Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumAt Least 59% Of Brazil In Drought; Amazon Basin River Flows Collapse In Worst Drought On Record
RIO DE JANEIRO In the north of Brazil, dried rivers have left communities accessible only by boat landlocked. In the central west, fires are razing what were once wetlands. And in the densely populated southeast, smoke from tens of thousands of blazes is choking cities. Brazil is in the grip of its worst drought on record, Brazils Center for Natural Disaster Monitoring and Alerts said this month, a drought that has parched at least 59 percent of Latin Americas largest country and dried out more than 1,400 cities.
Even in a country that has grown increasingly inured to the damage wrought by drought which in recent years has dried out swaths of the Amazon forest, killed scores of river dolphins and caused some territory to be reclassified as arid recent scenes of privation and struggle have been startling. Along the Rio Madeira in Amazonas state, locals are trekking miles on the hot sands of the dried riverbed in search of water. In the Pantanal, the worlds largest tropical wetland, fires have scorched an estimated 20,000 square kilometers (7,720 square miles). The vast Cerrado region is in the grip of the worst drought in at least 700 years, according to researchers at the University of São Paulo. And the air in São Paulo state has grown so heavy with forest fire smoke that authorities have urged people to avoid physical activity outside.
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We have to focus on why this is happening, said Philip Fearnside, a biologist at the National Institute of Amazon Research. This is global warming and deforestation. Fearnside and other climate scientists have warned for years that the impacts of the Amazons destruction would be felt well beyond its borders. This drought is evidence, he said.
The biome is hydrated by a unique rainfall pattern known as flying rivers. Moisture blows in from the Atlantic Ocean and forms rain over the eastern Amazon. The dense forest canopy absorbs the water, then releases much of it back into the atmosphere as vapor to be carried farther west. The cycle repeats until the flying rivers collide with the Andes mountains, where they turn southward into central Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay and Argentina. The Río de la Plata basin, which extends from Bolivia to Argentina, is particularly dependent on what scientists call cascading moisture recycling.
Reliant on trees, the hydraulic system is now being frayed by deforestation. The destruction has been most acute in the southeastern Amazon, precisely where the moisture from the Atlantic is first deposited. The loss of vegetation is reducing the volume of water thats reaching the continent.
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2024/09/12/brazil-drought/
https://wapo.st/3MJUiQx
Think. Again.
(17,926 posts)...doesn't effect us.
The Amazon is a major driver of the entire planet's ecological system's funtioning and balances.
When one major, or even minor, part of any system fails, the domino effect can cause the entire system to cease functioning completely.
At the very least, the drastic changes our planetary systems will have to go through to try to re-achieve a working balance will be devastating to our populated societies.