Tuesday, January 7, 2020


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                                          Pollution Science 101 - Brazil 
                                                           Emergency Report

                                                     Edited by: Michael J. Ross
                                                    Published: January 7th, 2020
                                                        Updated: May 6th, 2022

 
                                             Website: MonsantoInvestigation.com



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Section 1: Fires, Deforestation & Aerosols
Section 2: Mining, Fracking & Tar Sands
Section 3: Tectonic Plates
Section 4: Methane, Carbon, Nitrogen & Greenhouse gasses
Section 5: Sinkholes, Land Erosion, Radiation, Landfills & Soil
Section 6: Deforestation & Cattle
Section 7: Pesticides & Fungicides
Section 8: Fungus
Section 9: Bacteria & Viruses
Section 10: Agriculture
Section 11: Climate Change & Ancient Climate Change

Section 12: Microplastics & Microcontamination
Section 13: Beaches & Transboundary Pollution
Section 14: Dams & Water Pollution
Section 15: Rivers
Section 16: Cerrado

Section 17: Atlantic Forest
Section 18: Caatinga
Section 19: Pantanal
Section 20: Rio De Janeiro & São Paulo
Section 21: Endangered Animals & Plants
Section 22: Medicine
Section 23: BRICS
Section 24: Extra


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Section 1: Fires, Deforestation & Aerosols

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Brazilian troops deploy in the Amazon to fight fires that have swept the region

Aug 24, 2019

https://www.chicagotribune.com/nation-world/ct-nw-amazon-rainforest-fires-20190823-eu53q4sjmrcqdcsloh722wlwbm-story.html

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The Amazon is burning: What you need to know

27 Aug 2019

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/08/amazon-burning-190823082046821.html

Where are the fires? Why is the Amazon important? Six things to know about the fires burning in the 'lungs of Earth'.

What's causing them?

Fires are a regular and natural occurrence in the Amazon at this time of year, during the dry season.


 


 About one million indigenous people, divided into some 400 tribes, live throughout the Amazon rainforest

But environmentalists and non-governmental organisations have attributed the record number of fires to farmers setting the forest alight to clear land for pasture and to loggers razing the forest for its wood, with INPE itself ruling out natural phenomena being responsible for the surge.

Critics say far-right President Bolsonaro's weakening of Brazil's environmental agency, IBAMA, and push to open up the Amazon region for more farming and mining has emboldened such actors and created a climate of impunity for those felling the forest illegally.

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Amazon Rainforest fires put thousands of species, indigenous communities and the
Earth's atmosphere at risk.


Aug 22, 2019

https://www.mic.com/p/amazon-rainforest-fires-put-thousands-of-species-indigenous-communities-the-earths-atmosphere-at-risk-18690738

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Amazon Rainforest fire a 'crisis', Macron says, but Brazil pushes back: What we know

Aug 23, 2019

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2019/08/23/amazon-rainforest-fire-international-crisis-emmanuel-macron-says/2093574001/

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Rainforest on Fire {It is debated the exact amount of oxygen the Amazon rainforest gives off}.

July 6 2019


 


On the Front Lines of Bolsonaro’s War on the Amazon, Brazil’s Forest Communities Fight Against Climate Catastrophe


 



 



https://theintercept.com/2019/07/06/brazil-amazon-rainforest-indigenous-conservation-agribusiness-ranching/

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Why the Amazon Is on Fire

August 22, 2019


 



Smoke from the fires hangs over Brazil. NASA Worldview, Earth Observing System Data and Information System (EOSDIS)

The rash of wildfires now consuming the Amazon rainforest can be blamed on a host of human factors, from climate change to deforestation to Brazilian politics.

https://www.citylab.com/environment/2019/08/amazon-rainforest-fire-map-burning-bolsonaro-deforestation-map/596605/

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Track the Amazon Rainforest Fires With This Map

9/06/19









https://lifehacker.com/track-the-amazon-rainforest-fires-with-this-map-1837901523

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 6 charts show why thousands of fires in the Amazon rainforest matter to the world

Aug. 28, 2019

https://www.usatoday.com/in-depth/news/2019/08/23/amazon-rainforest-six-charts-explain-why-fires-matter/2096257001/

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Brazil fire: Explosion unleashes toxic gas in Santos

15 January 2016

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-35320083


A chemical explosion at a cargo warehouse in Brazil has spread toxic gas over the country's biggest port.

The company owners said the containers in Santos were full of acid and a disinfectant which came into contact with rainwater, causing a reaction.

The area's mayor said at least 66 people were taken to hospital with breathing difficulties.

Officials said the fire had been controlled but that there is still smoke in the area.

The cargo terminal and nearby homes were evacuated and residents were asked to stay inside.

The container terminal was operated by Localfrio, a logistics company, in Guaruja, an area on the eastern side of Santos, in Sao Paulo state.

A spokeswoman for the company, which exports chemicals used for refrigeration and general cargo, said the containers were filled with chloric acid and sodium dichloroisocyanurate - a cleaning and disinfectant agent.

Firefighters said rainwater had seeped into the containers causing a chemical reaction.

Local Mayor Mario Antonieta de Brito asked people to stay out of the rain which could "contain chemical elements that can burn the skin".

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Deforestation and fires in Para, Brazil

https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/1703/deforestation-and-fires-in-para-brazil

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Brazil registers huge spike in Amazon deforestation

Date 03.07.2019

 https://www.dw.com/en/brazil-registers-huge-spike-in-amazon-deforestation/a-49462773



Clear cutting in the rainforest has gone up 88% in June compared to the same time last year. The new government's push for more logging may, however, scuttle the new EU-Mercosur free-trade agreement.



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 Drought-Stressed Forest Fueled Amazon Fires

November 5, 2019

https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?feature=7534

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Wildfires are burning around the world. The most alarming is in the Amazon rainforest.

Aug 23, 2019

Record heat, drought, and deforestation are contributing to wildfire risk.

https://www.vox.com/world/2019/8/20/20813786/wildfire-amazon-rainforest-brazil-siberia

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It’s not just the Amazon — wildfires have been burning around the world

August 23, 2019

https://globalnews.ca/news/5805528/amazon-wildfires-buring/

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The Amazon Has Seen More Than 100,000 Fires This Year, Causing Spike in Air Pollution

9/10/19

https://earther.gizmodo.com/amazon-forest-fires-soar-past-100-000-causing-spike-in-1838007724

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Amazon fires increase by 84% in one year - space agency

2019

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-49415973

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Why the Amazon doesn’t really produce 20% of the world’s oxygen

August 28, 2019

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/2019/08/why-amazon-doesnt-produce-20-percent-worlds-oxygen/

Of the many important reasons to worry about the thousands of fires raging in the world’s largest rainforest, oxygen supply is not one of them.

To Coe, the claim “just doesn’t make any physical sense” because there simply isn’t enough carbon dioxide in the atmosphere for trees to photosynthesize into an entire fifth of the planet’s oxygen.


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World's 'largest river' is actually in the sky - as biggest myth about Amazon Rainforest dispelled in new documentary

27 MAR 2018

National Geographic's One Strange Rock, narrated by Will Smith, takes a look at how the Amazon helps us breath - while debunking the myths, showcasing the largest structure in South America and revealing the River in the Sky

https://www.mirror.co.uk/science/worlds-largest-river-actually-sky-12260884

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We’re thinking about the Amazon fires all wrong. These maps show why.

2019

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2019/09/05/were-thinking-about-amazon-fires-all-wrong-these-maps-show-why/?arc404=true

For weeks, we’ve seen headlines saying the Amazon rainforest is burning. But something unexpected happens when you map satellite data showing both the fires this year and those that have burned in the previous four years: The bulk of the forest remains almost entirely intact.

Confused? That’s because the heart of the Amazon is not actually on fire. Instead, most of the fires are burning at the fringes of the forest. That’s where the real story, and the real solution to these fires, lie.

Fires are common in the region during this time of the year, as seen on the maps below. They are mostly a man-made event. These fires are set in areas that had already been deforested in previous years and are now being cleared for agriculture.

Brazil nearly doubled its arable land for intensive row cropping between 2000 and 2014, according to a recent study by researchers from the Department of Geographical Sciences at the University of Maryland. Much of the new cultivable land is a result of deforestation.


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Brazil has seen 100,000 fire alerts in 10 days, but it's not just the Amazon — one map shows how much of South America is burning

Aug 23, 2019

https://www.businessinsider.com/map-south-america-on-fire-amazon-2019-8


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Forget oxygen — the Amazon’s destruction could threaten rain and food growing: experts

August 29, 2019

https://globalnews.ca/news/5828481/amazon-wildfires-rain-food-production/

The wildfires ravaging the Amazon have focused new attention on the ongoing destruction of this tropical rainforest — and prominent voices have amplified factors that do not stand up to critical scrutiny.

As wildfires have grown, the Amazon rainforest has been called the “lungs of the planet,” a place that produces 20 per cent of Earth’s oxygen.

French President Emmanuel Macron tweeted that claim, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau retweeted it — and scientists say it’s just not true.

The net production of oxygen by forests — and all land plants — is “very close to zero,” Scott Denning, professor of atmospheric science at Colorado State University, wrote in The Conversation.

However, even if that fact doesn’t stand up to scrutiny, the Amazon rainforest is facing very serious environmental threats that resonate far beyond South America.

One of those threats is rainfall, or the lack thereof, that could result from deforestation, Kai Chan, a professor at UBC’s Institute for Oceans and Fisheries, told Global News.

Chan described the Amazon as a “massive rain factory,” where most of the water that is evaporated from the Amazon falls right back on top of it.

“There’s a current of air in the atmosphere, basically, and it dumps water and then picks it up and travels further, picks it up, and that happens about eight times before the Amazon finishes in this current,” he explained.

In numerous parts of the world, rain falls from atmospheric rivers, or “rivers in the sky,” phenomena that carry an amount of water vapour equivalent to the flow at the mouth of the Mississippi River, which falls as rain or snow.

The atmospheric river that floats over the Amazon rainforest is more like a lake, feeding the region in a cycle, Chan said.

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Wave of Fires in Brazil Hits 68 Protected Areas This Week

Aug 21.2019

Ilha Grande National Park (PR) has already lost at least 32.500 hectares of its vegetation cover

https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/internacional/en/scienceandhealth/2019/08/wave-of-fires-in-brazil-hits-68-protected-areas-this-week.shtml

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‘I Thought the World Was Ending’: What’s Fueling the Amazon Rainforest Fires

Aug. 28, 2019.

