Assessing the Impact of Deforestation of the Atlantic Rainforest on ...
1 Why are we loosing the Amazon Rainforest?. 2 Increase in Tropical Deforestation Around the World.
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Transcript of 1 Why are we loosing the Amazon Rainforest?. 2 Increase in Tropical Deforestation Around the World.
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Why are we Why are we loosing the loosing the
Amazon Amazon Rainforest?Rainforest?
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Increase in Tropical Deforestation Around the WorldIncrease in Tropical Deforestation Around the World
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What are the main causes of What are the main causes of deforestation?deforestation?
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AgricultureAgricultureThere is (mainly) cattle ranching and soya productionWhy are they clearing the forest for cattle ranching?Beef is cheaply produced. This means there is a ready export market. This encourages the ranchers to produce more.Land ownership is difficult to establish, so that means anyone can come along and clear the land.It is very much a matter of finders- keepers. Often, land ownership can be claimed not by a proof of property, but simply by physical occupation.But this means that Amerindians may have to move away + loss of plants/animals and soil erosion etc
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Why is soya growing?Why is soya growing?
Soy provides more than a quarter of the world’s vegetable oil. In its meal form, it is the preferred food for domesticated animals as it is high in protein - and this demand is growing rapidly. For example, as countries such as China develop, they are eating more meat than ever before.They feed their cattle/pigs on soya but they don’t have the space to produce enough themselves – so they need to import it.
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So ….So ….
There is growing global demand, which has propelled soy to the single most important agricultural export commodity of Brazi.Soy developers take over land cleared by the cattle ranchers because it makes more money than ranching. The cattle ranchers (and deforestation) move deeper into the Amazon towards new areas.Soy traders to offer cheap loans to producers - even where soy is not the most suitable crop from an ecological or food security perspective. With their new gains, producers expand their cultivated areas without depending on expensive domestic loans.
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Can you remember Can you remember some of the some of the
problems we talked problems we talked about last week about last week
that were caused by that were caused by the rainforest being the rainforest being
cut down?cut down?
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Problems caused by soya Problems caused by soya productionproductionLoss of natural areas: The expansion of soy
cultivation is a powerful agent of rainforest loss.The longer dry season caused by the removal of the trees is actually better for production than land in the rainforest areaBy heavy use of chemicals, while the area under production increased 57 times, while the amount produced increased 138 times. Erosion and subsequent siltation of rivers and wetlands, caused by the clearing of vegetation along waterways. Pollution of surface water with pesticides threatens human populations and aquatic life. Social impacts: Labour conditions during land preparation are generally poor. In the 1970s, 2.8 million people were displaced by soybean production. Many of these people moved to the Amazon Basin where they cleared pristine forests.
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What is likely to happen?What is likely to happen?
American/China will continue need more oil/feedA new highway through the Amazon will encourage development along itBrazil needs the income – so things do not look good
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The great demand for tropical hardwood such as mahogany and rosewood. Five million hectares of forest are lost in the Amazon each year as a result.
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Why?Why?There is a huge demand for timber worldwideIn 1996, Asian companies invested more than US$ 500 million in Brazil’s timber industry, mainly because they were aware of the speed at which the forests in Asia are being cut.Illegal loggingWhile laws exist which authorize logging in designated areas, illegal logging is widespread in Brazil and several Amazon countries. A study by a Brazilian commission showed that 80% of all logging in the Amazon was illegal during the late 90s. Of the 13 companies that were investigated, 12 had broken the law
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How do they get away with How do they get away with it?it?Use of forged permits
Cutting any commercially valuable tree regardless of which ones are protected by law Cutting more than authorized quotas Cutting outside of concession areas Stealing from protected areas and indigenous lands In Colombia, while illegal practices have been reduced, government assessments reveal that between 80% and 90% of all forest clearing is still illegal, with timber being smuggled into Brazil and Peru.
