Report
shows deforestation threatens Brazil's Pantanal
Conservation International
Almost half of the Paraguay River Basin that includes vast
Pantanal wetlands already transformed into grazing and crop
lands
Deforestation from increased grazing and agriculture has
destroyed 17 percent of the native vegetation in Brazil's
Pantanal, considered the world's largest wetland.
A new study published by Conservation International sounds
an alarm for the Paraguay River Basin, which includes the
Pantanal. Continued deforestation at the current rate would
cause all of the Pantanal's original vegetation to disappear
in 45 years, according to CI researchers in Brazil.
Overall, opening the region to more grazing and agriculture,
including the transformation of native pasture to farmland,
has destroyed almost 45 percent of the original vegetation
in the Paraguay River Basin. The river basin covers approximately
600,000 square kilometers, 60 percent of it within Brazilian
territory. It includes the Pantanal, which comprises 41 percent
of the entire basin. The Pantanal is a Brazilian National
Heritage site, a significant site of international relevance
according to the RAMSAR Wetlands Areas Convention, and a UNESCO
Biosphere Reserve.
The CI scientists analyzed satellite images to compare the
proportion of deforested areas with those that still have
native vegetation. They concluded that agriculture, cattle
grazing and coal mining are the major threats to the Paraguay
River Basin, a significant hydrographical drainage of the
South American continent.
Titled "Estimated Loss of Natural Area in the High
Paraguay River Basin and the Brazilian Pantanal,"
the report produced by the Pantanal Program of CI-Brazil depicts
a critical situation. As of 2004, it says, approximately 44
percent of the area's original vegetation had been altered,
with some districts in the Paraguay River Basin losing more
than 90 percent of their vegetation.
"It is extremely important to conserve the areas
surrounding the Pantanal lowlands, because they are the headwaters
of the rivers that make up the Pantanal," said Sandro
Menezes, manager of CI-Brazil's Pantanal's Program. "These
locations contribute to wildlife populations and serve as
refuges for the fauna during unfavorable seasons, sheltering
species that migrate to avoid floods and climate extremes."
Losing native vegetation causes soil degradation and changes
the hydrological processes, which determine the dry and wet
cycles and are largely responsible for the biological richness
of the region. That in turn can compromise resources such
as food and breeding sites offered by the forests and other
types of vegetation. An example is the hyacinth macaw, a species
threatened with extinction, which depends on a tree commonly
called 'manduvi' (Sterculia apetala) for shelter and
reproduction. Without this specific tree, chances are that
the hyacinth macaw will disappear.
According to the report, urgent actions required to reverse
the situation include increased government regulation and
better coordination of conservation efforts at various government
levels (municipal, state and federal); a review of current
legislation regarding protected areas and legal reserves for
the region; and implementation of a broad environmental restoration
program in devastated areas.
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