Trees
 in tropical forests are well known for removing carbon dioxide from the
 air and storing the potent greenhouse gas as carbon in their leafy 
branches and extensive roots. But a new analysis led by Stanford 
University researchers finds that large forest animals are also an 
important part of the carbon cycle.
The findings are based on more than a million records of animal sightings and activity collected by 340 indigenous technicians in the Amazon during more than three years of environmental surveys, coordinated by ecologist Jose Fragoso and supported by biologist Rodolfo Dirzo, who were working together at Stanford at the time. The team found that places where animals are most diverse correlate with places that have the most carbon sequestered in the soil.
Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2017-10-diversity-large-animals-important-role.html
 
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