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What happens to the forest?What happens to the forest?Whereas sustainable logging can be a long-term source of income for people and the government, logging is often not carried out in accordance to such standards. Because the permits to logging companies are short term, they see no value in logging sustainable – they arrive, take as much as they can and leave again leaving devastationThis leads to biodiversity loss, over-hunting of wildlife and soon after conversion for agriculture or pasture. It has documented that for every commercial tree removed, 27 other trees more than 10 cm in diameter are damaged, 40 m of road are created and 600 m2 of canopy is opened – about the size of one football pitch for each tree harvested.Once fallen, trees must be transported which may involve using tractors. The erosion that follows logging washes away nutrients/soil into the streams and rivers.
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Resettlement in the AmazonResettlement in the Amazon
People have been encouraged to move out of the shanty towns in the cities into the AmazonThey receive:
would receive a plot just over 1 km2 in size, six months' salary, and agricultural loans,
This entitles them to settle along one of the highways and cut the surrounding rainforest to grow crops.Five million cattle were also brought into the area, a trend repeated elsewhere. The population has tripled between 1980 and 2000
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Why was road building such as the TransAmazonian Highway vital to all these large scale development projects?
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Roads are bad news tooRoads are bad news too
For the Amazon rainforest, roads are very often bad news. In the Brazilian Amazon rainforest, about 80% of the deforested areas are within 30 km of official roads. In addition to that, approximately 80% of new towns and farming communities and other reasons for deforestation are within 70 km of such roads. But at least the Trans-Amazonian highway cuts through interior forest, well off the floodplain and hence in an infertile area.
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What impact does road building have on the Amazon’s ecosystem?Organise these statements into the flow chart below. There is more than one correct order.
there is no vegetation to intercept the rain
the soil is washed away
trees are cut down
road is builtthe nutrient cycle is broken and so the soil becomes infertile
it is difficult to grow crops
the area become more accessible
other large scale developments such as mining come to the area
more trees are cut down
people migrate to the area
the area become more accessible
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The Amazon rainforest has developed a rich base of mineral resources. Iron is exported to countries for steel making. Vast areas have been cleared to gain access to these reserve.
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IssuesIssues
While mining does not cause so much deforestation as logging and agriculture, it brings problems of its own.While government controlled mines are doing their best to reduce pollution from the processing, illegal miners such as the gold prospectors (garimpeiros) are not so careful. Highly toxic mercury is used in the processing of gold and this gets into the rivers.This chemical is dangerous for the nervous system as well as foetuses.
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Developments in the AmazonDevelopments in the Amazon
Carajas Project
iron ore, copper, manganese, nickel, bauxite, gold,
tin, lead, zinc
Carajas
Sao Luis
Belem
Tucurui
TransAmazonian Highway
rail link
0 100km
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Tucurui Dam
Tucurui Dam was built between 1976 and 1984, on the Lower Tocantins River in the state of Para, approximately 300km south of Belem. The reservoir created upstream of the dam is over 2000km2. The dam will produce more than 4000 MW of electricity.
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Amazonian Indian villages
Before Tucurui Dam
TucuruiDam
HEP plant
Road
flooded an area 5 times the size
of the Isle of Wight
After Tucurui Dam
Tucurui Dam – cost $5 billion
River Tocantins
What has changed?
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The dam has stopped silt travelling downstream. This silt is a natural fertiliser. We will have to buy chemical fertilisers or clear more forest.
The flooding displaced thousands of us living by the river. Moreover, chemicals used to defoliate the vegetation before flooding have contaminated the water and caused illness.
This electricity will be used to power the mines at Carajas and the smelting industries at Belem. These industries will provide jobs.
The dam has stopped the migration of fish up and downstream.
Who gained and who lost out from its construction? Click here to go to word
TucuruiMatch the statement with the correct person
Carajas
Farmer
Fishermen
Amazonian Indian
Miner
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Then the water in the lake and what the lake releases,Is crawling with infected snails and water born diseases. There’s a hideous locust breeding ground when the water level’s low…
by K E Boulding
The cost of building dams…