| Just to add something here, all plants store carbon in the form of "biomass," which just means mass that is alive or once was. A huge tree that has fallen down and hasn't rotted yet is a great place to store carbon dioxide so that the CO2 won't cause global warming. Of course, you need a LOT of dead trees lying around for it to make a difference. Living trees keep soaking up more carbon every year. But usually the older the tree gets, the more slowly it grows and the less carbon it takes up. On the other hand, the bigger it is, the more carbon it's storing. Big forests like the amazon also affect climate, but I forget how...
Besides tropical rain forests and boreal forests (evergreen firs, etc of the far north), there are also temperate "deciduous" forests that lose their leaves in winter (maples, oaks, etc), like in New England and parts of the South. They also can store carbon.
American farmers almost completely clear cut the whole eastern part of the United States in the 18th and 19th century, but the forests have grown back--although they lost a lot of species diversity in the process. Guess I'm pretty far off topic!
Cheers, |