Soy and Biodiversity and Habitat Loss...

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Page 1 of 18 The Story of Soy Part 2 – Biodiversity and Habitat Loss from Soybean Production............................................................ 1 The North American Prairie ................................................................................................................................. 2 South America ............................................................................................................................................................. 3 The Atlantic Forest.................................................................................................................................................... 4 The Amazon Rainforest........................................................................................................................................... 6 The Cerrado .............................................................................................................................................................. 10 The Gran Chaco........................................................................................................................................................ 14 The Chiquitano ........................................................................................................................................................ 16 This report is taken from the following main sources by James O’Donovan (VSM) May, 2018; 1. WWF, The Growth of Soy, Impacts and Solutions, 2014. 2. WWF, Website Accessed Jan, 2018. 3. Chatham House, Agricultural Commodity Supply Chains, 2016. 4. Mighty Earth and Rainforest Foundation Norway (ME&RFN) The Ultimate Mystery Meat, Exposing the Secrets Behind Burger King and Global Meat Production, 2017. 5. ME&RFN Mystery Meat 2, The Industry behind the Quiet Destruction of the American Heartland, 2017. 6. ME&RFN The Avoidable Crisis, The European Meat Industry's Environmental Catastrophe, 2018. 7. FERN Soybean Briefing Paper 2017.

Transcript of Soy and Biodiversity and Habitat Loss...

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The  Story  of  Soy    

Part  2  –  Biodiversity  and  Habitat  Loss  from  Soybean  Production  ............................................................  1    The  North  American  Prairie  .................................................................................................................................  2    South  America  .............................................................................................................................................................  3    The  Atlantic  Forest  ....................................................................................................................................................  4    The  Amazon  Rainforest  ...........................................................................................................................................  6    The  Cerrado  ..............................................................................................................................................................  10    The  Gran  Chaco  ........................................................................................................................................................  14    The  Chiquitano  ........................................................................................................................................................  16  

     

This  report  is  taken  from  the  following  main  sources  by  James  O’Donovan  (VSM)  May,  2018;  1. WWF,  The  Growth  of  Soy,  Impacts  and  Solutions,  2014.  2. WWF,  Website  Accessed  Jan,  2018.  3. Chatham  House,  Agricultural  Commodity  Supply  Chains,  2016.  4. Mighty  Earth  and  Rainforest  Foundation  Norway  (ME&RFN)  The  Ultimate  Mystery  

Meat,  Exposing  the  Secrets  Behind  Burger  King  and  Global  Meat  Production,  2017.  5. ME&RFN  Mystery  Meat  2,  The  Industry  behind  the  Quiet  Destruction  of  the  American  

Heartland,  2017.  6. ME&RFN  The  Avoidable  Crisis,  The  European  Meat  Industry's  Environmental  

Catastrophe,  2018.  7. FERN  Soybean  Briefing  Paper  2017.  

     

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Part 2 – Biodiversity and Habitat Loss from Soybean Production

In  2016  The  US,  Brazil,  Argentina  and  Paraguay  produced  85%  of  the  world’s  soy.    Growing  soybeans  often  means  evicting  indigenous  people  and  destroying  large  areas  of  natural  habitat,  packed  with  flora  and  fauna,  to  make  way  for  agricultural  land.    In  all  of  these  countries  soybean  cultivation  has  taken  place  at  the  expense  of  indigenous  people  (historically  in  the  US)  and  natural  grasslands  and  forests.  Biodiversity  is  in  decline  in  tropical  regions  according  to  WWF’s  Living  Planet  Index.    Species  populations  in  tropical  regions  have  fallen  by  an  average  of  60  per  cent  since  1970.  

