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| A Yacare Caiman, in the Pantanal wetlands of Mato Grosso state, Brazil (CÁCERES (BRAZIL) (AFP) |
You can
only just hear the murmur of running water through Plinia Rodrigues' vegetable
garden, but that tiny stream has a huge job: keeping alive Latin America's
mammoth wetlands, known as the Pantanal.
Rodrigues,
63, shows off the thick stands of palms and other native plants crowding around
the fish-filled, crystalline water. The garden in the tiny community of
Piraputanga in the far west of Brazil, near the border of Bolivia, looks like a
little slice of paradise.
It's also
important, one of a myriad of similar streams rising from the lush landscape to
feed the mighty Paraguay river, which in turn underpins the Pantanal.
But with
industrialized agriculture encroaching deeper and deeper into former
wilderness, that fragile water network nestled between Brazil, Paraguay and
Bolivia is now under serious threat, experts say.
The problem
is that even if the Pantanal itself is protected -- and Brazil's Congress is
currently considering additional measures -- destruction of the sources
upstream would be just as bad.
Rodrigues,
who raises chickens, makes cheese and grows vegetables, says the undergrowth
flourishing along her stream shows its good health. The plants help keep the
banks in place, shielding the water and the life in it.
"We
don't touch the river banks, so they're full of trees. We want to preserve what
we have," she said, adding that she has only told a handful of other
people about the hard-to-access spot where the stream is born.
But she's
aware of the growing threat from deforestation, pesticides and industrial-scale
planting of monocrops like soya.
Once, big
fish swam here but they vanished when a nearby hydroelectric station blocked
their path, she says.
"Everyone
around here works with soya. Since that started, our trees haven't produced
such good fruit," she said. "We grew papaya for the market but not
any longer and the oranges have turned ugly."
Natural
treasure trove
Covering
65,600 square miles (170,500 square kilometers), the Pantanal contains some
4,000 species of flora and fauna. But even though the Pantanal is Brazil's best
preserved biosphere, that doesn't mean it isn't under pressure.
The
Pantanal itself enjoys many legal protections and some 82 percent is untouched,
the World Wildlife Fund says, but in the area where water rises, 55 percent of
the territory has suffered deforestation.
"This region
is at risk and if nothing is done to change this, we'll start seeing the
collapse of the Pantanal during the coming years," said Julio Cesar
Sampaio, WWF's coordinator for the Cerrado-Pantanal.
On the
Pantanal, life is governed by the coming and going of the dry and rainy
seasons. Between October and May, rain-swelled rivers spill and gradually flood
80 percent of the whole area, leaving only rich green islands.
At peak
flooding, the Pantanal is a spectacular place for fishing and adventurous tourists.
Birds, alligators, jaguars, monkeys and the mammoth green anaconda snake call
this magical place home.
The
Pantanal also plays an important role in controlling the climate, says Sergio
Freitas, who studies the region at the University of Brasilia.
"The
surface functions as a big mirror made of water, reflecting part of the heat
back and making the climate more agreeable," he said.
It's not
that humans can't coexist with the natural treasure house. Local cowboys,
called "pantaneiros," move their herds in rhythm with the movement of
the floods.
Freitas
said ranchers have had a presence for more than 200 years without causing undue
impact. The problem was the arrival in recent decades of intensive agriculture,
reducing the topsoil and muddying the streams.
A better
balance could still be achieved if the government applies incentives for
producers to diversify and to steer away from current unsustainable practices,
he said.
Development threatens Latin America's great Pantanal wetlands https://t.co/LgCKvqlVZq pic.twitter.com/kzGw4rKWbD— AFP news agency (@AFP) March 18, 2018

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