Deforestation pits environmentalists against a defiant president and revives conspiracy theories about foreign interference

https://www.wsj.com/articles/i-thought-the-world-was-ending-whats-fueling-the-amazon-rainforest-fires-11567224081

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Kids are having trouble breathing because of the Amazon fires: 'They're coughing a lot'

Aug 2019

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2019/08/28/brazil-denies-aid-money-amazon-fires-respiratory-problems-rise/2139236001/

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Brazil's Amazon fires could cause disastrous climate change impact

Aug 27, 2019

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pw3mvUbm7Xo&vl=en

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 Deforestation and conservation in major watersheds of the Brazilian Amazon

2009

http://mtc-m16d.sid.inpe.br/col/sid.inpe.br/mtc-m19@80/2010/04.30.13.14/doc/Trancoso%20et%20al.%202010.%20Deforestation%20and%20conservation%20in%20major%20watersheds%20of%20the%20Brazilian%20Amazon.pdf

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 State-sanctioned fires devastate Amazon Rainforest

September 4, 2019

http://willamettecollegian.com/main/state-sanctioned-fires-devastate-amazon-rainforest/

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World of Change: Amazon Deforestation

https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/world-of-change/Deforestation

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The Amazon Rainforest Is Nearly Gone. We Went to the Front Lines to See If It Could Be Saved

September 12, 2019

https://pulitzercenter.org/reporting/amazon-rainforest-nearly-gone-we-went-front-lines-see-if-it-could-be-saved

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What can be saved? Restoring Amazon forests, one tree at a time

Oct 2019

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2019/10/04/climate-change-effects-peruvian-amazon-forest-restoration-underway/3831069002/

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2019: The year rainforests burned

https://news.mongabay.com/2019/12/2019-the-year-rainforests-burned/

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 Amazon Deforestation Rate Highest in 11 Years

Nov. 19, 2019

https://www.ecowatch.com/amazon-deforestation-highest-2641391018.html

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Norway Freezes $33.2M Transfer to Brazil's Amazon Fund Amid Deforestation 'Surge'

Aug. 19, 2019

https://www.ecowatch.com/amazon-deforestation-norway-fund-2639894385.html


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Amazon Deforestation Increase Prompts Germany to Cut $39.5M in Funding to Brazil

Aug. 14, 2019

https://www.ecowatch.com/amazon-deforestation-germany-2639821568.html

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Smoke from burning Amazon rainforest drops São Paulo into sudden darkness

 Aug 20, '19

https://archinect.com/news/article/150153604/smoke-from-burning-amazon-rainforest-drops-s-o-paulo-into-sudden-darkness

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 Raging rainforest fires darken skies in Brazil, inspire #prayforamazonia

2019

Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research said the country has seen a record number of wildfires this year, an 84 percent increase compared to last year.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/amazon-fires-2019-deforestation-hashtag-prayforamazonia-n1044976

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In Brazil, sudden darkness befalls Sao Paulo, baffling thousands

August 20, 2019

https://www.greenwichtime.com/news/article/In-Brazil-sudden-darkness-befalls-Sao-Paulo-14363423.php

RIO DE JANEIRO - In the height of daytime on Monday, the sky suddenly blackened, and day became night in Sao Paulo.

Sure, smog is bad in the Western Hemisphere's largest city, where traffic jams can stretch for dozens of miles. But not this bad. What was going on? Was the end near?

"Apocalypse!" one person cried on Twitter.

"The final judgment is coming!" another added.

"Mordor," one more person intoned.


 

Experts tried to puzzle it out, but their conclusions at times appeared to be conflicting, deepening the mystery. The National Institute of Meteorology said the city, which sits at an elevation of 2,500 feet, was "inside a cloud." Others explained that it was a cold front. Metsul, a Brazilian meteorology company, said the culprit was smoke that had come in from forest fires in Bolivia, Paraguay and remote parts of Brazil.

In fact, it appeared to be a combination of all three factors - clouds, smoke and a cold front - that ushered in the smoke from distance reaches, plunging the city into darkness in the middle of the day.

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Researchers help tracing “river of smoke” that blackened the day in São Paulo

August 23, 2019





Particles originated in forest fires in the Center-West and North of Brazil interacted with clouds borne by the cold front coming from the south, causing sky and rain to turn to a dark-grey hue (image: CPTEC)

http://agencia.fapesp.br/researchers-help-tracing-river-of-smoke-that-blackened-the-day-in-sao-paulo/31290/

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The impact of light on forests

May 2017

Light pollution is becoming more intense and could affect Brazilian ecosystems

https://revistapesquisa.fapesp.br/en/2017/12/05/the-impact-of-light-on-forests/

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How hacking photosynthesis could fight deforestation and famine


April 23, 2019


https://theconversation.com/how-hacking-photosynthesis-could-fight-deforestation-and-famine-114929

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Where Is the Amazon Rainforest Vanishing? Not Just in Brazil

2019

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/30/world/americas/amazon-rainforest.html

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Other ecoregions of South America

https://globalforestatlas.yale.edu/amazon/ecoregions/other-ecoregions

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World is losing vital forests quicker than ever

The years 2016 and 2017 saw the highest global tree cover loss ever recorded. Tropical forests in South America and Central Africa are disappearing at an alarming rate. Here's why that's bad news for everyone.

https://www.dw.com/en/world-is-losing-vital-forests-quicker-than-ever/a-44404176

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The World Lost a Belgium-sized Area of Primary Rainforests Last Year

April 25, 2019

https://www.wri.org/blog/2019/04/world-lost-belgium-sized-area-primary-rainforests-last-year

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Amazon rainforest

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_rainforest#Sahara_Desert_dust_windblown_to_the_Amazon

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Amazon Watch: What Happens When the Forest Disappears?

October 17, 2019

At a remote site where the world’s largest rainforest abuts land cleared for big agriculture, Brazilian and American scientists are keeping watch for a critical tipping point – the time when the Amazon ceases to be a carbon sink and turns into a source of carbon emissions.

https://e360.yale.edu/features/amazon-watch-what-happens-when-the-forest-disappears

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In the Brazilian Amazon, Indigenous people deal with a violent new world

2017

https://unearthed.greenpeace.org/2017/12/01/brazil-amazon-indigenous-violence-rondonia/

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Jair Bolsonaro Praised the Genocide of Indigenous People. Now He’s Emboldening Attackers of Brazil’s Amazonian Communities.

February 16 2019

https://theintercept.com/2019/02/16/brazil-bolsonaro-indigenous-land/

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Violence against the Indigenous Peoples in Brazil

https://cimi.org.br/pub/relatorio/Report-Violence-against-the-Indigenous-Peoples-in-Brazil_2015-Cimi.pdf

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ENCLOSURES AND RESISTANCE ISOLATED  INDIGENOUS  PEOPLES IN BRAZILIAN  AMAZONIA


https://acervo.socioambiental.org/sites/default/files/publications/C3L00002_ing.pdf

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 The Uncontacted Indians of Brazil


At risk of extinction from disease and land loss

In the depths of the Amazon rainforest in Brazil live tribes who have no contact with the outside world.

Illegal loggers and cattle ranchers are invading their land and bringing disease. They won’t survive unless this stops.

https://www.survivalinternational.org/tribes/uncontacted-brazil

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Guardian of the Forest Killed by Illegal Loggers in the Amazon

November 4, 2019

https://www.kcet.org/shows/earth-focus/guardian-of-the-forest-killed-by-illegal-loggers-in-the-amazon

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Deforestation of Amazônia is increasing pollution in South American countries

Study indicates that smoke from fires in Amazon states migrates to Bolivia, Peru and Paraguay, raising the atmospheric pollution levels of these countries

http://www.dicyt.com/news/deforestation-of-amazonia-is-increasing-pollution-in-south-american-countries

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Bolsonaro downplays severity of Amazon fires as burning ban takes effect

30/08/2019

https://www.france24.com/en/20190830-brazil-jair-bolsonaro-amazon-rainforest-wildfires-burning-ban

 A 60-day ban on burning in Brazil took effect Thursday after a global outcry over fires raging in the Amazon and data showing hundreds of new blazes in the rainforest.

The decree issued by President Jair Bolsonaro comes after escalating international pressure over the worst fires in the Amazon in years, which have ignited a diplomatic spat between Brazil and Europe.

But activists quickly doused hopes that the ban would work.

"The people who burn without a license are not going to obey," said Rodrigo Junqueira of the Socio-Environmental Institute.

Thousands of troops and firefighters have been deployed since the weekend to combat the fires, along with two C-130 Hercules and other aircraft that are dumping water over affected areas in the country's north.

Police on Thursday arrested three people for burning more than 5,000 hectares (12,350 acres) in a conservation area in Para state.

More than 1,600 new fires were ignited between Tuesday and Wednesday, taking this year's total to almost 85,000 -- the highest number since 2010, official data shows. Around half of them are in the vast Amazon basin.

Bolsonaro however claimed in a live broadcast on Facebook that "this year's fires are below the average of recent years."

UN chief Antonio Guterres on Thursday mooted a meeting of key countries to drum up support to tackle the fires that have also devastated swaths of Bolivia.

"We are strongly appealing for the mobilization of resources and we have been in contact with countries to see whether, during the high-level session of the General Assembly, there could be a meeting devoted to the mobilization of support to the Amazon," Guterres told reporters.

Brazil's foreign ministry said it was not aware of the proposal.

It urged "foreign authorities" to learn more about the country's environmental policies, the situation in the Amazon and measures taken to combat the fires "before proposing new initiatives."



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Blame humans for starting the Amazon fires, environmentalists say

August 23, 2019

https://www.cnn.com/2019/08/22/americas/amazon-fires-humans-intl-hnk-trnd/index.html

(CNN)The Amazon is burning -- and humans are likely to blame.
Environmental organizations and researchers say the wildfires blazing in the Brazilian rainforest were set by cattle ranchers and loggers who want to clear and utilize the land, emboldened by the country's pro-business president.
"The vast majority of these fires are human-lit," said Christian Poirier, the program director of non-profit organization Amazon Watch. He added that even during dry seasons, the Amazon -- a humid rainforest -- doesn't catch on fire easily, unlike the dry bushland in California or Australia.
Farmers and ranchers have long used fire to clear land, said Poirier, and are likely behind the unusually large number fires burning in the Amazon today.

The country's space research center (INPE) said this week that the number of fires in Brazil are 80% higher than last year. More than half are in the Amazon region, spelling disaster for the local environment and ecology.
And 99% percent of the fires result from human actions "either on purpose or by accident," Alberto Setzer, a senior scientist at INPE, said. The burning can range from a small-scale agricultural practice, to new deforestation for a mechanized and modern agribusiness project, Setzer told CNN by email.

Environmentalists are blaming Bolsonaro

Organizations, activists, and social media users worldwide have reacted to the news with alarm. #PrayForTheAmazon and other variations of the hashtag are trending globally on Twitter, with hundreds of thousands of tweets. As images and news of the fire spread, many are demanding accountability from Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro.
When Bolsonaro was running for president, he made campaign promises to restore the economy by exploring the Amazon's economic potential. Now, environmental organizations say he has encouraged ranchers, farmers, and loggers to exploit and burn the rainforest like never before with a sense of impunity...

Poirier warns that shrugging off the fires could embolden farmers to burn more and "land grabbers" to illegally occupy, parcel out, and resell plots of land to ranchers. There have previously been attempts to rein in these rainforest "mafia" -- but these attempted crackdowns are rare and often met with strong public opposition.

All the while, the Amazon veers toward potential disaster. 


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Bolsonaro-backed highway targets heart of Brazil's Amazon

October 2, 2019

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-environment-highway-insight-idUSKBN1WH0Z3


Bolsonaro’s administration is working on an ambitious plan to begin reconstruction by 2021 as part of a broader strategy to jumpstart economic development in the region. The completed project would reconnect Realidade with Manaus, a riverfront metropolis of 2 million people that lies 600 kilometers to the northeast. With BR-319 out of service much of the year, Manaus is consistently reachable only by water and air travel from the rest of Brazil.

“We are certain that our BR-319 will be paved,” Bolsonaro said in July at a public event in Manaus.

Bolsonaro’s office said the president has discussed the project with Infrastructure Minister Tarcisio Freitas, but declined further comment.

Amazon researchers said the repaved road would trigger an explosion of deforestation in Amazonas, currently Brazil’s best preserved rainforest state precisely because it has few good roads. A highway to Manaus would enable subsistence farmers, land speculators and loggers to penetrate deep into the jungle, said Philip Fearnside, an American ecologist at Brazil’s National Institute of Amazonian Research in Manaus, who has examined the link between roads and deforestation.

A study led by the Federal University of Minas Gerais estimates the project would result in a fivefold rise in clearing by 2030, the equivalent of an area larger than the U.S. state of Florida.