The  North  American  Prairie  Grassland  once  covered  around  one-­‐half  of  the  landmass  of  the  48  contiguous  states  of  the  United  States.  From  west  of  the  Mississippi  River,  the  great  prairies  stretched  for  some  400  million  ha  (4  million  km2).  Native  people’s  managed  the  land  long  before  European  settlement,  using  interventions,  particularly  fire,  to  maintain  huge  areas  of  grassland  as  habitat  for  wild  bison  and  countless  other  species.  From  1850  to  1950,  before  the  soy  boom,  over  100  million  ha  (1  million  Km2)  of  grassland  were  lost,  mostly  converted  to  cultivated  cropland.  The  soy  story  in  North  America  began  with  World  War  II,  with  a  shortage  in  domestic  oil  and  fat  due  to  decreasing  imports  of  East  Asian  oils.  A  further  100  million  ha  (1  million  Km2)  was  lost  between  1950  and  1990,  with  roughly  two-­‐thirds  ploughed  up  for  crops.  The  United  States  became  a  major  exporter  of  soy  and  maize  to  Europe  and  Russia.      

 WWF  

Centuries  of  land  conversion  mean  that  the  large  majority  of  US  grasslands  have  already  been  degraded  or  converted  to  agricultural  use.  Conversion  of  these  highly  erodible  lands  into  production  is  in  part  what  led  to  the  Dust  Bowl  in  the  1930s.  During  the  drought  in  2012,  there  were  sporadic  dust  storms  in  Oklahoma  and  Kansas  due  to  soil  tillage.    Current  high  corn  and  soybean  prices,  and  the  demand  for  biofuel  feedstocks  and  the  Renewable  Fuels  Standard,  are  credited  as  driving  some  of  the  most  significant  changes  in  land  use  in  recent  US  history.  Between  2006  and  2008  the  area  on  which  corn  and  soybean  was  harvested  in  the  United  States  increased  by  more  than  3.2  million  ha;  nearly  one-­‐third  of  this  increase  came  from  converting  grass-­‐dominated  land.  Federal  government  policies  to  support  agricultural  

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production  in  the  United  States  through  protection  or  subsidies,  coupled  with  periods  of  high  prices  for  agricultural  commodities,  have  long  provided  incentives  to  convert  grasslands  to  crop  production.  More  recently,  expanding  federal  crop  insurance  and  disaster  relief  programmes  such  as  the  2012  Farm  Bill  mean  that  farmers  in  drought-­‐prone  areas  are  able  to  risk  growing  highly  profitable  but  rainfall-­‐dependent  crops  such  as  soybeans.  

 “Images  of  recently  cleared  grassland  areas  from  North  Dakota  where  rates  of  grassland  conversion  to  corn  and  soy  are  the  highest  in  the  country.    Stripping  grassland  landscapes  bare  removes  natural  buffers,  increases  soil  erosion,  and  exacerbates  the  risk  of  fertiliser  pollution  from  crops  planted  in  these  areas.”  (Caption  in  below  image)  

 Mighty  Earth  Mystery  Meat  2  Report  2017  

A  2013  Wright  and  Wimberly  study  called  recent  loss  of  natural  grasslands  “one  of  the  most  important  land  cover/land  use  change  events  in  recent  U.S.  history,”  leading  U.S.  grasslands  to  be  classified  as  one  of  the  most  threatened  biomes  in  the  world.    A  recent  University  of  Wisconsin  study  estimated  that  the  recent  loss  of  natural  grassland  “could  have  emitted  as  much  carbon  dioxide  into  the  atmosphere  as  38  coal  fired  power  plants  operating  for  a  year.“    

South  America  From  2001-­‐2010,  an  average  of  approximately  four  million  hectares  of  forests  were  destroyed  each  year,  mostly  for  soy  and  beef  production.  This  has  impacted  a  range  of  

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precious  ecosystems  including  the  Amazon  rainforest,  the  Cerrado,  the  Atlantic  Forest,  the  Gran  Chaco,  and  the  Chinquitano  in  Brazil,  Argentina,  Paraguay  and  Bolivia  from  diverse  native  ecosystems  into  soy  monocultures.  

