical farms
can be divided into hydroponics, air cultivation, or
fish and vegetable symbiosis to provide nutrients for
plants. The advantages of this technology are
abundant. Multiple combinations of AI, artificial
light, sensor monitoring, climate control systems,
and other facilities and tools make agriculture
controllable. Crops are stacked in layers or rows,
sometimes up to 20 to 30 feet tall. All vertical farms
use LED lights to create a specific lighting scheme
for each plant, thereby providing green plants with
the precise spectrum, intensity, and frequency
required for photosynthesis. Several key factors
determine the feasibility of a vertical farm. First, the
physical layout: Indoor farming aims to maximize
the output efficiency per square meter, which is the
source of the vertical tower structure. Second, the
lighting: Lighting optimization for crop growth in
vertical agriculture usually involves growing lights
and natural light. Professional technology such as
rotating beds improves the efficiency of the light
source and can meet the needs of different crops.
There are three different indoor agricultural systems
models: hydroponics, aeroponic, and fish and
vegetable symbiosis. In hydroponics, crops are
grown in nutrient-rich water basins, and water is
recycled, increasing efficiency and reducing water
consumption. In addition, hydroponic agriculture is
scalable in scale and cost, which is very suitable for
farmers' production goals and needs. It includes drip
irrigation, deep water cultivation, ebb and flow,
nutrient film technology, and a wick system.
Aeroponic agriculture uses regular timers (no soil,
sunlight, or water) to frequently spray crops with
nutrient-based mist. Then, Aeroponics delivers
nutrients directly to plant roots to save water and
reduce labor-intensive. Scalability is another great
advantage of this method, as crops can be harvested
easily without the need for soil. Fish and vegetable
symbiosis is a closed-loop food production system;
aquaponics is the practice of cultivating fish and
plants simultaneously. Fish provide nutrients and
beneficial bacteria to plants, and plants filter water
for fish. Thus, the fish and vegetable symbiosis
creates a high-yield and balanced ecosystem with
many benefits, including water-saving methods. As
is shown in Fig.1, the vertical farms work in a clean,
energy-saving, orderly and smart environment. LED
lights to provide suitable light while the water
supplements and nutrients solutions are under
culture beds, and air conditioners maintain the air
cycle system in the vertical farm. All these factors
are controlled precisely by the AI system, and solar
panels and storage batteries provide electric energy.
Figure 1: The mechanism of vertical farming (W. Abtew,
A.M. Melesse, 2016).
First, since this vertical farming requires the
accurate control of light, water, temperature, and
humidity, this technology was combined with smart
farming in AI to realize efficient, eco-friendly
production. Researchers use artificial intelligence to
coordinate the whole vertical farming lab and
The Vertical Farming Response to the Agricultural Tropical Rainforest’s Destruction
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simulate the natural growing environment of the
crops—smart farming, including incorporating
communication technologies and information. The
smart farming producing system uses
communication technologies, the internet of things,
cloud computing technologies, robots, machinery,
equipment, and sensors (Laurance, Sayer, Cassman,
2014). Vertical farming could be a solution to
tropical agricultural deforestation. Second, it allows
less land use since it is skyward; Only a tiny amount
of land would be required for growing the crops.
This means slash-and-burn deforestation is
unnecessary. Third, vertical farming is eco-friendly
and allows a reduction or total abandonment of
chemical pesticides and herbicides (Z. Atafar);
workers need to be disinfected before working,
which means less harmful bacteria, plant viruses,
and pests would have a chance to go into the lab.
Moreover, since vertical farming is also soilless
cultivation; the culture medium is organic and eco-
friendly, such as coconut shells, the nutrient supply
of crops comes from the environmentally friendly
organic nutrient solution. Some soil-borne crop
diseases, insect pests, or weeds do not happen in the
lab, which means chemicals like pesticides and
herbicides no longer need to be applied. Thus,
environmental contamination, for example, the
waterbody and the soil contamination caused by
fertilizer, pesticides, and herbicides mentioned
above, would not appear. Last, the energy and
resource consumption of vertical farming is small.
The power that vertical farming labs use could be
solar energy, considered as clean and safe energy,
and reduce carbon emissions significantly. Highly
efficient Light-Emitting Diodes are used in most
vertical farms, and only the red and blue light bulbs
are needed, the most beneficial for optimizing plant
growth, ad eliminating other light waves helps
reduce energy costs by 15% (Z. Atafar). The water
applied in the vertical farm is also recyclable; even
the humidity in the atmosphere in the lab would be
collected and reused, which means the
eutrophication is not going to happen in the natural
environment. Fig. 2 is the plant phenotype with
desirable attributes for vertical farming. Vertical
farming provides high-quality crop productions,
while the processes of growing the crops are high
efficiency.
Figure 2: Ideal plant phenotype with desirable attributes for vertical farming.
In contrast, vertical agriculture also has its
limitations. Initially, vertical farming requires
considerable financial investment, such as patents,
researches, developments, equipment, and AI
technology expenses. However, tropical rainforest
agricultural deforestation usually happens in
developing countries, and less capital could be
applied to the vertical technology. Furthermore,
since vertical farms widely use AI technology,
practices like breeding, watering, temperature, and
humidity control can all be coordinated by
computers and operated by robots, fewer jobs could
be offered to the poverty. Thus, developing vertical
farms is counter to the original intention of tropical
rainforest agriculture. The needs, which are tackling
poverty and livelihood issues, have not been met, so
the problem cannot be solved unless the process of
vertical farming replacing the traditional horizontal
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1192
farming in tropical rainforests becomes an
international cooperating project. Furthermore, in
vertical farming projects, there is necessary to
provide services with a supply of skilled labor or
scientific resources workers with a university
education certification. However, in most tropical
agriculture deforestation areas, people have fewer
chances and financial aids to accept higher
education. Third, vertical farming technology has
focused on some specific species of crops. Current
models of vertically grown crops are high value, fast
growth, small area, and fast turnover species. For
example, leafy greens are trendy as a vertical
farming crop because they provide a premium profit
margin (Abtew, Melesse, 2016), such as lettuce,
basil, and a few "salad" crops. Fourth, slow-growing
vegetables and grains are not so profitable that
commercial crops have not been introduced into the
vertical farming system (Z. Atafar). However, in
tropical rainforest agriculture, the crops grown in
tropical areas are usually banana, cocoa, rice, oil
palm, etc.; all of these crops are still have not been
studied as vertical farming growing crops.
4 CONCLUSIONS
Most tropical rainforests are distributed in
developing countries, which means that the
developing economy by cutting down tropical
rainforests and expanding agriculture is inevitable.
To realize the conservative practices of the tropical
rainforest, finding a new method of developing
agriculture is becoming urgent. This article discusses
the impact of agricultural development on tropical
rain forests and the global climate, such as
eutrophication of tropical rain forests, soil heavy
metal pollution, and reduction of biodiversity.
Excessive carbon emissions caused by deforestation
and the development of agriculture will destroy the
global carbon and oxygen balance, intensify the
greenhouse effect and affect the global climate. This
article proposes that vertical agriculture may be one
of the solutions to this problem. Vertical farming
saves most of the water, land, and energy in growing
crops, and it is also clean and organic. Meanwhile, it
allows less environmental contamination and carbon
emission. However, the technology currently has the
following problems: the cost is higher than
traditional agriculture, the crops grown are limited to
salad vegetables, and there are no growing tropical
crops. Furthermore, with artificial intelligence
technology and robots in vertical farms, locals rarely
have a working chance. Although there are some
concerns, there is much space for more research in
this area.
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