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Researchers warn of climate repercussions if Brazilian highway through the Amazon is paved

August 7, 2020

https://phys.org/news/2020-08-climate-repercussions-brazilian-highway-amazon.html

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Brazil: Bolsonaro uses Ukraine war to support extraction on indigenous land

02.03.2022

The Brazilian president wants to pave the way for further exploitation of protected lands. He is not known for protecting the environment or indigenous rights.

https://www.dw.com/en/brazil-bolsonaro-uses-ukraine-war-to-support-extraction-on-indigenous-land/a-60990812

 

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'Nobody Tells Him What to Do.' Brazil's President Bolsonaro Is Visiting Putin Despite U.S. Criticism 


February 2022

https://time.com/6148311/bolsonaro-putin-visit-ukraine/


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Bolsonaro Using Ukraine Crisis to Push for Mining in indigenous Lands

May 2, 2022

https://brazilian.report/liveblog/2022/03/02/ukraine-mining-indigenous-lands/



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Brazil: Amazon sees worst deforestation levels in 15 years

19 November 2021

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-59341770

 

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Deforestation in Brazilian Amazon hits January record

3rd February, 2022

https://www.daily-sun.com/post/603301/Deforestation-in-Brazilian-Amazon-hits-January-record

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Amazon deforestation 5x worse in Jan 2022 than Jan 2021

14 Feb 2022

https://www.politics.co.uk/opinion-former/press-release/2022/02/14/amazon-deforestation-5x-worse-in-jan-2022-than-jan-2021/

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Deforestation in the Amazon Reaches Record Highs

February 17, 2022

In January, deforestation in Brazil’s Amazon reached record highs, highest recorded rate in 15 years

https://impakter.com/deforestation-brazil-amazon/

 

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Amazon tragedy repeats itself as Brazil rainforest goes up in smoke

September 2, 2020

The vast rainforest is experiencing a repeat of last year’s devastating fires and critics say Bolsonaro bears ultimate responsibility

Jair Bolsonaro smiles down from a propaganda billboard at the entrance to this scruffy Amazon outpost, welcoming travelers to his “route to development”.

But 20 months into Bolsonaro’s presidency – and a year after a devastating outbreak of Amazon fires caused global outrage – the fires are back, and many fear Brazil’s leader is instead steering his country towards environmental ruin.

 

 


https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/sep/02/amazon-fires-brazil-rainforest-bolsonaro-destruction
 

 

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In Bolsonaro’s burning Brazilian Amazon, all our futures are being consumed

Aug 2019

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/aug/23/amazon-rainforest-fires-deforestation-jair-bolsonaro

 

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Amazon Fires Spark Growing International Criticism of Brazil

Aug 23, 2019

France calls the large number of fires in the Amazon an international crisis and an urgent issue for the G7 summit. “Our home is on fire. Literally.”

https://insideclimatenews.org/news/23082019/amazon-fires-brazil-g7-international-criticism-ireland-france-germany-canada

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Building A Future: Lumber Poaching In Oregon and Brazil

Season 2, Episode 3

Wood is found in countless products consumers use every day. In fact, lumber is closely connected to the world’s economy – a country’ s importation of lumber tends to rise in correlation with its gross domestic product. Following groups like “Guardians of the Forest,” we explore illegal lumber poaching in the forests of Brazil and Oregon, where citizens and scientists are working together to combat the illegal lumber trade.

https://www.kcet.org/shows/earth-focus/episodes/building-a-future-lumber-poaching-in-oregon-and-brazil



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The Socioeconomic Factors and the Indigenous Component of Tuberculosis in Amazonas

2016

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0158574

-------------------


Brazil Perspectives: Air Pollution

https://www.copenhagenconsensus.com/publication/brazil-perspectives-air-pollution

--------------------

Brazil: Air pollution due to Amazon wildfires

26 Aug 2019

https://www.garda.com/crisis24/news-alerts/261426/brazil-air-pollution-due-to-amazon-wildfires

Event

The thousands of ongoing wildfires in the Amazon are releasing toxic elements into the environment, posing a danger to populations in surrounding areas. The air quality in São José do Rio Preto (São Paulo state) has been recorded as unhealthy for sensitive groups on Monday, August 26.
Context

Wildfires have been burning in the Amazon for several days as of August 26, though some estimates indicate that more than 41,800 fires are ongoing in the region. Smog due to the wildfires was reported in São Paulo on August 19 after a combination of smoke, clouds, and a cold front steered the smoke into the city.

Wildfires emit substantial amounts of volatile and semi-volatile organic materials and nitrogen oxides that form ozone and particulate matter. Particulate matter can enter the respiratory system when inhaled and may reach the bloodstream. Other dangerous compounds such as carbon monoxide can cause health difficulties. Air pollution can cause breathing difficulties such as shortness of breath, coughing, and eye and nose irritation. Smoke inhalation may produce various symptoms.
Advice

Individuals in Brazil are advised to monitor local weather and air quality reports, refrain from outdoor or strenuous activity, adhere to instructions issued by local authorities, and see a medical practitioner if they suspect to have inhaled smoke.

-------------------

How Brazil is Tackling Pollution

Aug 27 2019

https://www.azocleantech.com/article.aspx?ArticleID=953

Plastic Pollution in Brazil

In 2018, Brazil ranked as the 16th most mismanaged nation in terms of plastic waste by mass. Brazil, which is the fourth-largest producer of plastic waste in the world, is estimated to recycle only 1.28% of the 11.4 million tons of waste they produce each year. As a result, about 7.7 million tons of Brazil’s plastic waste will ultimately end up in landfills.

In order to begin to ameliorate their plastic waste generation, Brazil’s government has begun to introduce legislation that will eventually eliminate single-use plastic around the country. For example, Rio de Janeiro has already banned the use of plastic drinking straws, whereas Brazil’s largest city of Sao Paulo has prohibited the use of petroleum-based plastic bags.


-------------------


European space agency records Amazon air pollution

September 9, 2019

https://wtop.com/latin-america/2019/09/european-space-agency-records-amazon-air-pollution/

--------------------

 


Amazon forest fires led to an increase in air pollution: European Space Agency

September 10, 2019

The agency said fires released carbon dioxide once stored in the Amazon forests back into the atmosphere, potentially having an impact on the global climate and health.

https://indianexpress.com/article/world/amazon-forest-fires-led-to-an-increase-in-air-pollution-european-space-agency-5981412/

 

-

The Impacts of Air Pollution on Fertility

 April 24, 2015

https://integrativewomenshealthinstitute.com/the-impacts-of-air-pollution-on-fertility/

--------------------

Bad air days are even deadlier than we thought

Aug 22, 2019

A global study finds that particulate matter in the air can increase the risk of death even at low levels and with brief exposures

https://www.theverge.com/2019/8/22/20828210/air-pollution-particulate-matter-epa-soot-death-amazon

---------------------


Brazil's Love of Pizza Is Causing Major Air Pollution

 Jun 20, 2016

https://www.eater.com/2016/6/20/11978794/brazil-pizza-pollution-rainforest

Vox points to a recent report published in the journal Atmospheric Environment, which looked at air pollution in Brazil's largest city, São Paulo. Though the country has long struggled with pollution — largely due to its vast amount of cars — São Paulo inhabitants largely use "clean" biofuels to fill up their tanks. The authors of the study claim that Brazilians' passion for pizza is so strong, though, that it's negating the positive effect of those biofuels.

One of the study's authors, University of Surrey's Dr. Prashant Kumar, said in a press release: "There are more than 7.5 hectares of Eucalyptus forest being burned every month by pizzerias and steakhouses. A total of over 307,000 tonnes of wood is burned each year in pizzerias. This is significant enough of a threat to be of real concern to the environment negating the positive effect on the environment that compulsory green biofuel policy has on vehicles."

---------------------

Tourism Damages Amazon Region


1989


Brazil creates programs to minimize environmental damage without halting tourist boom


https://www.csmonitor.com/1989/0606/otour.html

---------------------


EVALUATION OF THE CHEMICAL TRANSPORT OF AIR POLLUTANTS IN THE METROPOLITAN REGION OF SALVADOR, BRAZIL

2018

https://www.witpress.com/elibrary/wit-transactions-on-ecology-and-the-environment/230/36787

---------------------

Evaluating Atmospheric Pollutants from Urban Buses under Real-World Conditions: Implications of the Main Public Transport Mode in São Paulo, Brazil

2019

https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/10/3/108/htm

--------------------

Urban air pollution in Brazil: Acetaldehyde and other carbonyls

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/095712729090015M

Abstract

We have measured ambient levels of carbonyls in three major urban areas of Brazil: Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Salvador. The most abundant carbonyls were acetaldehyde (up to 63 μg m−3, or 35 ppb) followed by formaldehyde (up to 42 μg m−3, or 34 ppb), and acetone (up to 20 ppb). Levels of 10 other aliphatic and aromatic carbonyls were in the range 0–5 ppb. Total carbonyl concentrations were in the range 11–75 ppb. Indoor levels were also measured at several locations in Salvador. High levels of acetaldehyde, 430 μg m−3 or 240 ppb, were measured in a highway tunnel.

Using carbonyl/CO concentration ratios, mobile source emissions of carbonyls are estimated for the Sao Paulo area. Ambient levels of acetaldehyde and acetaldehyde/formaldehyde concentration ratios in Brazil are compared to those for other urban areas, and are briefly discussed in relation with the large scale use of ethanol as a vehicle fuel.


--------------------

Pollution in Salvador, Brazil

https://www.numbeo.com/pollution/in/Salvador

--------------------

Air quality in Brazil: what’s at stake with the change in standards

2018

https://wribrasil.org.br/en/blog/2018/06/air-quality-in-brazil

-------------------

Are you breathing Amazon smoke right now?

https://www.iqair.com/us/blog/air-quality/you-are-breathing-amazon-rainforest-fire-smoke-right-now

You’ve probably heard of massive blazes burning across vast swathes of the Amazon rainforests in Brazil and beyond. In August alone, 26,000 individual fires have been recorded, engulfing the equivalent of the U.S. East Coast in flames. These tens of thousands of individual fires burning has ignited renewed discussions of the major impact that these fires will have on climate change.

There’s no doubt that the destruction of the Amazon rainforests will have far-reaching consequences for years to come. The Amazon, home to 10% of the world’s biodiversity and at least 15% of all its fresh water, has long been an enormously important feature of the planet’s ability to capture harmful carbon from the atmosphere and produce a large volume of the earth’s oxygen supply.1 For this reason, some have labeled the Amazon rainforests the "earth's lungs."

But there’s a much more immediate toxic impact that the wildfire smoke from these fires has on every single person on Earth, no matter their proximity to the fires: air pollution – especially the particulate matter smaller than 2.5 microns (PM2.5) produced by the wildfires.2

So even though Brazil’s fires may be burning thousands of miles away from you, you may be breathing air that’s contaminated by the Amazon wildfires. Read on to learn why and how to protect yourself from the health impacts of wildfire smoke.

How far does wildfire smoke travel?

It’s easy to think that the Amazon fires are Brazil’s problem – but as with any other wildfire, their smoke travels globally. Consider that wildfire air pollution from these fires can travel as far away Asia on the other side of the world.

And when you add up the smoke produced by the over 87,000 fires recorded in Brazil in 2019, no one can afford to ignore the air quality impact that sheer volume of smoke can have.3

This impact is due to a combination of the physics of wildfire smoke itself and of wind currents that can carry air pollution across the globe. With the Amazon fires, the smoke rising from vast burning areas had already covered hundreds of thousands of square miles from the west coasts of South America to Papua New Guinea and Australia, over 11,000 miles away, within mere days.

Here’s how that happens – and why you may be breathing that smoke as you read this:

    Smoke rises miles into the air due to a mixture of intense heat from flames and conditions in the atmosphere like sunlight, cloud cover, and wind speeds.
    Global wind currents blow smoke for hundreds of miles across the upper atmosphere and spread airborne pollutants for hundreds of miles in every direction. In the case of the Amazon fires, the westward-blowing currents along the equator can take the smoke as far west as Australia, China, and Indonesia. Then, the smoke is blown northward by currents near Japan, and then eastward by north Pacific currents that bring that same smoke all the way to the United States, Canada, and Central America.
    Pollutants in the upper atmosphere react with heat from sunlight and lower-lying pollutants in major urban areas. Regions that produce a lot of industrial and traffic pollution are especially vulnerable to the added pollution that smoke can bring to the area – not only are nearby major urban areas like São Paulo in Brazil are directly affected by Amazon rainforest fires, but cities as far-flung as Mexico City, and as far north as Alaska and eastern Russia, were affected mere days after the fires started. And many more cities in North America will be impacted in the coming months.