 WWF  2014  

The  Atlantic  Forest  The  Atlantic  Forest  was  once  one  of  the  world’s  great  forests,  covering  100–150  million  ha  (1-­‐1.5  million  Km2)  along  the  coast  of  Brazil  and  into  eastern  Paraguay  and  northeast  Argentina.    Centuries  of  forest  clearance  have  reduced  it  to  a  fraction  of  its  original  area.  Nonetheless,  it  remains  immensely  rich  in  both  biodiversity,  with  over  8,000  endemic  species,  and  diverse  human  cultures.    60%  of  Brazilian  endangered  species  depend  on  the  Atlantic  Forest  to  survive.    Approximately  40%  of  its  vascular  plants  and  up  to  60%  of  its  vertebrates  are  endemic  species,  meaning  they  are  found  nowhere  else  in  the  world.    New  species  are  

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continually  being  found  in  the  Atlantic  Forest.  Between  1990  and  2006  over  a  thousand  new  flowering  plants  were  discovered.  

 Two  of  the  world’s  great  cities,  São  Paolo  and  Rio  de  Janeiro,  lie  within  the  region,  and  the  remaining  forest  helps  to  protect  watersheds  and  provide  other  important  environmental  services.  The  Atlantic  Forest’s  spectacular  wildlife  includes  jaguars,  tree  anteaters,  tapirs,  the  golden  lion  tamarin,  as  well  as  more  bird  species  than  are  found  in  the  whole  of  Europe.  It’s  also  home  to  263  species  of  amphibians  found  nowhere  else  on  Earth.  Over  one-­‐half  the  forest’s  tree  species  are  unique  to  the  region,  and  as  many  as  450  types  have  been  found  in  a  single  hectare.    Previously  deforested  areas  are  shown  in  yellow  below.    

 WWF  

The  Atlantic  Forest  in  Brazil  is  originally  thought  to  have  covered  around  130  million  ha.  This  original  area  has  been  greatly  reduced,  with  estimates  for  remaining  forest  ranging  from  7%  to  16%.  Today,  most  of  this  is  in  isolated  fragments  of  fewer  than  50  ha,  although  there  has  been  some  regrowth  of  young  secondary  forest  and  efforts  at  restoration.  In  1993,  the  Atlantic  Forest  in  Brazil  was  granted  legal  protection,  and  further  clearing  was  banned  10  years  later.    Paraguay’s  Atlantic  Forest  had,  by  2010,  shrunk  to  less  than  13%  of  its  original  8.7  million  ha  and  losses  continued.  In  Paraguay,  the  government  legislated  a  2004  

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moratorium  on  forest  conversion  in  the  east  of  the  country,  which  has  reduced  deforestation  rates  in  the  Atlantic  Forest  by  90  %.  The  moratorium  has  been  extended  several  times,  most  recently  to  2018.  But  according  to  a  2018  report  agricultural  interests  have  now  cleared  an  estimated  98%  of  Paraguay’s  Atlantic  Forest.    Argentina  contains  the  largest  remaining  intact  areas  of  Atlantic  Forest,  with  more  than  1  million  ha  in  both  public  and  private  lands;  nonetheless,  almost  half  a  million  ha  were  lost  between  1973  and  2006.        There  have  been  multiple  drivers  of  forest  loss  in  the  Atlantic  Forest,  including  agriculture,  ranching,  forestry,  conversion  to  tree  plantations  and  road  building,  with  soy  becoming  increasingly  significant  as  earlier  crops  diminished.  Agricultural  expansion,  for  crops  including  soybeans  as  well  as  cattle  ranching  and  tree  plantations,  is  the  major  underlying  cause  of  the  fragmentation  of  the  forest.    Despite  strengthened  protection  in  Brazil  and  Paraguay,  soy  production  remains  a  threat  to  the  remaining  Atlantic  Forest,  one  of  the  most  vulnerable  and  diverse  forests  on  Earth.    

The  Amazon  Rainforest  One-­‐third  of  the  world’s  tropical  forest  is  found  in  the  Amazon,  which  stretches  across  parts  of  Brazil,  Bolivia,  Peru,  Ecuador,  Colombia,  Venezuela,  Guyana,  Suriname  and  French  Guiana.    

