In the Amazon, Brazilian ecologists try new approach against deforestation and poverty
FABIANO MAISONNAVE Associated Press 11 hrs ago
CARAUARI, Brazil In a remote corner of the Amazon, Brazilian ecologists are trying to succeed where a lack of governance has proved disastrous. Theyre managing a stretch of land in a way that welcomes both local people and scientists to engage in preserving the worlds largest tropical forest.
The goal is ambitious, counter the forces that have destroyed 10% of the forest in less than four decades and create something that can be replicated in other parts of the Amazon.
Jose Alves de Morais maneuvers a boat, in Carauari, Brazil on Sept. 1, 2022. A Brazilian non-profit created a model for land ownership that welcomes both local people and scientists to collaborate in preserving the Amazon. This is something that doesnt exist here in the Amazon, it doesnt exist anywhere in Brazil. If it works, which it will, it will attract a lot of peoples attention, Morais, a resident, told The Associated Press.
Jorge Saenz, Associated Press
It began with a four-month expedition along the Juruá River in 2016. Researchers visited some 100 communities that at first sight looked similar: rows of wooden homes on stilts along the water. But they were struck by contrasts in the living conditions.
These areas have been shown to be more vulnerable to deforestation. Land robbers drive traditional communities off the land and then clear it, hoping the government will recognize them as owners, which usually happens.
Its very unequal. Inside protected areas, there are many positive things happening, but outside, they seemed to be 40 years behind, João Vitor Campos-Silva, a tropical socio-ecologist, told The Associated Press.o understand what they saw, its important to know that 29% of the Amazon, an area roughly three times the size of California, is either public land with no special protection, or public land for which no public information exists, according to a study by the Amazon Institute of People and the Environment.
A man trails a dog in Lago Serrado community, near Carauari, Brazil, on Sept. 1, 2022.
Jorge Saenz, Associated Press
The researchers were aware that the part of the river known as Medio Juruá, near the city of Carauari, has remarkable social organization and people manage its fish and forest products, such as acai, sustainably. The land designation here is extractive reserves, public lands where residents are allowed to fish and harvest some crops.
But outside these reserves, in many places, people take orders from self-appointed landowners, Campos-Silva said. Entire communities are denied access to lakes, even to fish to feed their families. People don´t own the land, and they dont know who does.
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