--------------------------

Amazon blazes could speed climate change

August 28, 2019

https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2019/08/harvard-biologist-discusses-the-environmental-impact-of-the-amazon-fires/

-------------------------

How, and How Much, Tropical Forests Absorb and Store Carbon

Year: 2015

http://www.grida.no/resources/6948

--------------------------

Deforestation and Forest Degradation

https://www.worldwildlife.org/threats/deforestation-and-forest-degradation

Forests cover 31% of the land area on our planet. They help people thrive and survive by, for example, purifying water and air and providing people with jobs; some 13.2 million people across the world have a job in the forest sector and another 41 million have a job that is related to the sector. Many animals also rely on forests. Eighty percent of the world's land-based species, such as elephants and rhinos, live in forests. Forests also play a critical role in mitigating climate change because they act as a carbon sink—soaking up carbon dioxide that would otherwise be free in the atmosphere and contribute to ongoing changes in climate patterns.

But forests around the world are under threat, jeopardizing these benefits. The threats manifest themselves in the form of deforestation and forest degradation. The main cause of deforestation is agriculture (poorly planned infrastructure is emerging as a big threat too) and the main cause of forest degradation is illegal logging. We’re losing 18.7 million acres of forests annually, equivalent to 27 soccer fields every minute.

Deforestation is a particular concern in tropical rain forests because these forests are home to much of the world’s biodiversity. For example, in the Amazon around 17% of the forest has been lost in the last 50 years, mostly due to forest conversion for cattle ranching. Deforestation in this region is particularly rampant near more populated areas, roads and rivers, but even remote areas have been encroached upon when valuable mahogany, gold, and oil are discovered...

Increased Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Forests are carbon sinks and, therefore, help to mitigate the emission of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases. Tropical forests alone hold more than 228 to 247 gigatons of carbon, which is more than seven times the amount emitted each year by human activities.

But when forests are cut, burned or otherwise removed they emit carbon instead of absorb carbon. Deforestation and forest degradation are responsible for around 15% of all greenhouse gas emissions. These greenhouse gas emissions contribute to rising temperatures, changes in patterns of weather and water, and an increased frequency of extreme weather events. For example, in Sumatra, rainforests on deep peatlands are being cleared, drained and converted to pulp plantations, contributing to Indonesia’s high greenhouse gas emissions. Changes in climate can affect forest-dwelling creatures by altering their habitats and decreasing availability of food and water. Some will be able to adapt by moving to higher elevations or latitudes, but species losses may occur.

Disruption of Water Cycles

Trees play a key role in the local water cycle by helping to keep a balance between the water on land and water in the atmosphere. But when deforestation or degradation occurs, that balance can be thrown off, resulting in changes in precipitation and river flow.


Increased Soil Erosion

Without trees to anchor fertile soil, erosion can occur and sweep the land into rivers. The agricultural plants that often replace the trees cannot hold onto the soil. Many of these plants—such as coffee, cotton, palm oil, soybean and wheat—can actually exacerbate soil erosion. Scientists have estimated that a third of the world’s arable land has been lost through soil erosion and other types of degradation since 1960. And as fertile soil washes away, agricultural producers move on, clearing more forest and continuing the cycle of soil loss.

Disrupted Livelihoods

1.25 billion people around the world rely on forests for shelter, livelihoods, water, fuel, and food security. And 750 million people (approximately one-fifth of total rural population) live in forests. This includes 60 million indigenous people. But deforestation disrupts the lives of these people, sometimes with devastating consequences. In the Greater Mekong in Southeast Asia, where land tenure systems are weak, deforestation has contributed to social conflict and migration. In Brazil, poor people have been lured from their villages to remote soy plantations where they may be abused and forced, at gunpoint, to work under inhumane conditions.


---------------------------

Amazon Doesn’t Produce 20% of Earth’s Oxygen

September 3, 2019

https://www.factcheck.org/2019/09/amazon-doesnt-produce-20-of-earths-oxygen/

Q: Does the Amazon produce 20% of the world’s oxygen?

A: No. Scientists estimate the percentage is closer to 6 to 9%, and the Amazon ultimately consumes nearly all of that oxygen itself.

FULL QUESTION

Does the Amazon Rainforest truly produce 20% of the Earth’s oxygen? Where does the remaining 80% come from?
FULL ANSWER

On Aug. 20, Brazil’s space agency sparked a media frenzy when it released satellite data showing an alarming number of wildfires in the Amazon rainforest over the past year — nearly 40,000, or a 77% rise compared with the same time period in 2018.

Most of the fires have started since June. NASA also has confirmed the surge, declaring 2019 the worst year for wildfires in the region since 2010. Scientists attribute the uptick in fires to increased deforestation, at least some of which, critics say, has been encouraged by Brazil’s president, Jair Bolsonaro.

As news outlets across the globe picked up the story, journalists began to spread the false but catchy factoid that the Amazon produces 20% of the world’s oxygen. ABC, CNN and Newsweek, among others, cited the statistic.

Politicians then joined in, repeating the factoid to draw attention to the blazes. For instance, Sen. Kamala Harris, a Democratic presidential candidate, shared the number and suggested it was even higher. “The Amazon creates over 20% of the world’s oxygen and is home to one million Indigenous people,” she said in an Aug. 23 tweet.

French President Emmanuel Macron also quoted the statistic in an Aug. 22 tweet calling for world leaders to address the fires at the Group of Seven summit. (His tweet was accompanied by an outdated photo of a burning forest from 1989.)

The exact numbers vary, but according to a study Foley did in 1995 and a more recent 2010 Science paper Malhi referenced, tropical forests do approximately a quarter to a little more than a third of all photosynthesis on land. The Amazon makes up about half or less of all tropical forests, so it alone does about 12-16% of all land photosynthesis. As Malhi writes in a blog post that addresses this question, rounding that higher-end figure up might be where the 20% factoid came from.

But that’s still only considering photosynthesis from land plants. The ocean accounts for about half of all photosynthesis, which means that only about 6-9% of the world’s oxygen, and perhaps less, is produced by the Amazon.

“With a little more analysis and a more thorough review of the literature, we could probably derive a slightly better estimate with more specific uncertainties,” said Scott Saleska, a University of Arizona ecosystem ecologist who agreed with the 6-9% approximation.


--------------------------

Can the Amazon Save the Planet?

2017

Scientists climb to perilous heights to gauge how much carbon dioxide the rainforest is absorbing

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/can-the-amazon-save-the-planet/

---------------------------


Drought sensitivity of Amazonian carbon balance revealed by atmospheric measurements.

2014

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24499918

--------------------------

Amazon trees may absorb far less carbon than previously thought: study

21 November 2019

https://news.mongabay.com/2019/11/amazon-trees-may-absorb-far-less-carbon-than-previously-thought-study/

    The capacity of the Amazon rainforest to absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere is predicted to increase with climate change, but now computer modelling suggests that these increases may be far smaller than expected.
    So far, global photosynthesis rates have risen in line with increases in atmospheric CO2 concentrations, but whether this pattern will hold true for the Amazon, one of the oldest ecosystems on Earth, is still unclear.
    Depending on how key nutrient cycles are represented, researchers found that models predict the Amazon carbon sink could be 46 to 52 percent smaller than predicted based on current trends, a finding that has serious implications for carbon sequestration forecasts and future climate change.
    The researchers plan to test the model predictions against the results from proposed field experiments that will artificially elevate CO2 levels in real sections of the Amazon forest — a study for which the team is currently raising funds.


-------------------------

Amazon rainforest absorbing less carbon than expected

August 20, 2019

Summary:
    An international team of climate scientists has found that accounting for phosphorus-deficient soils reduced projected carbon dioxide uptake by an average of 50% in the Amazon, compared to current estimates based on previous climate models that did not take into account phosphorus deficiency.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/08/190820081848.htm

--------------------------

Amazon rainforest is taking up a third less carbon than a decade ago

2015

https://www.carbonbrief.org/amazon-rainforest-is-taking-up-a-third-less-carbon-than-a-decade-ago

--------------------------

    Climate Change Series Part 1 – Rainforests Absorb, Store Large Quantities of Carbon Dioxide

September 1, 2017

https://www.rainforesttrust.org/climate-change-series-part-1-rainforests-absorb-store-large-quantities-carbon-dioxide/

--------------------------

Amazon Rainforest Breathes In More Than It Breathes Out

2014

https://www.livescience.com/44235-amazon-rainforest-carbon-cycle-measured.html

-------------------------

Annual Carbon Emissions from Deforestation in the Amazon Basin between 2000 and 2010

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4423949/

------------------------

Carbon emissions from tropical deforestation and regrowth based on satellite observations for the 1980s and 1990s.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12384569

------------------------

Amazon Sees Alarming Rise in Deforestation

2019

https://www.ecowatch.com/amazon-deforestation-rate-2641606083.html

------------------------

Determination of tropical deforestation rates and related carbon losses from 1990 to 2010.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24753029

------------------------

Accelerated deforestation in the humid tropics from the 1990s to the 2000s.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27656010

------------------------

Baseline map of carbon emissions from deforestation in tropical regions.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22723420

------------------------

High-resolution forest carbon stocks and emissions in the Amazon.

2010

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20823233

Abstract

Efforts to mitigate climate change through the Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD) depend on mapping and monitoring of tropical forest carbon stocks and emissions over large geographic areas. With a new integrated use of satellite imaging, airborne light detection and ranging, and field plots, we mapped aboveground carbon stocks and emissions at 0.1-ha resolution over 4.3 million ha of the Peruvian Amazon, an area twice that of all forests in Costa Rica, to reveal the determinants of forest carbon density and to demonstrate the feasibility of mapping carbon emissions for REDD. We discovered previously unknown variation in carbon storage at multiple scales based on geologic substrate and forest type. From 1999 to 2009, emissions from land use totaled 1.1% of the standing carbon throughout the region. Forest degradation, such as from selective logging, increased regional carbon emissions by 47% over deforestation alone, and secondary regrowth provided an 18% offset against total gross emissions. Very high-resolution monitoring reduces uncertainty in carbon emissions for REDD programs while uncovering fundamental environmental controls on forest carbon storage and their interactions with land-use change.

------------------------

Environmental change and the carbon balance of Amazonian forests.

2014

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25324039

------------------------

Why is the Amazon absorbing less carbon?

https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2015/03/why-is-the-amazon-absorbing-less-carbon/

------------------------

Carbon uptake by mature Amazon forests has mitigated Amazon nations' carbon emissions.

2017

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28413845


------------------------

 Historic carbon burial spike in an Amazon floodplain lake linked to riparian deforestation near Santarém, Brazil

https://www.biogeosciences.net/15/447/2018/

----------------------------

Contributions of fallow lands in the Brazilian Amazon to CO2 balance, deforestation and the agrarian economy: Inequalities among competing land use trajectories

https://www.elementascience.org/articles/10.12952/journal.elementa.000133/


--------------------------

Carbon stock loss from deforestation through 2013 in Brazilian Amazonia.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25380507

-------------------------

CO2, CO, hydrocarbon gases and PM2.5 emissions on dry season by deforestation fires in the Brazilian Amazonia.

2019

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30901645

Abstract

The rate of deforestation in Brazil increased by 29% between 2015 and 2016, resulting in an increase of greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) of 9%. Deforestation fires in the Amazonia are the main source of GHG in Brazil. In this work, amounts of CO2, CO, main hydrocarbon gases and PM2.5 emitted during deforestation fires, under real conditions directly in Brazilian Amazonia, were determined. A brief discussion of the relationship between the annual emission of CO2 equivalent (CO2,eq) and Paris Agreement was conducted. Experimental fires were carried out in Western Amazonia (Candeias do Jamari, Rio Branco and Cruzeiro do Sul) and results were compared with a previous fire carried out in Eastern Amazonia (Alta Floresta). The average total fresh biomass on the ground before burning and the total biomass consumption were estimated to be 591 ton ha-1 and 33%, respectively. CO2, CO, CH4, and non-methane hydrocarbon (NMHC) average emission factors, for the four sites, were 1568, 140, 8, and 3 g kg-1 of burned dry biomass, respectively. PM2.5 showed large variation among the sites (0.9-16 g kg-1). Emissions per hectare of forest were estimated as 216,696 kg of CO2, 18,979 kg of CO, 1,058 kg of CH4, and 496 kg of NMHC. The average annual emission of equivalent CO2 was estimated as 301 ± 53 Mt year-1 for the Brazilian Amazonia forest. From 2013, the estimated CO2,eq showed a trend to increase in Amazon region. The present study is an alert and provides important information that can be used in the development of the public policies to control emissions and deforestation in the Brazilian Amazonia.

