|
Welcome
to the Amazon. Enjoy your stay!
Learn more about:
Geography
History
Climate
Flora
Fauna
Culture
The River
Pollution
Deforestation
worry
responsible
keepers
fit
Be sure to visit all those people and web sites who
made this site possible by clicking HERE |
Deforestation
Unfortunately, the Amazon is endangered
as well as exotic. Through the intervention of humankind, much
of the rainforest is being destroyed to make way for "progress".
It is not a simple tale of the loggers and the natives, but is
almost as complex as the interactions of the flora and fauna
in the forest. Many different groups are involved and each sees
the forest in a different way, making the problem all that more
difficult to resolve. While the Amazon Rainforest does cover
over 2.2 million square miles of the basin, time is running out
as over 80 acres are being lost every day |
|
Why worry?
The Amazon rainforest holds millions
of species of flora and fauna, some found nowhere else on earth.
It is a treasure chest that hasn't even been fully opened, as
the Amazon still remains partially unexplored. There are many
more plants and animals that anywhere else on earth. And we are
destroying them without even understanding what they are. Many
cures to illnesses have been derived from rainforest plants but
if we lose the species we'll never know that it held a cure for
cancer.
In addition, another problem is that people don't understand
what they are doing. The Amazon, though it is host to millions
of lifeforms, is not full of fertile soil. The organic material
that builds up from all the plants and animals such as dead leaves,
skin, and various other materials is what allows plants and animals
to thrive. Without the forest, this is quickly washed away by
rain and the once fertile soil is fertile no more.
The rainforest takes in CO2 and releases oxygen. Without it,
we would probably have global warming to deal with as well as
a lack of oxygen. A few trees here and there cannot compare to
what we would lose if we lost the Amazon as a producer
Already, we are causing changes in the Amazon as flooding patterns
are changing due to the immense destruction of rainforest. This
flooding creates fertile soil and is crucial to the farmers long
the river. If we continue in this madness, we will only hurt
ourselves. We must try as hard as we can to stop it. |
|
Who is responsible?
One of the largest problems with stopping
this destruction of the rainforest is that it is not being done
by just one group of people. It's not just the loggers trying
to make a buck off lumber. They take wood considered to be good
in other countries and ship them. Replanting is not always an
option they can take, though some have grand dreams about shipping
other woods and replanting better to preserve the stock. Without
the replantation, the trees become rarer and rarer until they
are impossible to find. If that day comes, we will all be in
trouble.
The Brazilian government encouraged poor people to go into the
rainforest, settle on new land, and paid them to do it. They
are not any richer as a result, but remain out there. There isn't
always enough land to go around and trouble arises when they
dispute over land with the Amazonians.
Ranchers clear land for cattle, destroying vast areas for their
cattle. The land they build off of is poor without the organic
fertilizer created by the rainforest and the ranchers usually
must move on.
There is a need for better education in the Amazon, as most don't
understand why their crops fail soon after the land is cleared,
but there is also a need to stop the destruction as soon we can. |
|
The Amazon's original keepers
And what of the Amazonians? They are
trapped between the old and the new. While they have their traditions,
our world encroaches upon them at every turn. Everyone wants
their land, from the poor people without land to the rich businessmen
with much land, and they cannot defend themselves with spears
against guns. Our world has brought both opportunity and disease.
They must use our medicine to fight against new illnesses that
we bring, yet their illnesses require their traditional cures.
They want their tradition and their old world, we are destroying
both. They cannot exist in the way they were before anymore,
but they know the Amazon better than any of us. If we listened
to them instead of stealing from them, we could improve our usage
of the Amazon. |
|
Where do we go?
The problem is not going to be solved
by talking alone. People have attempted to raise money for the
Amazon through numerous ways, though not all that money is going
back to where it is needed. While the people are still poor,
while the money is spent outside the Amazon, and while the Indians
keep giving up their treasure to the exploiters, the problem
is not solved. Many people see the Amazon rainforest as a resource
that can be used until none is left. The great size of the forest
contributes to many illusions. We must help to dispel these illusions
if we every want to save the forest. A moderate estimate of how
many acres of rainforest are lost every minute of every day is
80 acres a minute. That's roughly the size of fourteen football
fields. If any progress is to be made, we must hit the problem
at its core by making a difference and changing the course of
the present. |
Home | Feedback | Sitemap |