Current:Home > NewsIn the Amazon, the World’s Largest Reservoir of Biodiversity, Two-Thirds of Species Have Lost Habitat to Fire and Deforestation -GrowthInsight
In the Amazon, the World’s Largest Reservoir of Biodiversity, Two-Thirds of Species Have Lost Habitat to Fire and Deforestation
View
Date:2025-04-14 12:02:01
As industrial agriculture, mining and logging have barreled across the Amazon rainforest in recent decades, fires and deforestation have dramatically reduced the habitat of tens of thousands of plant and animal species, damaging not just the rainforest’s ability to act as a climate stabilizer but its role as the world’s greatest reservoir of biodiversity.
In a study published Wednesday in the journal Nature, a large collaboration of researchers from the United States and China found that up to 85 percent of species listed as threatened by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature have lost habitat because of fires and deforestation since 2001. Overall, fires have damaged the habitat of as many as two-thirds of the species in the Amazon basin.
“The Amazon ecosystem is not adapted to fires, but deforestation and fires have been and are still continuously impacting the Amazonia biodiversity,” said Xiao Feng, a geographer with Florida State University and one of the paper’s lead authors. “Literature suggests a tipping point that when the Amazon loses a certain portion of the forest, the whole ecosystem will transition to another type. If this happens, it will be a tragedy for the Amazon, and for the global ecosystem given the important role the Amazon plays.”
Feng and her colleagues looked at fire data collected from satellites and then mapped that data onto the ranges of thousands of species—a remarkable accomplishment, given the sheer numbers of plants and animals in the region. The Amazon is home to 10 percent of the planet’s known species.
“The Brazilian Amazon is absolutely massive. There are so many species it’s hard to model,” said Thomas Gillespie, a geography professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, who wrote a companion piece to the study, also published Wednesday.
Yet the study’s authors, Gillespie wrote, were able to “develop the most comprehensive collection of range maps available so far of Amazonian plant and vertebrate species.”
The authors of the study then go a step further by comparing the habitat damaged by fires and deforestation to environmental policies in place at the time. They found that, from the early 2000s to 2008, deforestation rates began to rise. But then rates began to slow from 2009 to 2018, when the government removed incentives to burn forest for soy and cattle, created more protected areas and began to better police environmental policies.
In 2019, shortly after Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro took office, rates again began to rise. In Brazil, home to the largest swath of the Amazon basin, “policies that were initiated in the mid-2000s corresponded to reduced rates of burning,” the authors wrote. “However, relaxed enforcement of these policies in 2019 has seemingly begun to reverse this trend.”
Nearly 4,000 square miles of forest have been damaged since 2019, the authors noted, “leading to some of the most severe potential impacts on biodiversity since 2009.”
The study comes as the Bolsonaro administration and its allies in the Brazilian legislature push a handful of laws aimed at reducing protection for the Amazon and for Indigenous peoples. Last week, thousands of protesters from Indigenous and environmental advocacy groups marched in the streets of Brasilia, the country’s capital, demanding that Brazil’s Supreme Court uphold a land claim by the Xokleng people. Bolsonaro and the country’s powerful agricultural lobby have argued that Indigenous claims on land should be rejected if the Indigenous group did not inhabit that land prior to the 1988 enactment of the country’s constitution.
Under the Bolsonaro administration, mining, logging and industrial agriculture operations have been given carte blanche to make inroads into the Amazon. Incursions into Indigenous lands have risen since Bolsonaro was elected, largely on the promise of opening up the Amazon for business.
“There are many attempts to weaken the environmental policies and those related to the Indigenous peoples rights,” said Nurit Bensusan, a biologist with Socioambiental, a Brazilian environmental and Indigenous rights advocacy group. “Indigenous lands are about 23 percent of the Brazilian Amazon, and those are the most well-conserved areas. But since the beginning of Bolsonaro’s government, those lands have been invaded and destroyed.”
Evidence is mounting that much of that business is illegal. In another study, published last week, researchers from the Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG), in collaboration with Brazilian federal prosecutors, found that illegal gold mining is soaring and that it has caused the deforestation of nearly 52,000 acres of the Brazilian Amazon.
“There’s so much illegality in the gold supply chain,” said Raoni Rajão, an associate professor at UFMG and one of the report’s authors. “Bolsonaro was a wildcat miner, and he has this perception that wildcat miners are entrepreneurs and heroes.”
Bensusan said the Nature study’s findings were not surprising, given the rise in forest destruction under Bolsonaro.
“The article’s conclusions offer another proof that forest policy regulations are related to biodiversity conservation, because it is clearer each day that fire, deforestation, forest degradation and drought are destroying species and ecosystems,” she said. “Since Bolsonaro took office in 2019, the situation is getting worse.”
veryGood! (11367)
Related
- 'Most Whopper
- As more Americans work or look for jobs, inflation is falling. How long will it last?
- PGA Tour starts a new year that feels like the old one. There’s more to golf than just the golf
- California prosecutors charge father in death of child his 10-year-old son allegedly shot
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- Atlanta Braves rework contract with newly acquired pitcher Chris Sale
- Florida surgeon general wants to halt COVID-19 mRNA vaccines; FDA calls his claims misleading
- Woman sues Jermaine Jackson over alleged sexual assault in 1988
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- A Colorado funeral home owner accused of abandoning dozens of bodies may be close to leaving jail
Ranking
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- Crib videos offer clue to mysterious child deaths, showing seizures sometimes play a role
- Possible Ozempic side effects including hair loss and suicidal thoughts probed by FDA
- Thousands attend the funeral of a top Hamas official killed in an apparent Israeli strike in Beirut
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Live updates | Hamas loses a leader in Lebanon but holds on in Gaza
- Poor schools are prepared to return to court if Pennsylvania budget falls short on funding plan
- What can ordinary taxpayers learn from the $700m Shohei Ohtani baseball megadeal?
Recommendation
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
Nick Carter Breaks Silence on Sister Bobbie Jean Carter's Death
AP Week in Pictures: Asia
How many national championships has Michigan won? Wolverines title history explained
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
A return to the moon and a rare eclipse among 5 great space events on the horizon in 2024
California forces retailers to have 'gender-neutral' toy aisles. Why not let kids be kids?
Germany’s government waters down a cost-cutting plan that infuriated the country’s farmers