 ©  Fundacion  Vida  Silvestre    

Its  intricate  web  of  life  is  home  to  one  in  every  10  species  on  Earth,  from  more  than  100,000  types  of  insects  and  nearly  40,000  plant  species.  The  Amazon  River  flows  for  more  than  6,600  km,  and  with  its  hundreds  of  tributaries  and  streams  contains  the  largest  number  of  freshwater  fish  species  in  the  world.    As  Earth’s  largest  river  basin,  the  Amazon  is  the  source  of  around  one-­‐sixth  of  all  the  water  that  flows  into  the  sea  from  the  world’s  rivers.    Spanning  6.7  million  km2  (twice  the  size  of  India)  the  Amazon  Biome  is  virtually  unrivalled  in  scale  and  complexity.    

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 Aerial  view  of  the  Brazilian  Amazon.  Photo:  Gustavo  Frazao  

The  Amazon  also  plays  a  huge  role  in  the  Earth’s  climate  –  not  just  as  a  massive  store  of  carbon,  but  in  the  way  it  affects  rainfall  patterns.  Climate  models  suggest  Amazon  deforestation  could  lead  to  droughts  and  crop  failures  across  the  Americas,  and  possibly  in  other  agricultural  regions  as  far  away  as  Europe.      

 But  cattle  ranching  (which  is  expanding  by  slash-­‐and-­‐burn  agriculture)  is  paving  the  way  for  soy  developers,  who  take  over  the  land  and  push  cattle  ranching  (and  deforestation)  towards  new  pioneer  areas.  The  Amazon  has  lost  20-­‐25%  of  its  forest  cover,  and  soy  production  in  the  Brazilian  Amazon  tripled  from  1990  to  2006.  More  than  30  million  people  live  in  the  region,  and  many  depend  on  the  forest  and  its  rivers  for  their  livelihoods.  Soy  production  is  one  of  a  

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number  of  drivers  of  deforestation  in  the  Amazon,  along  with  pasture  expansion  for  cattle  rearing;  fires;  legal  and  illegal  logging;  opening  up  paved  roads;  and  climate  change.    

 Despite  the  Morotorium  on  clearing  rainforest  for  soybean  cultivation  it  still  remains  one  of  the  major  underlying  causes  of  deforestation  in  the  Legal  Amazon.    

 Between  2010  and  2015,  the  Bolivian  Amazon  experienced  an  average  of  289,000  hectares  per  year  of  deforestation,  according  to  a  2015  Food  and  Agriculture  Organization  report.  A  separate  Bolivian  study  published  in  the  international  Plos  One  scientific  journal  found  that  Bolivia  lost  430,000  hectares  of  forest  per  year  over  the  previous  decade.  More  than  three  quarters  of  this  deforestation  takes  place  in  the  Santa  Cruz  region.  According  to  analysis  by  Forest  Trends,  up  to  nine-­‐tenths  of  this  deforestation  is  illegal.  Although  Bolivia  is  one  of  the  least  economically  developed  countries  in  South  America,  its  greenhouse  gas  emissions  levels  per  capita  equal  or  exceed  those  of  many  European  countries.  More  than  80%  of  those  emissions  come  from  deforestation.    

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 Fires  blaze  on  Propieded  Valle  Verde  in  Bolivia.   Credit:  Jim  Wickens/Ecostorm  

Mighty  Earth  and  the  Rainforest  Foundation  Norway  report  that  “Upon  reaching  the  outskirts  of  Santa  Cruz,  the  agricultural  capital  of  Bolivia,  we  quickly  started  to  see  the  same  type  of  extensive  deforestation  that  we  witnessed  in  Brazil.  Massive,  out-­‐of-­‐control  fires  raged  through  the  landscape.  Farm  workers  explained  how  blazes  set  by  soy  growers  have  dried  out  the  landscape  and  made  it  vulnerable  to  fire.”    The  direct  driver  of  deforestion  is  the  meat  industry.    Other  indirect  causes  of  forest  loss  include  land  tenure  issues,  crime,  poverty  and  population  growth.  As  well  as  direct  conversion  of  Amazon  rainforest  to  soy,  much  soy  expansion  in  Brazil  now  occurs  on  land  previously  deforested  for  cattle  grazing.  This  can  contribute  indirectly  to  deforestation  by  pushing  cattle  production  into  the  forest.  Off-­‐site  impacts  of  soy,  such  as  pollution  of  watercourses  from  agrochemicals  and  soil  erosion,  have  also  had  an  impact  on  natural  ecosystems.  

