Amazon Basin
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Area | 75 |
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Did you know | The tropical Amazon Basin includes the Amazon River and surrounding areas, in South America, and it drains large volumes of water into the Atlantic Ocean. |
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ID | 1127729 |
About Amazon Basin
The Amazon Basin is the part of South America drained by the Amazon River and its tributaries. The Amazon drainage basin covers an area of about 6,300,000 km², or about 35. 5 percent that of the South American continent.
Amazon rainforest: Deforestation rate continues to fall
... Last month, President Lula hosted leaders from the eight countries that share the Amazon Basin at a summit in the city of Belém...
Amazon nations fall short of agreed goal to end deforestation
...By Christy Cooney in London & Katy Watson in Belém, BrazilBBC NewsThe eight countries that share the Amazon Basin have fallen short of an agreed goal to end deforestation...
Drought robs Amazon communities of 'life-giving' river
... Such low water levels pose an existential threat to the estimated 30 million people that call the Amazon Basin home, including Mr Rufino s indigenous Ticuna people...
COP26: World leaders promise to end deforestation by 2030
... Tuntiak Katan, coordinator of the Coordination of Indigenous Communities of the Amazon Basin, welcomed the deal telling BBC News that indigenous communities are on the frontline of stopping deforestation...
Deforested parts of the Amazon, emit more CO2 than they absorb'
... results from a decade-long study of greenhouse gases over the Amazon Basin appear to show about 20% of the entire area has become a net source of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere...
World 'losing battle against deforestation'
... Globally, net deforestation continues apace Tropical forest loss accounts for more than 90% of global deforestation, with the hotspot being located in Amazon Basin nations of Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia and Peru...
Are fires in the Amazon and elsewhere getting worse?
... There is a similar pattern for other areas of Brazilian forestry that are not part of the Amazon Basin...
Amazon fires: Brazil governors push Bolsonaro to accept aid
...South American countries will meet to discuss a coordinated response to the fires ravaging the Amazon Basin next week, Brazil s President Jair Bolsonaro has announced...
Drought robs Amazon communities of 'life-giving' river
Orlando Rufino stands in The Bed of The River that he says has been " life-giving" for his people for hundreds of years.
" It's life, because it's what gives us everything, " he explains.
A key source of transport, food and income for families like Mr Rufino's, The River has always snaked through dense jungle in southern Colombia, eventually linking up with The Mighty Amazon.
But instead of wading through water, his feet sink into dry sand. Wooden boats that normally travel along its steady current sit forgotten next to him.
" Even during droughts, it has always gone up to here, " Mr Rufino, 43, says, holding his hand over his head. " Right now, it's critical. "
Historically, the Dry Season in the region runs from July to December. While The River level goes down during This Time , it almost always remains Deep enough for boats to travel, Mr Rufino says.
But over The Past five years, the droughts have gradually worsened. This year, it has stretched for months longer than normal.
Usually metres Deep , right now The River is little More Than a trickle.
Such low water levels pose an existential threat to the estimated 30 million people that call the Amazon Basin home, including Mr Rufino's indigenous Ticuna people.
The Director of The Foundation for Conservation and Sustainable Development, Rodrigo Botero, says that Climate Change is to blame for the increased frequency of the droughts.
" And The Ones who suffer are The People with the fewest resources, " he adds.
Mr Botero, a scientist working across Colombia's Amazon region, has documented the destruction over The Past decades.
Dubbed " the lungs of the planet" the Amazon Basin 's 6. 9 million square kilometres (2. 7m sq miles) of Rainforest - Land More Than twice the size of India - has suffered rampant deforestation, which fuels Climate Change .
Roughly 15% of that forest has been destroyed across Bolivia, Brazil , Colombia, French Guiana , Guyana, Peru, Suriname and Venezuela since 1978, data gathered by the non-profit conservation news platform Mongabay suggests.
" Between deforestation and these massive droughts. . local communities face more new problems Every Day , " warns Mr Botero.
Deisi Sánchez Parente Bóatakü is one of those affected by the dropping river levels.
The 33-year-old who lives in San Pedro de Los Lagos - Deep in Colombia's Amazon region, near The Border with Peru and Brazil - normally sends her children to school by boat.
But with river levels too low to navigate, their half-hour journey has turned into a two-hour trek on foot through dense jungle terrain.
Every Day , she wakes her children up at 03:30 to make it to school In Time . " Sometimes they tell me: 'Mommy, I don't want to go to class, it's too far. '"
For Mr Rufino, A Fisherman and farmer, The Drought means that half of his work has evaporated. Fish have moved to deeper waters and the community struggles to water its crops, he explains.
And even when he and his fellow farmers manage to grow something, they cannot take it to market without boats.
" You lose money, because there is no way to sell anything. There's no transport, " he says.
Mr Botero says that in some extreme cases he has seen livestock die due to lack of water. Wild Animals that communities normally hunt for food migrate to places where water is more abundant.
He warns that food scarcity could increase further in populations that already face disproportionately high rates of malnutrition.
Indigenous communities have repeatedly sounded The Alarm about The Effects The Drought could have on approximately 350 different ethnic groups in the region.
" We don't want any more speeches. We Are facing an Amazon that's at The Point of No Return , " The Head of the Coordination of Indigenous Organizations of the Amazon Basin , José Gregorio Díaz, told a press conference recently, as United Nations leaders met to discuss the issue.
To make matters worse, large swathes of Colombia's Amazon region have been ravaged by forest fires since The Beginning of the year.
While data on the fires is still not available, the country's environmental ministry published a memo in January saying they appeared to be the worst the region had experienced in a decade.
" What is happening is unheard of, " says Mr Botero. " It's one of the biggest fires that I've seen in 10 Years . Really, it's an apocalyptic situation. "
The Fear is that in long term the fires will contribute to changing climate conditions, thrusting the region into a Vicious Cycle of burns and drought.
Back in her small community, Ms Sánchez Parente is feeding her baby in her small brick home. She says she worries about what The Future may look like for her children.
" It never used to be like this, " she says. " They're things that make you sad, because everything has changed so much. "
You may want to watch:Source of news: bbc.com