The bar chart shows information about farm land damage in four continents land. The chart details give information about millions of hectares of agricultural area reduced by tree cutting, breeding, farming.
Overall, most of land damage in Africa is from breeding crops or trees; however, in Europe, a lesser amount of harm is present. Land impairment by farming drastically changed in Asia and Australia, from 450 to 50 million hectares simultaneously.
The first cause of deforestation resulted in 380 million hectares of land damage in Africa and in Asia than in Australia and Europe. Whereas, the Europe and Australia regions experienced the same amount of land destruction—100 million hectares.
The second cause, cross-breeding of crops, resulted in more land damage in Africa than in Europe—about 110 million hectares of land. Then, in Asia, there was slightly more than double the soil harm than in the Australia region.
The third cause is the use of pesticides in farming for better crop growth and more yield. The highest number of hectares of land harmed in Asia was up to 420 million hectares of soil. Africa had 300 million hectares of damaged land; the Europe region had a number less than three times that of Africa, and Australia had 20 million fewer hectares of damaged land than the Europe region due to farming.