 If  deforestation  rates  seen  over  the  last  few  decades  continue,  a  further  one-­‐quarter  of  the  remaining  Amazon  forest  could  be  lost  within  the  next  30  years,  and  37%  within  50  years.  More  pessimistic  estimates  suggest  that  55%  could  be  lost  in  the  next  20  years  as  increased  

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demand  for  agricultural  commodities  exacerbates  a  vicious  circle  of  climate  feedbacks,  such  as  increased  drought  and  forest  fires.    There  were  some  positive  signs  that  further  catastrophic  forest  loss  might  be  avoided.  In  Brazil,  a  moratorium  on  soy  grown  on  land  cleared  from  Amazon  forest  has  resulted  in  a  sharp  downturn  in  direct  impacts.  The  moratorium's  effectiveness  has  been  enhanced  by  a  concerted  effort  on  the  part  of  the  Brazilian  government  to  enforce  deforestation  laws  in  the  Amazon.    

The  positive  impact  of  the  Soy  Moratorium—an  agreement  not  to  buy,  trade  or  finance  soybeans  produced  on  deforested  land  in  the  Brazilian  Amazon—is  easy  to  see.  New  legal  controls  have  also  contributed  to  the  deforestation  rate  declining  by  70  per  cent  to  0.7  million  ha/year  in  2009.    In  2012,  overall  forest  clearing  reached  its  lowest  level  since  annual  record-­‐keeping  began  in  the  late  1980s.  But  the  reduction  in  forest  loss  remains  fragile,  changes  in  Brazil’s  Forest  Code,  in  mid-­‐2012,  have  resulted  in  deforestation  rates  rise  again.    According  to  Brazil’s  National  Institute  for  Space  Research’s  near-­‐real-­‐time  tracking  system,  at  least  61,500  ha  of  rainforest  were  cleared  in  the  Brazilian  Amazon  between  November  2012  and  February  2013.  This  deforestation  rate  continues  to  accelerate:  between  August  2012  and  July  2013  more  than  200,000  ha  of  forest  were  cleared,  92  %  more  than  the  previous  year.    And  with  a  change  in  the  ruling  party  deforestation  has  continued  to  increase  from  2013  to  today.  

The  Cerrado  Brazil's  Cerrado  was  a  200  million  hectare,  wildlife-­‐rich  forested  savanna.  It  is  home  to  five  percent  of  the  world’s  biodiversity,  including  threatened  species  like  the  jaguar,  giant  anteater,  fox,  maned  wolf,  and  marsh  deer.  The  region  also  locks  up  a  deceptively  large  store  of  carbon,  as  its  small  trees  have  deep  root  systems:  around  70  per  cent  of  the  biomass  of  this  “upside-­‐down  forest”  is  underground,  and  recent  studies  suggest  it  may  hold  some  265  tonnes  of  carbon  per  hectare  (Castro  and  Kauffman,  1998).    Annual  CO2  emissions  from  converting  the  Cerrado  are  around  250  million  tonnes  –  equivalent  to  one-­‐half  of  the  UK’s  emissions.    The  Cerrado  is  also  a  vital  source  of  water  for  millions  of  people  living  in  the  region.    Half  of  Brazil's  watersheds  have  their  sources  there,  including  the  Pantanal,  which  is  the  largest  wetland  in  the  world.    The  Cerrado  even  powers  Brazil's  economy:  90  percent  of  Brazilians  

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rely  on  hydroelectric  power  generated  from  watersheds  originating  in  the  Cerrado.  

 Chapada  dos  Veadeiros,  Brazilian  Cerrado.  Photo:  Willians  Fausto.  

