ナショナルジオグラフィックのインスタグラム(natgeo) - 11月16日 10時33分
Photo by @ismailferdous | The Sundarbans area is indisputably the largest mangrove forest on Earth, and it lies in the world's biggest river delta, formed by the convergence of the Ganges, Brahmaputra, and Meghna Rivers in the Bay of Bengal. This national forest spreads across 3,861 square miles in Bangladesh and India (60% in Bangladesh), and it's home to many rare and globally endangered wildlife species, such as the royal Bengal tiger. In two major ways, the Sundarbans is being impacted by climate change: first, the sea level is rising, flooding lands with each high tide. When the tide retreats, the land is left more saline than before—and less able to grow crops. The same goes for the brackish creeks and river mouths dotting the forests. The second consequence: more big cyclones. Higher seas give the cyclone winds greater velocity, and the area has been hit by catastrophic cyclones in the previous years. #Climatechange #RoyalBengalTiger
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