-------------------------

Climate change, allergy and asthma, and the role of tropical forests.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28286602

------------------------

The Climate Is Doomed Without Brazil

2018

The country's new president wants to increase development in the Amazon rainforest, which absorbs a massive amount of carbon emissions.

https://newrepublic.com/article/151933/climate-doomed-without-brazil

---------------------------

 

Amazon is less able to recover from droughts and logging, study finds

09 Mar 2022

https://bdnews24.com/environment/2022/03/09/amazon-is-less-able-to-recover-from-droughts-and-logging-study-finds

 

---------------------------

Brazil cancels another UN climate change event

2019

https://apnews.com/8803dde3bda8459c89ab4d221c5d7614

---------------------------

Brazil’s foreign minister says climate change is a 'Marxist plot'

16 November 2018

Scientists ‘ignore data’ suggesting opposite of rising global temperatures and CO2 levels, says Ernesto Araújo

https://www.independent.co.uk/environment/brazil-climate-change-foreign-minister-ernesto-araujo-marxist-plot-global-warming-a8637281.html


----------------------------

Regional atmospheric CO2 inversion reveals seasonal and geographic differences in Amazon net biome exchange.

2016

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27124119

----------------------------


Brazil fights attempt to cancel its old carbon credits

2019

https://www.climatechangenews.com/2019/10/11/brazil-fights-attempt-cancel-old-carbon-credits/


-----------------------------

Brazil's worst mining disaster: Corporations must be compelled to pay the actual environmental costs

2016

https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/eap.1461

-----------------------------

How Brazil’s Burning Amazon Threatens the Climate

August 29, 2019

https://www.cfr.org/in-brief/how-brazils-burning-amazon-threatens-climate


------------------------------

Climate change evidence in Brazil from Köppen's climate annual types frequency

2018

https://rmets.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/joc.5893


------------------------------

Could One Man Single-Handedly Ruin the Planet?

Oct. 31, 2018

http://nymag.com/intelligencer/2018/10/bolsanaros-amazon-deforestation-accelerates-climate-change.html

------------------------------

To save Brazil’s rainforest, boost its science

 22 October 2019

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-03169-0

------------------------------

Can humanity survive without the Amazon rainforest?

August 22, 2019

Massive fires in the Amazon rainforest, a result of far-right policies, call humanity's survival into question

https://www.salon.com/2019/08/22/can-humanity-survive-without-the-amazon-rainforest-maybe-not-experts-say/

------------------------------

Why Protecting the Amazon is Critical to Solving the Climate Crisis.

September 12, 2019

https://www.climaterealityproject.org/blog/why-protecting-amazon-critical-solving-climate-crisis

------------------------------

The destruction of the Amazon, explained

September 1, 2019

https://theweek.com/articles/861886/destruction-amazon-explained

------------------------------


The Amazon rainforest’s worst-case scenario is uncomfortably near

Aug 27, 2019

Wildfires and deforestation are pushing the Amazon rainforest toward a dieback scenario: an irreversible cycle of collapse.

https://www.vox.com/2019/8/27/20833275/amazon-rainforest-fire-wildfire-dieback


------------------------------

AP Explains: Role of the Amazon in global climate change

August 27, 2019









https://apnews.com/384fdb5ee7654667b53ddb49efce8023

------------------------------

The Disappearing Rainforests

http://www.rain-tree.com/facts.htm

We are losing Earth's greatest biological treasures just as we are beginning to appreciate their true value. Rainforests once covered 14% of the earth's land surface; now they cover a mere 6% and experts estimate that the last remaining rainforests could be consumed in less than 40 years.

One and one-half acres of rainforest are lost every second with tragic consequences for both developing and industrial countries.

Rainforests are being destroyed because the value of rainforest land is perceived as only the value of its timber by short-sighted governments, multi-national logging companies, and land owners.

Nearly half of the world's species of plants, animals and microorganisms will be destroyed or severely threatened over the next quarter century due to rainforest deforestation.

Experts estimates that we are losing 137 plant, animal and insect species every single day due to rainforest deforestation. That equates to 50,000 species a year. As the rainforest species disappear, so do many possible cures for life-threatening diseases. Currently, 121 prescription drugs sold worldwide come from plant-derived sources. While 25% of Western pharmaceuticals are derived from rainforest ingredients, less that 1% of these tropical trees and plants have been tested by scientists.

Most rainforests are cleared by chainsaws, bulldozers and fires for its timber value and then are followed by farming and ranching operations, even by world giants like Mitsubishi Corporation, Georgia Pacific, Texaco and Unocal.

There were an estimated ten million Indians living in the Amazonian Rainforest five centuries ago. Today there are less than 200,000.

In Brazil alone, European colonists have destroyed more than 90 indigenous tribes since the 1900's. With them have gone centuries of accumulated knowledge of the medicinal value of rainforest species. As their homelands continue to be destroyed by deforestation, rainforest peoples are also disappearing.

Most medicine men and shamans remaining in the Rainforests today are 70 years old or more. Each time a rainforest medicine man dies, it is as if a library has burned down.

When a medicine man dies without passing his arts on to the next generation, the tribe and the world loses thousands of years of irreplaceable knowledge about medicinal plants.


------------------------------


The worst case of oil pollution on the planet


http://www.sosyasuni.org/en/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=106%3Athe-worst-case-of-oil-pollution-on-the-planet&catid=17%3Ageneral&Itemid=1


Chevron-Texaco in the Ecuadorian amazon region:

Chevron is responsible for creating toxic contamination 30 times larger than the Exxon Valdez Probably the largest oil-related environmental catastrophe in the world exists quietly in the Amazon rainforest, threatening to wipe out five indigenous groups largely out of sight of the world's media.



------------------



Vale: The pride of Brazil becomes its most hated company


30 January 2019


https://www.bbc.com/news/business-47056849


------------------------------


The Amazon rainforest: could it become a desert?

October, 2019

Fire consumed the outskirts of the Amazon rainforest in August. With mortality rates of tropical trees increasing, we ask: could the ecosystem be tipped into a barren desert environment?

https://www.sciencefocus.com/planet-earth/the-amazon-rainforest-could-it-become-a-desert/

------------------------------

61 facts you need to know about the rainforest


https://www.ovoenergy.com/blog/ovo-foundation/61-facts-you-need-to-know-about-the-rainforest.html

Biodiversity

    One rainforest tree can have more than 40 different species of ant in it, more than the number of ant species in the whole British Isles

    Rainforests are home to two-thirds of all living animal and plant species on the planet, with hundreds of millions of species still undiscovered

    The rainforest canopy can be more than 40 feet thick

    One tropical tree can have 4 million flowers

    We lose 137 species of plants and animals every day because of rainforest destruction

    Six million different species live in the world’s rainforests

    A single hectare of tropical rainforests may contain more than 480 species of tree

    99% of rainforest species have still to be studied

    Scientists believe human beings have increased the rate of extinction by 1,000 times - greater than any time in the last 500 million years

    The world’s largest orchid weighs nearly one tonne and grows to be three metres high and produces 10,000 flowers

    63% of a female praying mantis' diet is male praying mantis

    The world's population of ants weighs the same as the world's population of people

    17,500 species have been discovered each year over the last decade. That's around 47 new species every single day

    3,000 amphibians have been discovered in the last 25 years

    Peru has the greatest butterfly biodiversity in the world, with more than 4,000 native species. The whole of Europe has just 400 species

    16% of animals in Peru are endemic, meaning they are found nowhere else in the world

    8% of Peru’s animals are listed as endangered

    There are a staggering 6,800 species of tree in Peru

    Cool Earth’s projects are keeping 120 million trees standing

Deforestation

    The global rate for deforestation is 32 million acres every year

    10.6 acres of forest are lost in South America each year

    9.9 million acres of forest in Africa are lost each year

    25 million acres of tropical rainforest are lost per year

    68,000 acres of tropical forest are lost each day

    2,853 acres of tropical forest are lost each hour

    48 acres of tropical forest are lost each minute

    2.5 acres of tropical forest are lost every 3 seconds

    Rainforests once covered 14% of the world’s land surface, today they cover just 6%

    Since 1990 Peru has lost 2,773,810 acres of primary rainforest

--------------------------

Analysis of Atmospheric Aerosol Optical Properties in the Northeast Brazilian Atmosphere with Remote Sensing Data from MODIS and CALIOP/CALIPSO Satellites, AERONET Photometers and a Ground-Based Lidar

2019

https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/10/10/594/htm

--------------

Characterization of aerosol chemical composition from urban pollution in Brazil and its possible impacts on the aerosol hygroscopicity and size distribution

2019

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1352231019300469

--------------

U.S. Blocks U.N. Resolution on Geoengineering

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/u-s-blocks-u-n-resolution-on-geoengineering/

The measure called for a report on carbon capture and solar radiation management


The United States joined Saudi Arabia to derail a U.N. resolution that sought to improve the world’s understanding of potential efforts to lace the sky with sunlight-reflecting aerosols or use carbon-catching fans.

The two countries were joined by Brazil in blocking the resolution at the U.N. Environment Assembly conference in Nairobi, Kenya, earlier this week. The measure asked the world’s decisionmaking body on the environment to commission a report outlining research and planning related to carbon dioxide removal and solar radiation management. Those controversial efforts are still in the planning stage and are not operational.

Switzerland and nine other nations originally asked the U.N. Environment Programme for guidance on possible future governance options and analysis of the implications of geoengineering, but they agreed to substantially reduce the scope of their resolution in hopes that the United States, Saudi Arabia and Brazil would allow it to move forward. The final version, which failed to gain consensus Wednesday, would have asked UNEP only to provide a compilation by next year of current scientific research on geoengineering and U.N. bodies that have adopted resolutions regarding it.


