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hatrack

(61,093 posts)
Sun Aug 25, 2024, 08:39 AM Aug 2024

To Date In 2024, 59,000 Amazon Basin Fires, And The Dry Season Doesn't Peak Until September/October

The Brazilian government has deployed almost 1,500 firefighters to the Amazon as the most severe drought in decades is turning the rainforest’s usually moist vegetation into kindling and flames. Despite a sharp decrease in deforestation since the president, Lula da Silva, took power in January 2023, there have reportedly been 59,000 fires in the forest since the start of the year, the highest number since 2008, according to satellite data from the National Institute for Space Research.

The unusually early fire season has engulfed the city of Porto Velho in smoke, prompting medical concerns about its 540,000 residents who are forced to breathe unhealthy air. Commentators say the usual “flying rivers” of moisture above the world’s biggest rainforest have been replaced by plumes of smoke. There have already been devastating fires in another of Brazil’s great biomes, the Pantanal wetlands, which were made at least four times more likely and 40% more intense by human-caused climate disruption, according to a study by international scientists.

EDIT

The impact on non-human species is incalculable. In Lake Tefé last year, more than 100 endangered river dolphins died in shallow, dirty water that had heated up to 39C. Anecdotal reports suggest plants, fungi and insects – which are the core of the forest – are also suffering in the unusually dry conditions.

More than a third of the Amazon rainforest is struggling to recover from drought, according to a recent study that warned of a “critical slowing down” of this globally important ecosystem. The signs of weakening resilience have raised concerns that the world’s greatest tropical forest – and biggest terrestrial carbon sink – is degrading towards a point of no return after four supposedly “one-in-a-century” dry spells in less than 20 years.

EDIT/END

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/article/2024/aug/22/brazil-sends-1400-firefighters-to-the-amazon-amid-devastating-blazes

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