The  Cerrado  is  one  of  the  richest  savannah  formations  on  Earth.  Located  between  the  Amazon,  Atlantic  Forest  and  Pantanal,  the  Cerrado  is  the  largest  savannah  region  in  South  America,  covering  more  than  20  per  cent  of  Brazil.    The  Cerrado  is  also  one  of  the  most  threatened  and  over-­‐exploited  regions  in  the  world.  These  wooded  grasslands  once  covered  an  area  half  the  size  of  Europe:  now,  its  native  habitats  and  rich  biodiversity  are  being  destroyed  much  faster  than  the  neighbouring  rainforest.    The  Cerrado  has  biodiversity  that  rivals  equivalent  areas  of  Amazonian  forests,  but  only  1.5%  of  such  lands  are  in  federal  reserves  and  the  soy  moratorium  does  not  apply  to  the  Cerrado.  Unfortunately,  they  can  be  easily  converted  into  vast  expanses  of  soybean  fields.  This  damages  the  land  hugely.  Agrochemicals  are  needed  for  soybeans  to  be  financially  viable.  The  soils  often  become  so  poor  that  within  two  years,  virtually  all  nutrients  have  to  come  from  lime  and  fertilizers.  The  soil  ends  up  stripped  of  virtually  all  fertility  and  only  serves  to  hold  up  the  plants.      

 The  Cerrado  shelters  5  per  cent  of  all  the  living  species  on  Earth  and  one  in  every  ten  Brazilian  species.  There  are  over  10,000  species  of  plants,  44%  of  its  plant  species  exist  nowhere  else  on  Earth.  The  Cerrado  is  home  to  60  vulnerable  animal  species,  20  endangered  and  12  

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critically  endangered,  including  the  maned  wolf  and  the  giant  anteater.    Around  300  of  its  native  plant  species  are  used  as  food,  medicine,  handicrafts  or  for  trade.    

 ©  Fernando  Allen  /  WWF  Paraguay    

The  Cerrado  was  once  thought  to  be  unsuitable  for  agriculture.  But  new  technologies  and  techniques  have  allowed  farming  to  spread  rapidly  over  the  last  40  years.  Initially  this  was  largely  driven  by  cattle  ranching,  with  over  50  million  ha  being  converted  (Klink  and  Machado,  2005).  But  since  2000  soy,  along  with  other  crops  such  as  maize,  cotton  and  sugarcane,  has  expanded  into  extensive  areas.    

 The  Cerrado  (WWF)  

Between  2002  and  2008,  average  deforestation  of  the  Cerrado  exceeded  14,000  km2  per  year.  Unsustainable  agricultural  activities,  particularly  soy  production  and  cattle  ranching,  as  well  as  burning  of  vegetation  for  charcoal,  continue  to  pose  a  major  threat  to  the  Cerrado’s  

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biodiversity.    As  of  2018  around  half  the  native  savannah  and  forest  of  the  Cerrado  has  been  converted  to  agriculture  since  the  late  1950s.    

 Clearance  on  Fazenda  São  José,  São  Desidério,  Brazil.    Jim  Wickens,  Ecostorm  

Though  other  estimates  are  as  low  as  35  per  cent  (Klink  and  Machado,  2005;  Durigan  et  al.,  2007)  and  21.3  per  cent  (Conservation  International,  2012).  Remaining  areas  are  severely  fragmented  (Ribeiro  et  al.,  2011),  and  there  are  few  contiguous  areas  over  1,000  ha  (Durigan  and  Ratter,  2006).  Just  over  11  million  ha  are  under  protection,  though  less  than  3  million  ha  –  1.4  per  cent  of  the  total  area  –  is  classified  under  the  strictest  levels  of  protection,  IUCN  categories  I-­‐IV  (Conservation  International,  2012;  Klink  and  Machado,  2005).    

