Planting giant cactus to stave off desertification in Brazil
Pablo PORCIUNCULA and Carlos FABAL with Lucia LACURCIA in Rio de Janeiro
Fri 28 June 2024 at 9:44 pm GMT-5·3-min read
Alcides Peixinho Nascimento walks through his plantation of mandacaru (Pablo PORCIUNCULA)
Giant spiky cacti tower over farmer Alcides Peixinho Nascimento, 70, one of the residents of Brazil's unique Caatinga biome who is on a mission to plant native vegetation in a bid to halt desertification.
"In the absence of laws, it is up to us to act," said Nascimento, who is trying to regenerate his land by planting mandacaru, an emblematic cactus from the region that grows up to six meters tall.
The Caatinga stretches across ten northeastern states, a unique area boasting a tapestry of thorny shrubs, twisty trees and succulents adapted to its semi-arid conditions.
Its plight attracts little interest compared to the lush Amazon, but the vegetation of this dry forest plays a key role in absorbing carbon emissions and is rapidly disappearing. The MapBiomas NGO reports it has lost 40 percent of its original surface area due to agriculture, mining and the installation of wind farms.
More:
https://uk.news.yahoo.com/planting-giant-cactus-stave-off-024435918.html