--------------


Ozone measurements in Amazonia: Dry season versus wet season

1990

https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/JD095iD10p16913

--------------



Brazil’s biggest coal-producing state eyes Chinese investment

2018

Rio Grande do Sul coal project creates jobs but conflicts with Chinese domestic plans and CO2 cuts

https://dialogochino.net/15659-brazils-biggest-coal-producing-state-eyes-chinese-investment/

--------------

Bioethanol and Biodiesel as Vehicular Fuels in Brazil — Assessment of Atmospheric Impacts from the Long Period of Biofuels Use

https://www.intechopen.com/books/biofuels-status-and-perspective/bioethanol-and-biodiesel-as-vehicular-fuels-in-brazil-assessment-of-atmospheric-impacts-from-the-lon

--------------

Pollution Control in Brazil

https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/45da/b6278f0fd7a61ddc50d2c59e6f025e144ecc.pdf

---------------

Air Pollution in World: Real-time Air Quality Index Visual Map

http://aqicn.org/map/world/

--------------

Cough-aerosol cultures of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the prediction of outcomes after exposure. A household contact study in Brazil

2018

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0206384

--------------

Pollution from Manaus results in up to 400% higher aerosol formation due to the Amazon Rainforest

May 29, 2019

http://agencia.fapesp.br/pollution-from-manaus-results-in-up-to-400-higher-aerosol-formation-due-to-the-amazon-rainforest/30619/

--------------

Analysis of incoming biomass burning aerosol plumes over southern Brazil

2016

https://search.proquest.com/openview/b79a2c038a681b4854f7c40e8f26b9a9/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=2045193

-------------

Air pollution and respiratory diseases in the Municipality of Vitória, Espírito Santo State, Brazil

2007

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0102-311X2007001600023

-------------

Air quality assessment in different urban areas from Rio Grande do Sul state, Brazil, using lichen transplants

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0001-37652018000502233

-------------

Methanesulfunate and Non-Sea-Salt Sulfate in the Marine Aerosol and Precipitation

https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-94-009-0567-2_102

---------------

Modeling of Atmospheric Aerosol Properties in the São Paulo Metropolitan Area: Impact of Biomass Burning

2018

https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2018JD028768

--------------

Single-particle characterization of aerosols collected at a remote site in the Amazonian rainforest and an urban site in Manaus, Brazil

2019

https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/1221/2019/

--------------

Long-range Transport of Aerosols from Biomass Burning over Southeastern South America and their Implications on Air Quality

http://www.aaqr.org/article/detail/AAQR-17-11-2017AAC-0545

--------------

Long Term Analysis of Optical and Radiative Properties of Aerosols in the Amazon Basin

http://www.aaqr.org/article/detail/AAQR-19-04-OA-0189

--------------

Analysis of Atmospheric Aerosol Optical Properties in the Northeast Brazilian Atmosphere with Remote Sensing Data from MODIS and CALIOP/CALIPSO Satellites, AERONET Photometers and a Ground-Based Lidar

https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/10/10/594

--------------

Review of Aerosol Observations by Lidar and Chemical Analysis in the State of São Paulo, Brazil

2012

https://www.intechopen.com/books/atmospheric-aerosols-regional-characteristics-chemistry-and-physics/review-of-aerosol-observations-by-lidar-and-chemical-analysis-in-the-state-of-s-o-paulo-brazil

--------------

Influence of Atmospheric Aerosols on Evapotranspiration over a Semiarid Region in Northeast Brazil

2018

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0102-77862018000400677

--------------

Southern Brazil: analysis of aerosols from different sources through the sensors MODIS and CALIOP

http://www.scielo.org.bo/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1562-38232012000400008

--------------

Characterization of the radiative impact of aerosols on CO2 and energy fluxes in the Amazon deforestation arch using Artificial Neural Networks

2019

https://www.atmos-chem-phys-discuss.net/acp-2019-167/acp-2019-167.pdf

--------------

Spatial and temporal distribution of aerosol properties in Brazil, China, Australia and Canada during 2000–2012

2016

https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7730504

--------------

Aerosols Control Rainfall in the Rainforest

https://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=117696

--------------

Detection of saharan mineral dust aerosol transport over brazilian northeast through a depolarization lidar

2018

https://www.epj-conferences.org/articles/epjconf/abs/2018/11/epjconf_ilrc28_05036/epjconf_ilrc28_05036.html

--------------

Toward clearer skies: Challenges in regulating transboundary haze in Southeast Asia

https://cpb-us-w2.wpmucdn.com/blog.nus.edu.sg/dist/a/6358/files/2016/07/Lee_et_at_2015_ESP-20r33uw.pdf

---------------

Assessment of the variability of pollutants concentration over the metropolitan area of São Paulo, Brazil, using the wavelet transform

2015

https://rmets.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/asl.618

--------------

Synergetic measurements of aerosols over São Paulo,Brazil using LIDAR, sunphotometer and satellite data during the dry season

https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00295335/document

--------------

Air pollution and mortality in São Paulo, Brazil: Effects of multiple pollutants and analysis of susceptible populations.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25586330

--------------

Particulate pollutants in the Brazilian city of São Paulo: 1-year investigation for the chemical composition and source apportionment

09 Oct 2017

https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/17/11943/2017/

--------------


Association between ambient air pollution and birth weight in São Paulo, Brazil

https://jech.bmj.com/content/58/1/11

-------------


Characterising Brazilian biomass burning emissions using WRF-Chem with MOSAIC sectional aerosol

2014

https://www.geosci-model-dev.net/8/549/2015/gmd-8-549-2015.pdf


--------------

NASA-NOAA's Suomi NPP tracks fire and smoke from two continents

2019

https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-09/nsfc-nsn091319.php

--------------

Are metals and pyrene levels additional factors playing a pivotal role in air pollution-induced inflammation in taxi drivers?

2018

https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlehtml/2018/tx/c7tx00203c

--------------


There’s no doubt that Brazil’s fires are linked to deforestation, scientists say

Aug. 26, 2019

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2019/08/theres-no-doubt-brazils-fires-are-caused-deforestation-scientists-say

--------------

Fires in Brazil’s Amazon have devastating consequences

September 2019

The increase in the number of fires in the Brazilian Amazon this year compared to last year is unprecedented, figures from different organizations show.

https://news.mongabay.com/2019/09/fires-in-brazils-amazon-have-devastating-consequences/

--------------

 Amazon rainforest fires: global leaders urged to divert Brazil from 'suicide' path

2019

Experts say international pressure may be only way to sway Bolsonaro government

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/aug/23/amazon-fires-global-leaders-urged-divert-brazil-suicide-path


----------------------

Black Carbon Found in the Amazon River – Most From Recent Forest Burnings

November 27, 2019

https://scitechdaily.com/black-carbon-found-in-the-amazon-river-most-from-recent-forest-burnings/

----------------------

 Brazilian Farmers Believe They Have the Right to Burn the Amazon

“The people in the big cities of Sao Paulo and Rio, they want us to live on picking Brazil nuts,” a farmer says. “That doesn’t put anyone’s kid in college”

https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/brazilian-farmers-believe-they-have-the-right-to-burn-the-amazon-875879/

----------------------


Amazon Deforestation in Brazil Rose Sharply on Bolsonaro’s Watch

2019

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/18/world/americas/brazil-amazon-deforestation.html

President Jair Bolsonaro has scaled back efforts to fight illegal logging, mining and farming, which have led to widespread destruction in the world’s largest rainforest.

------------------------


Brazil’s Amazon rainforest destruction is at its highest rate in more than a decade

 Nov 18, 2019

https://www.vox.com/science-and-health/2019/11/18/20970604/amazon-rainforest-2019-brazil-burning-deforestation-bolsonaro

New satellite measurements show an alarming spike in deforestation this year

------------------------

Brazil's Bolsonaro says he will accept aid to fight Amazon fires

August 27, 2019

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/amazon-wildfires-brazil-spurns-20-million-aid-offer-from-g-7-nations-today-2019-08-27/


-----------------------

Leaked Documents Show Brazil’s Bolsonaro Has Grave Plans for Amazon Rainforest

2019


DemocraciaAbierta had access to PowerPoints from a meeting between members of the Bolsonaro government. The slides show that the current government intends to use the president's hate speech to diminish the power of minorities living in the region and to implement predatory projects that could have a devastating environmental impact for the Amazon.

https://www.commondreams.org/views/2019/08/22/leaked-documents-show-brazils-bolsonaro-has-grave-plans-amazon-rainforest

----------------------

 Brazil's president says he fell, briefly lost memory

Jair Bolsonaro says he managed to remember lots of things day after incident

Beyza Binnur Donmez   | 25.12.2019

https://www.aa.com.tr/en/americas/brazils-president-says-he-fell-briefly-lost-memory/1683958

----------------------

Brazil Was a Global Leader on Climate Change. Now It’s a Threat.

 January 4, 2019

Jair Bolsonaro’s government could roll back decades of progress on clean energy and reducing deforestation.

https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/01/04/brazil-was-a-global-leader-on-climate-change-now-its-a-threat/

----------------------------


Spatial patterns of medium and large size mammal assemblages in varzea and terra firme forests, Central Amazonia, Brazil

2018

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0198120&type=printable

---------------


Pollution Control in Brazil

https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/45da/b6278f0fd7a61ddc50d2c59e6f025e144ecc.pdf

---------------

Air Pollution in World: Real-time Air Quality Index Visual Map

http://aqicn.org/map/world/

--------------

 NASA DATA SHOWS DEFORESTATION AFFECTS CLIMATE IN THE AMAZON

 2004

https://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2004/0603amazondry.html

--------------

Secrets of Cloud Formation, Revealed in the Amazon

2013

https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/article/cloud-formation-in-the-amazon/

--------------

The Role of Sea Spray in Cleansing Air Pollution over Ocean via Cloud Processes

2002

https://science.sciencemag.org/content/297/5587/1667.abstract

---------------

Cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) concentration in the Brazilian northeast semi-arid region: the influence of local circulation

2014

https://ccacoalition.org/fr/resources/cloud-condensation-nuclei-ccn-concentration-brazilian-northeast-semi-arid-region-influence

----------------


Issues of local and global use of water from the Amazon

2004

https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000136195

------------------

The Amazon River Needs Rights Recognition Now

2018

https://www.earthlawcenter.org/blog-entries/2018/2/the-amazon-river-needs-rights-recognition-now

------------------

The Amazon Rain Forest Is Nearly Gone We Went to the Front Lines to See If It Could Be Saved

https://time.com/amazon-rainforest-disappearing/

------------------


Pollution, illness, threats and murder: is this Amazon factory the link?

2018

The death of a Brazilian community leader followed concerns about contaminated water around the aluminium plant but its Norwegian owners deny responsibility

The Norwegian-owned aluminium plant in Barcarena in the state of Pará is accused of contaminating rivers and water supplies, causing diarrhoea, vomiting and hair loss and poisoning fish.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/mar/16/brazil-pollution-amazon-aluminium-plant-norwegian

------------------


Groundwater may play key role in forest fires

 2017

https://news.mongabay.com/2017/06/groundwater-may-play-key-role-in-forest-fires/


------------------

World's Water Could Become Scarce if the Amazon Rainforest Is Destroyed

2018

https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/amazon-rainforest-water-crisis/

------------------

Self-amplified Amazon forest loss due to vegetation-atmosphere feedbacks

2017

https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms14681

------------------

Groundwater

Important Underground Sources Are Shrinking

The overpumping of groundwater is causing water tables to fall across large areas of northern China, India, Pakistan, Iran, the Middle East, Mexico, and the western United States.

The Ogallala Aquifer, which spans parts of eight states from southern South Dakota to northwest Texas, is steadily being depleted. The Ogallala provides 30 percent of the groundwater used for irrigation in the U.S., and as of 2005, a volume equivalent to two-thirds the water in Lake Erie had been depleted.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/freshwater/groundwater/

------------------


Surface water quality and deforestation of the Purus river basin, Brazilian Amazon

2016

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40071-016-0150-1

-------------------------------

------------------
-----------------
----------------

Section 2: Mining, Fracking & Tar Sands

---------------
-----------------
-------------------

-----------------------------


Illegal Gold Mining Causes ‘Devastating’ Mercury Pollution In Amazon Rainforest, Study Says

Jan 28, 2022

https://www.forbes.com/sites/zacharysmith/2022/01/28/illegal-gold-mining-causes-devastating-mercury-pollution-in-amazon-rainforest-study-says/?sh=4c28ff0a521d

 

---------------

Illegal gold mining causing mercury contamination in indigenous groups

7 July 2016

https://news.mongabay.com/2016/07/illegal-gold-mining-causing-mercury-contamination-in-indigenous-groups/

---------------

Gold, wood, religion: Threats to Colombia’s isolated indigenous peoples

2019

https://news.mongabay.com/2019/06/gold-wood-religion-threats-to-colombias-isolated-indigenous-peoples/

---------------

Illegal Mining, ‘Worse Than at Any Other Time,’ Threatens Amazon, Study Finds

2018

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/10/world/americas/amazon-illegal-mining.html

---------------

Blood Gold in the Brazilian Rain Forest

November 11, 2019

Indigenous people and illegal miners are engaged in a fight that may help decide the future of the planet.

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/11/11/blood-gold-in-the-brazilian-rain-forest?utm_source=pocket-newtab

--------------- 

 

Highest levels of atmospheric mercury pollution now found in Amazonian rainforest due to gold mining

January 31, 2022

https://www.markettradingessentials.com/2022/01/highest-levels-of-atmospheric-mercury-pollution-now-found-in-amazonian-rainforest-due-to-gold-mining/

 

---------------

Mercury Pollution in Amapá, Brazil: Mercury Amalgamation in Artisanal and Small-Scale Gold Mining or Land-Cover and Land-Use Changes?

