Kids Environmental Posters Cutting Trees

Original price was: $6.99.Current price is: $5.99.

Kids Environmental Posters Cutting Trees

  • Poster Size: 11×17.
  • Composition: 110 lb. heavyweight card-stock.
  • Quality: Sharp resolution, detail, and colors.
  • White border trim space added for matting (if desired).
  • Good for 11×17, 13×19, and 16×20″ frames. Looks great matted!
SKU: 11X17CT-K Category:

Description

Kids Environmental Posters Cutting Trees illustrates the devastation that forest clearing can have on one of our planet’s most valuable ecosystems. This colorful and educational poster is designed to help bring awareness to children to environmental issues. Also, to help kids grasp the message our illustrations are designed with cartoon humor, and simple vocabulary.

Basically, our goal is to teach children that there are important Earth, Ocean and Air issues that plague our planet and its ecosystems. We hope that our visuals will help promote new discussion among children and adults regarding the environment. Further, we hope these discussions will lead to addressing the problems endangering our planet. In the end, our children and grandchildren will inherit what we as parents, grandparents, teachers, and role models leave them. So, let’s clean up this planet. Then, they too can one day lead by example.

Kids Environmental Posters Cutting Trees

Facts…

Deforestation, clearance or clearing is the removal of a forest or stand of trees where the land is thereafter converted to a non-forest use. Examples of deforestation include conversion of forestland to farms, ranches, or urban use. The most concentrated deforestation occurs in tropical rain-forests. References: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

We need trees for a variety of reasons. Firstly, they absorb the carbon dioxide that we exhale. More importantly, they also absorb the heat-trapping greenhouse gases that human activities emit. As those gases enter the atmosphere, global warming increases, a trend scientists now prefer to call climate change. References: National Geographic