 Extensive  clearance  and  fires  on  Fazenda  São  José  in  São  Desidério,  Brazil.  Jim  Wickens,  Ecostorm  

As  these  ecosystems  are  lost,  indigenous  people  are  displaced  and  the  wildlife  and  vital  ecological  services  the  ecosystems  provide,  like  clean  water,  carbon  sequestration  and  healthy  soils  are  lost.    Species  that  are  threatened  include  the  jaguar,  maned  wolf  and  giant  anteater,  but  also  many  other  plants  and  animals  that  are  unique  to  the  Cerrado.  Not  only  fragile  ecosystems  and  species  are  feeling  the  strain.  Habitat  destruction  also  threatens  the  way  of  life  of  many  indigenous  people  and  other  communities  who  rely  on  forests,  natural  grasslands  and  savannahs  for  their  livelihoods.    According  to  Mighty  Earth  and  RAN  More  than  half  of  the  Cerrado’s  natural  vegetation  has  already  been  cleared,  compared  to  less  than  25  

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percent  of  the  Amazon.    A  recent  study  by  Brazilian  universities  found  that  this  deforestation  is  threatening  the  Cerrado’s  water  supplies,  which  in  turn  can  dry  out  the  neighboring  Amazon,  making  it  more  susceptible  to  large  fires.  Nonetheless,  big  soy  companies  like  Cargill  and  Bunge  that  supply  Burger  King  and  many  of  the  other  top  meat  retailers  haven’t  shown  signs  of  letting  up.  

The  Gran  Chaco  The  Gran  Chaco  is  a  110-­‐million  hectare  region  spanning  Argentina,  Bolivia,  and  Paraguay.  The  dry  woodlands  of  the  Chaco  are  one  of  the  largest  remaining  continuous  tracts  of  native  vegetation  in  South  America,  second  in  size  only  to  the  great  Amazon  rainforest.      

The  forests  of  the  Gran  Chaco  are  home  to  a  vibrant  community  of  indigenous  peoples,  such  as  the  Ayoreo,  Chamacoco,  Enxet,  Guarayo,  Maka'a,  Manjuy,  Mocoví,  Nandeva,  Nivakle,  Toba  Qom,  and  Wichi  who  are  completely  dependent  on  the  forest.  One  of  the  of  the  most  vulnerable  groups  are  the  Ayoreo  indigenous  people,  some  of  which  remain  uncontacted.  They  are  dependent  upon  the  Chaco  forest  to  survive  and  particularly  vulnerable,  given  that  when  contact  happens,  it  is  almost  always  violent.    The  Gran  Chaco  is  highly  biodiverse  and  home  to  many  endemic  species.  It  was  once  the  impenetrable  stronghold  of  almost  magical  creatures  like  the  screaming  hairy  armadillo  (a  real  animal),  the  famous  jaguar,  and  the  giant  anteater.  The  Gran  Chaco’s  habitats  range  from  dry  thorn  forests  and  cactus  stands  to  palm  savannahs  that  flood  in  the  wet  season.      The  Gran  Chaco  has  high  levels  of  biodiversity,  containing  around  3,400  plant  species,  500  birds,  150  mammals  and  220  reptiles  and  amphibians.  Its  central  location  in  South  America  makes  it  an  important  refuge  for  many  migrating  birds.    The  Chaco  has  been  gradually  converted  over  long  periods,  but  the  rate  of  conversion  of  natural  vegetation  has  accelerated  in  recent  years.  Around  12  to  15%  of  the  natural  Chaco  landscape  has  been  converted  into  agricultural  uses.    

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 ©  WWF  /  Juan  PRATGINESTOS    

Over  the  last  two  decades,  the  forests  of  the  Chaco  have  experienced  some  of  the  world’s  highest  rates  of  conversion  to  agriculture,  primarily  for  soybean  farming  and  cattle  ranching.      

 Conversion  of  native  vegetation  to  monoculture  soy,  Argentina.  Photo:  Jim  Wickens,  Ecostorm  

 In  fact,  the  Chaco  forests  are  being  lost  at  rates  matching  or  exceeding  those  of  rainforests  —  even  the  Amazon.  More  than  eight  million  hectares  of  the  Chaco  have  been  cleared  over  just  a  dozen  years.  The  total  emissions  associated  with  the  conversion  of  Chaco  forest  and  grasslands  to  croplands  and  pasture  is  estimated  to  be  3,024  million  metric  tons  of  carbon  dioxide  between  1985  and  2013,  more  than  four  times  Germany’s  carbon  dioxide  emissions  from  fuel  combustion  in  2015.  