2018

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acsearthspacechem.7b00089

---------------

Many Mines

https://blogs.nelson.wisc.edu/es112-309-3/mining/

---------------

Illegal Gold Miners In Brazil Destroying Amazon, Indigenous Tribes At Risk

Sep 10, 2014

https://www.forbes.com/sites/kitconews/2014/09/10/illegal-gold-miners-in-brazil-destroying-amazon-indigenous-tribes-at-risk/#56f603901fd0

---------------

 Illegal gold mines destroying Amazon rainforest: study

11.12.2018

An increase in small-scale gold mining has taken a toll on the Amazon, increasing deforestation and polluting waterways, according to a new report. Mining in protected indigenous areas has increased exponentially.







https://www.dw.com/en/illegal-gold-mines-destroying-amazon-rainforest-study/a-46671784


---------------


Bauxite mining and deforestation in Oriximina (Para), Brazil

https://ejatlas.org/conflict/bauxite-mining-and-deforestation-in-oriximina-para-brazil

---------------

Mining drives extensive deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon

2017

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-017-00557-w

---------------

Brazil: The toxic impact of bauxite mining in Oriximiná

2018

https://lab.org.uk/brazil-the-toxic-impact-of-bauxite-mining-in-oriximina/

---------------

Mercury contamination and health risk in the Brazilian Amazon: an ethical dilemma

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0036-46651996000400001

---------------

Perception of mercury contamination by Brazilian adolescents in a gold mining community: an ethnographic approach

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1413-81232009000600009

---------------

Illegal gold mining is destroying Amazon rainforest, research shows

 December 2018

'Illegal mining can kill us,' indigenous leader warns

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/gold-mining-amazon-rainforest-south-america-mercury-jair-bolsonaro-raisg-a8677996.html

---------------

 

Illegal mining surges on Yanomami indigenous land: report

 25 Mar, 2021

https://www.brecorder.com/news/40077412

 

---------------

 
How Illegal Mining Fuels Pollution and Corruption in Colombia’s Northwest

August 24, 2021

https://eng.az24saat.org/2021/08/24/how-illegal-mining-fuels-pollution-and-corruption-in-colombias-northwest/

 

---------------

An Illegal Mining 'Epidemic' Is Spreading Across the Amazon Rainforest

Dec 20, 2018

While illegal mining in the Amazon has been a problem for decades, new data shows levels that are not comparable to any other period of its history.

https://psmag.com/environment/illegal-mining-epidemic-spreads-across-the-amazon

---------------

Human Exposure to Mercury Due to Goldmining in the Tapajos River Basin, Amazon, Brazil: Speciation of Mercury in Human Hair, Blood and Urine

https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-94-011-0153-0_10

---------------

Fractional Mercury Levels in Brazilian Gold Refiners and Miners

25 Sep 2008

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.3109/15563659509020208

-----------------

Mercury management on small scale gold mining: designing a strategy for a National Action Plan in Brazil

https://wedocs.unep.org/bitstream/handle/20.500.11822/13017/Text_to_accompany_brazil_presentation.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

---------------


Brazilian Gold

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brazilian_Gold

Brazilian gold, first discovered in the late 17th century, has played an important and lasting role in shaping the social, cultural, and economic realities of eastern South America. The initial discovery of gold in the area that is modern-day Brazil led to the longest lasting gold rush in world history, bringing hundreds of thousands of non-indigenous Portuguese and slaves to the area as well as environmental destruction and pollution. The effects from mass migration to the region in the pursuit of riches are some of the biggest formative components of Brazilian culture today. However, along with the opportunity for economic prosperity that gold has offered to some, extensive mining and the processes that accompany purification of the valuable mineral have wreaked havoc on the delicate ecosystem of the Amazon, with large swaths of rainforest leveled and dangerously high levels of mercury deposited in the Amazon River. Despite the negatives, Brazilian gold is still highly sought after and mined by modern-day Brazilian "garimpieros," partly due to the recent resurgence of gold prices making the dangerous and polluting line of work highly profitable.


----------------

 

Peruvian gold rush turns pristine rainforests into heavily polluted mercury sinks

January 28, 2022

https://phys.org/news/2022-01-peruvian-gold-pristine-rainforests-heavily.html

 

----------------

Peru cracks down on illegal gold mining to save deforested Amazon area

Feb. 20, 2019

If it works, Peru would be stopping a practice that releases harmful mercury as well as drives sex trafficking and child labor in mining camps

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/peru-cracks-down-illegal-gold-mining-save-deforested-amazon-area-n973551

---------------


Elevated Mercury Concentrations in Humans of Madre de Dios, Peru

March 16, 2012

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0033305

---------------

Gold Mining in the Peruvian Amazon: Global Prices, Deforestation, and Mercury Imports

April 19, 2011

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0018875

Abstract

Many factors such as poverty, ineffective institutions and environmental regulations may prevent developing countries from managing how natural resources are extracted to meet a strong market demand. Extraction for some resources has reached such proportions that evidence is measurable from space. We present recent evidence of the global demand for a single commodity and the ecosystem destruction resulting from commodity extraction, recorded by satellites for one of the most biodiverse areas of the world. We find that since 2003, recent mining deforestation in Madre de Dios, Peru is increasing nonlinearly alongside a constant annual rate of increase in international gold price (∼18%/yr). We detect that the new pattern of mining deforestation (1915 ha/year, 2006–2009) is outpacing that of nearby settlement deforestation. We show that gold price is linked with exponential increases in Peruvian national mercury imports over time (R2 = 0.93, p = 0.04, 2003–2009). Given the past rates of increase we predict that mercury imports may more than double for 2011 (∼500 t/year). Virtually all of Peru's mercury imports are used in artisanal gold mining. Much of the mining increase is unregulated/artisanal in nature, lacking environmental impact analysis or miner education. As a result, large quantities of mercury are being released into the atmosphere, sediments and waterways. Other developing countries endowed with gold deposits are likely experiencing similar environmental destruction in response to recent record high gold prices. The increasing availability of satellite imagery ought to evoke further studies linking economic variables with land use and cover changes on the ground.

----------------


 The Other Man-Made Disaster Ravaging the Amazon

August 29, 2019






Peru’s aggressive campaign to eradicate illegal gold mining in the Amazon has yielded mixed results.

https://www.thenation.com/article/peru-la-pampa-illegal-gold-mining/


----------------


'A global crime against the environment': Shocking video shows riverbank stacked with trash and trucks dumping huge loads of waste directly into the water in Peru

17 March 2016

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3496960/A-global-crime-against-environment-Shocking-video-shows-riverbank-stacked-trash-trucks-dumping-huge-loads-waste-directly-water-Peru.html

    Environmental campaigners post video of truck dumping into Huallaga river
    Footage first shows a walk down muddy road lined with high piles of rubbish
    Campaigners claim it is contaminating river and making people in the area ill
    Demanding joint action from Peru and Brazil as river flows through both

-----------------

How a sheriff in Brazil is using satellites to stop deforestation

12 April 2019

https://news.mongabay.com/2019/04/how-a-sheriff-in-brazil-is-using-satellites-to-stop-deforestation/

------------------

These pollution-spotting satellites are just a taste of what's to come

April 4, 2019

https://www.edf.org/blog/2019/04/04/these-pollution-spotting-satellites-are-just-taste-whats-come

------------------

European space agency records Amazon air pollution

2019

https://www.ctvnews.ca/sci-tech/european-space-agency-records-amazon-air-pollution-1.4585048

----------------

Gold Mining as a Source of Mercury Exposure in the Brazilian Amazon

May 1998

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0013935198938282

Abstract

Amalgamation has been used for more than 4500 years in mining processes. Mercury has been extensively used in South America by Spanish colonizers for precious metal recovery. It is estimated that between 1550 and 1880, nearly 200,000 metric tonnes of mercury was released to the environment. During the present gold rush, Brazil is first in South America and second in the world in gold production (with 90% coming from informal mining orgarimpos). At least 2000 tonnes of mercury has been released to the environment in the present gold rush. From the mid 1980s, environmental research has been carried out in impacted Amazon rivers, later followed by human exposure studies. The river basins studied were the Tapajós, Madeira, and Negro, but also some man-made reservoirs and areas in central Brazil. The analyses mainly involved sediments, soil, air, fish, human hair, and urine. The results show high variability, perhaps related to biological diversity, biogeochemical differences in the river basins, and seasonal changes. High mercury values also occur in some areas with no known history of gold mining. The results available document a considerable impact on environmental mercury concentrations and frequent occurrence of human exposure levels that may lead to adverse health effects.


---------------

Mercury Pollution in Amapá, Brazil: Mercury Amalgamation in Artisanal and Small-Scale Gold Mining or Land-Cover and Land-Use Changes?


https://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/acsearthspacechem.7b00089


-------------------

Maternal mercury exposure and neuro-motor development in breastfed infants from Porto Velho (Amazon), Brazil.

2007

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17011234

---------------

Mercury-Free Gold mining Technologies: Possibilities for Adoption in the Guianas

https://www.cbd.int/financial/monterreytradetech/guyana-montech.pdf

---------------

Mercury-Free Gold mining Technologies:

Possibilities for Adoption in the Guianas

Prepared by Rickford Vieira

Edited by Michelet Fontaine

https://www.cbd.int/financial/monterreytradetech/guyana-montech.pdf

----------------


Blood Gold in the Brazilian Rain Forest

2019

Indigenous people and illegal miners are engaged in a fight that may help decide the future of the planet.

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/11/11/blood-gold-in-the-brazilian-rain-forest

---------------

Alarming level of mercury contamination in Amazon dolphins: illegal gold mining

October 25th 2019

https://en.mercopress.com/2019/10/25/alarming-level-of-mercury-contamination-in-amazon-dolphins-illegal-gold-mining

Amazon river dolphins are showing alarming levels of contamination mainly because of illegal panning for gold, conservationists say. Researchers measured contamination levels in 46 of these large freshwater creatures known for long, bottle-like snouts in major basins of Brazil, Bolivia, Colombia and Peru.

All of them had some degree of mercury contamination and in more than half the level was high, said Marcelo Oliveira of the Brazilian chapter of the World Wide Fund for Nature, one of several NGOs that carried out the study.

It said illegal gold panning, in which mercury is used to separate the precious metal from other minerals, is a real threat, especially in the Orinoco River flowing through Colombia and Venezuela. But gold panning is not the only problem, said Oliveira.

“Mercury exists naturally in the Amazon, but is spreading through the water because of deforestation and forest fires and slipping into the food chains of dolphins and fish,” said Oliveira.

High levels of mercury in river dolphins also pose a serious threat for nearly 20 million people who live in the Amazon region and end up eating contaminated fish.

“Mercury can remain in the food chain for up to 100 years. It is a major problem,” said Oliveira.

---------------

Mercury Speciation in Hair of Children in Three Communities of the Amazon, Brazil

2014

https://www.hindawi.com/journals/bmri/2014/945963/

---------------

The Yanomami people are contaminated by mercury used in gold digging

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kGmmgv7Q7GI

---------------

Brazil a step closer to fully mining the Amazon

September 20, 2012

A controversial project to mine Brazil’s vast indigenous territories in the Amazon, to be presented at the South American country’s Congress in October, has revived a long-dragged confrontation among authorities, environmentalists and local communities.

The bill, which aims to revoke Brazil’s indigenous groups “inalienable rights” over their lands, granted by the 1988 constitution, would allow mining in a vast area that covers nearly 13% of the country, or an area almost twice the size of Spain.

 


https://www.mining.com/brazil-a-step-closer-to-fully-mine-the-amazon-70962/

---------------

Introducing New Technologies for Abatement of Global Mercury Pollution in Latin America

https://www.ais.unwater.org/ais/aiscm/getprojectdoc.php?docid=409

---------------

Mining Giants Head to Amazon Rain Forest

Dec. 23, 2012

https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424127887324020804578150964211301692

BELEM, Brazil—Mining giants such as Brazil's Vale SA and U.K.-based Anglo American PLC are increasing efforts to extract minerals from Brazil's Amazon rain forest, a high-stakes foray into one of the world's most remote and environmentally sensitive regions.

