Environment & Energy
Related: About this forum1.8 Million Acres Of The Pantanal Have Burned So Far In 2024; Countless 1,000s Of Animals Killed
Perched atop blackened trees, howler monkeys survey the ashes around them. A flock of rheas treads, disoriented, in search of water. The skeletons of alligators lie lifeless and charred. The Pantanal, the worlds largest wetland and one of the most biodiverse places on Earth, is on fire. Huge stretches of land resemble the aftermath of a battle, with thick green shrubbery now a carpet of white ash, and chunks of debris falling from the sky.
More than 760,000 hectares (1.8m acres) have already burned across the Brazilian Pantanal in 2024, as fires surge to the highest levels since 2020, the worst year on record. From January to July, blazes increased by 1,500% compared with the same period last year, according to the countrys Institute for Space Research. The impact is devastating. Animals are dying, wildfires are vanishing huge areas, says Gustavo Figueirôa, a biologist at SOS Pantanal, a non-governmental organisation. We expect it is only going to get worse.
Stretching across Brazil, Bolivia and Paraguay, the Pantanal covers 16.9m hectares (42m acres) and harbours rich biodiversity. It is one of the worlds main refuges for jaguars and houses a host of vulnerable and endangered species, including giant river otters, giant armadillos and hyacinth macaws. Its ecosystem is also unique. Every year its flood pulse sees it swell with water during the rainy season and empty throughout the dry months. But the climate crisis, droughts and weak rains have disrupted this seasonal pattern, turning the land into a tinderbox.
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Hospitals and health centres in Corumbá are crowded with patients suffering respiratory issues, with children under five and those over 60 most affected by the smoke. But while humans can usually flee the infernos and seek medical help, animals perish in their thousands. Reptiles and amphibians face the greatest risk, while monkeys die from smoke inhalation, and jaguars, too, have been found suffering with third-degree burns. In the 2020 fires, known as the year of flames, which saw almost 30% of the biome burned, 17 million vertebrates were killed. Deep into the charred wilderness, a team of volunteer animal rescue workers search for signs of life. Luka Moraes, a 26-year-old vet, says: In one week I have already seen hundreds and hundreds of dead animals, maybe thousands. Reptiles, snakes, frogs all the animals that cannot run they do not stand a chance.
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https://www.theguardian.com/environment/article/2024/jul/09/devastation-as-worlds-biggest-wetland-burns-those-that-cannot-run-dont-stand-a-chance-brazil-pantanal
jmbar2
(6,092 posts)My heart is heavy
2naSalit
(92,674 posts)And it's really pretty late to start a lot of things. At this point we should be looking at possible survival techniques for those who manage to hold on the longest. I think we're all toast.