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 Burn  and  forest  boundary  of  area  deforested  for  soy,  Argentina.  Photo:  Jim  Wickens,  Ecostorm  

In  Argentina,  some  1.2-­‐1.4  million  ha  (85%  of  the  national  deforestation  total)  was  cleared  in  30  years,  a  deforestation  rate  of  2.2%  per  year.  As  controls  have  tightened  on  felling  Atlantic    Forest  remnants,  particularly  in  Paraguay,  pressure  has  mounted  on  the  neighbouring  Gran  Chaco.  From  2010  to  2012,  for  example,  a  total  of  823,868  ha  was  cleared  in  the  three  main  countries,  three-­‐quarters  in  Paraguay.      

 Paraguay's  Gran  Chaco  used  to  be  described  as  "The  Impenetrable,"  but  now  bulldozers  clearing  land  to  grow  animal  feed  for  European  markets  are  not  an  unusual  sight.  Photo:  Jim  Wickens,  Ecostorm  

In  Bolivia,  the  heart  of  Gran  Chaco  is  protected  by  the  Kaa-­‐Iya  del  Gran  Chaco  National  Park  and  indigenous  area.  But  land  to  the  north  and  west,  where  the  soil  is  extremely  fertile,  is  being  cleared  for  agriculture.    Several  attempts  to  implement  a  temporary  moratorium  in  the  Chaco  have  failed,  due  to  strong  opposition  from  the  agricultural  sector.  

The  Chiquitano  Tropical  dry  forests  are  among  the  most  endangered  ecosystems  on  the  planet  –  and  the  Chiquitano  forest  is  the  largest  patch  of  healthy  dry  forest  ecosystem  still  remaining.  Located  

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at  a  crossroads  where  the  humid  Amazon  meets  the  arid  Chaco,  the  trees  of  the  Chiquitano  shed  their  leaves  in  the  dry  season,  and  have  evolved  to  withstand  both  fires  and  floods.  Most  intact  Chiquitano  forest  is  found  in  Bolivia,  though  small  patches  remain  in  Brazil  and  Paraguay.  This  ancient  and  unique  shelters  a  wide  range  of  species  including  pumas,  maned  wolf  and  the  giant  armadillo.  Bolivia’s  little-­‐known  dry  forests  contain  exceptional  biodiversity,  and  are  targeted  for  soy  expansion.  

 The  Chiquitano  forest  once  covered  around  12.5  million  ha.  Around  15  per  cent  had  been  converted  before  2001.  The  mean  annual  rate  of  forest  loss  in  Santa  Cruz  was  estimated  at  about  100,000  ha  between  1990  and  2000,  which  grew  to  220,000  ha  between  2000  and  2005  (Killeen  et  al.,  2007a).    

 Maned  Wolf  ©  Martin  Harvey  /  WWF    

The  main  threat  to  the  Chiquitano  forest  comes  from  cattle  ranching  and  soy  cultivation  although  mining  is  also  an  important  agent  of  change.  The  large-­‐scale  cultivation  of  soy  took  off  in  the  early  1990s,  an  explicit  objective  of  a  development  project  financed  by  the  World  Bank.  Soy  cultivation  in  Bolivia  has  continued  to  increase  rapidly,  by  nearly  6%  every  year.  Land  and  labour  are  cheap  compared  to  other  South  American  countries  and  these  factors  

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have  contributed  significantly  to  the  increasing  expansion  of  soy  production.  In  recent  years,  these  costs  have  increased  substantially,  which  may  limit  future  expansion  of  soy.  Over  half  the  soy  farms  in  Santa  Cruz  are  owned  by  non-­‐Bolivians,  with  25%  owned  by  Brazilians.  

 ©  Ilosuna  (Wikipedia)  

The  rise  of  soy  has  been  accompanied  by  accelerating  deforestation  rates.  One  author  has  attributed  the  loss  of  650,000  ha  of  the  Bolivian  Chiquitano  since  the  1950s  specifically  to  soy  production,  noting  that  this  deforestation  has  shown  little  respect  for  previous  land  use,  protected  areas  or  indigenous  territories.