All together, mining companies will spend some $24 billion between 2012 and 2016 to boost production of iron ore, bauxite and other metals found in the Amazon basin, according to Brazil's mining association, Ibram. Already, Brazil is attracting a fifth of all mining investment...


----------------


Mercury Mining Awaits International Control in Mexico

2017

http://www.ipsnews.net/2017/09/mercury-mining-awaits-international-control-mexico/

---------------

An Amazon community braces for "monster" gold mine

3 Apr 2017

The Volte Grande Project on the Xingu river is destined to be Brazil’s largest open-pit goldmine. But activists fear the environmental impact on indigenous communities.

https://www.univision.com/univision-news/environment/an-amazon-community-braces-for-monster-gold-mine

---------------

Mercury Exposure and Health Impacts among Individuals in the Artisanal and Small-Scale Gold Mining (ASGM) Community

https://www.who.int/ipcs/assessment/public_health/mercury_asgm.pdf?ua=1

Investigators that conducted a study in the Tapajos River basin in Amazonian Brazil diagnosed three individuals with mild Minimata disease and suspected Minimata disease in 3 other individuals.

Kidney Dysfunction

•Exposure to high levels of elemental mercury has been associated with kidney effects.
Two studies have found an association between mercury concentrations and kidney dysfunction or kidney microdamage in residents of ASGM communities.

Immunotoxicity/Autoimmune Dysfunction

•Four studies report an association between methylmercury exposure and autoimmune dysfunction in mining communities in Amazonian Brazil.

---------------

Murder warrants in Brazil dam break; death toll over 300 expected

January 29, 2019

Criminal investigation begins after mud flow devastates town downstream of mine

https://www.mercurynews.com/2019/01/29/murder-warrants-in-brazil-dam-break-death-toll-over-300-expected/

---------------

Mercury Contamination in the Madeira River, Amazon-Hg Inputs to the Environment

1989

https://www.jstor.org/stable/2388449?seq=1

---------------

Mercury levels rising in Brazil

April 2018

https://newint.org/features/2018/08/10/mercury-levels-rising-brazil



A large-scale dam in the Amazon is leading to dangerously high levels of mercury in indigenous communities, according to a new study.

Hair samples taken from residents living near Tucuruí Dam found that more than half of the 37 participants had mercury concentrations 20 times higher than that which is considered safe by the World Health Organisation.

By flooding hundreds of square miles of forest, dams cause mercury that is stored in soil and vegetation to be released into the water. These waterlogged conditions favour methanogenic bacteria, which ‘transforms inorganic mercury into organic mercury – its most toxic form,’ according to Professor Maria Elena Crespo-López, co-author of the study published in Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety.

Organic mercury accumulates in the fish that are a key part of local diets. This allows it to enter the human food chain and accrue to dangerous levels; around 80 per cent of the mercury detected was in its organic form.

‘Acute exposure to organic mercury can cause Minamata disease,’ says López. ‘[This is] a severe condition which includes, co-ordination problems, progressive visual deterioration and even paralysis.’

More than 400 hydropower dams are currently operating or under construction in the Amazon. Brazil hopes to increase hydropower capacity by 27 gigawatts by 2024.


---------------


Mercury in the Madeira River ecosystem, Rondônia, Brazil

1991

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/037811279190145L

-------------------

Assessing mercury pollution in Amazon River tributaries using a Bayesian Network approach

2018

https://www.amazoniasocioambiental.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/article_bonotto2018.pdf


----------------


Daily mercury intake in fish-eating populations in the Brazilian Amazon

05 September 2007

https://www.nature.com/articles/7500599


--------------

 Amazonian dirt roads are choking Brazil’s tropical streams

March 1, 2018

https://theconversation.com/amazonian-dirt-roads-are-choking-brazils-tropical-streams-89226

-----------------

Air Pollution in the Brazilian Road Transport and Its Environmental and Social Consequences

2014

https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/a4be/49d5edfeb92878f60c2681481783937132c5.pdf

-------------------

 Heavy agricultural machinery can damage the soil, Nordic researchers find

2011

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/05/110505083737.htm


--------------------


The Dirty Truth About Plowing

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2007/08/dirty-truth-about-plowing

--------------------


Rondônia’s Deforestation Caused by Clearing along Roads

https://lcluc.umd.edu/hotspot/rond%C3%B4nia%E2%80%99s-deforestation-caused-clearing-along-roads

-------------------

Rondonia

https://www.nytimes.com/1988/08/29/opinion/the-burning-of-rondonia.html

-------------------

Diversity of the land resources in the Amazonian State of Rondônia, Brazil

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0044-59672006000100011

--------------------

 

BBC: How illegal logging in Brazil’s Amazon turns ‘legal’

29 November 2012

https://infoamazonia.org/en/2012/11/29/bbc-how-illegal-logging-in-brazils-amazon-turns-legal/

 

--------------------

Illegal logging and cattle ranching in TI Karipuna and Jací-Paraná, Rondônia, Brazil

https://ejatlas.org/conflict/illegal-logging-and-cattle-ranching-in-ti-karipuna-and-jaci-parana-rondonia-brazil

-----------------


Shooting Itself in the Foot, Brazil Spreads Concrete Through the Rainforest

2009

http://www.coha.org/shooting-itself-in-the-foot-brazil-spreads-concrete-through-the-rainforest/

------------------

The Putumayo-Içá River

http://amazonwaters.org/basins/great-sub-basins/putumayo-ica/

The Putumayo-Içá is the only river in the Amazon Basin that drains territory in Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Brazil. The Putumayo River demarcates most of the Peruvian-Colombian border.

Uses & Impacts

Overall, the Putumayo-Içá Basin is sparsely populated and most development is in the Andean headwaters. The foothill region and adjacent lowlands have been extensively deforested for agriculture. The most developed area is centered on the Orito oil fields and the trans-Andino pipeline transports crude oil from the fields to Tumaco on the Colombian coast. In addition, a secondary pipeline from Ecuador connects to the trans-Andino pipeline at Orito. Rebels repeatedly bombed the pipeline in past decades during Colombia’s internal armed conflict, but no major pollution was reported due to these incidents. Because the petroleum business is privatized in Colombia, oil exploration and drilling is expected to intensify in the Putumayo Basin, especially as insurgencies are reconciled.


------------------


Issue: Preventing soil degradation and erosion

2015

http://cgsmun.gr/wp-content/uploads/2015/10th/Study_Guides/EC1_2_BvD.pdf

-----------------

 Soil Erosion and Conservation in Brazil

http://www.anuario.igeo.ufrj.br/2014_1/2014_1_81_91.pdf

Abstract

Brazil covers 8,547,403 km2 and is divided into five regions (Northern, North Western, Central Western, South Eastern  and  Southern).  The  diversity  of  climate,  geology,  topography,  biota  and  human  activities  have  contributed  to  the considerable diversity of soil types and thus soil erosion problems. National soils can be classified into 12  classes. These  are:  Oxisols  (38.7%),  Alfisols  (20.0%),  Inceptisols  (2.7%),  Mollisols  (0.5%),  Spodosols  (1.6%),  Gleysols (3.7%), Aridisols (2.7%), Entisols (14.5%), Vertisols (2.0%), Ultisols (1.8%), Plinthosols (6%) and Alisols (4.3%). The erodibility of these Soil Orders is reviewed and is mainly related to soil texture. Sands and loamy sands are especially erodible. Soil erosion patterns are complex, being influenced by rainfall erosivity, soil erodibility, topography, land use and management characteristics. Urban areas have specific erosion problems and there are illustrated using a case study from São Luis (north-east Brazil). Soil erosion rates can be excessive, in some cases exceeding 100 tonnes per hectare per year. Particularly serious soil erosion is associated with six regions. These are north-western Paraná State; the Central Plateau, in the Centre Western Region; Western São Paulo State; the Paraíba do Sul middle drainage basin, in Rio de Janeiro  State;  Campanha  Gaúcha  in  Rio  Grande  do  Sul  State  and  Triângulo  Mineiro,  in  western  Minas  Gerais  State.  Examples of effective soil conservation are presented, using case studies from both Paraná and Santa Catarina States. Integrated management of drainage basins offers a promising way forward for effective soil conservation in Brazil.Keywords: Soil erosion; soil conservation; soil mapping

---------------------

Diagnosis of the Accelerated Soil Erosion in São Paulo State (Brazil) by the Soil Lifetime Index Methodology

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-06832016000100552

------------------------


Soil Erosion Washes Away $8 Billion Annually

May 21, 2019

https://www.forbes.com/sites/linhanhcat/2019/05/21/soil-erosion-washes-away-8-billion/#5313a5b85b6c


------------------------

Water Erosion in Brazil and in the World: A Brief Review

http://www.academicstar.us/UploadFile/Picture/2015-7/2015740309583.pdf

------------------------

 Third of Earth's soil is acutely degraded due to agriculture

2017

Fertile soil is being lost at rate of 24bn tonnes a year through intensive farming as demand for food increases, says UN-backed study

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/sep/12/third-of-earths-soil-acutely-degraded-due-to-agriculture-study

------------------------

Soils are endangered, but the degradation can be rolled back

Population growth, industrialization and climate change threaten soil health

http://www.fao.org/news/story/en/item/357059/icode/

---------------------


Restoring Soil Quality to Mitigate Soil Degradation

2015

https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/7/5/5875/htm

---------------------

11 ways to damage soil versus 11 ways to build it

May 03, 2017

https://www.farmprogress.com/soil-health/11-ways-damage-soil-versus-11-ways-build-it

-----------------

Land Use and Seasonal Effects on the Soil Microbiome of a Brazilian Dry Forest

2019

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6461016/

----------------------

Soil loss, soil degradation and rehabilitation in a degraded land area in Guarapuava (Brazil)

2010

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/ldr.1052

---------------------


Natural Potential for Erosion  for Brazilian Territory

http://cdn.intechweb.org/pdfs/23108.pdf

---------------------

 The impact of glyphosate on soil health

https://www.soilassociation.org/media/7202/glyphosate-and-soil-health-full-report.pdf


---------------------


Soil Degradation Threatens Nutrition in Latin America

http://www.ipsnews.net/2016/06/soil-degradation-threatens-nutrition-in-latin-america/

-----------------

Soil communities threatened by destruction, instability of Amazon forests

May 24, 2019

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/05/190524130239.htm

-----------------

Computation of Lake or Reservoir Sedimentation in Terms of Soil Erosion

https://www.intechopen.com/books/sediment-transport-in-aquatic-environments/computation-of-lake-or-reservoir-sedimentation-in-terms-of-soil-erosion

-----------------

Orinoco Belt

The Orinoco Belt is a territory in the southern strip of the eastern Orinoco River Basin in Venezuela which overlies the world's largest deposits of petroleum. Its local Spanish name is Faja Petrolífera del Orinoco (Orinoco Petroleum Belt).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orinoco_Belt

-----------------


Oil Spills in Brazil and North Dakota

NFK Editors - November 4, 2019

https://newsforkids.net/articles/2019/11/04/oil-spills-in-brazil-and-north-dakota/

-----------------

Environmental impact of the largest petroleum terminal in SE Brazil: A multiproxy analysis based on sediment geochemistry and living benthic foraminifera

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0191446

----------------

Characterization of Acidic Compounds in Brazilian Tar Sand Bitumens by LTQ Orbitrap XL: Assessing Biodegradation Using Petroleomics

2017

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-50532017000500848

-----------------

Tar sandstones in the Paraná Basin of Brazil: structural and magmatic controls of hydrocarbon charge

2005

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0264817205000218

-----------------


JPMorgan Facing A New Environmental Fight Over Tar Sands Funding

2017

The bank is the target of a new campaign by a well-funded advocacy group with a record of forcing policy change.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/jpmorgan-tar-sands_n_59ca6944e4b01cc57ff5a982

-----------------


Mobil's Chief Executive Warned of CO2 From Oil Sands Fuels in 1982

2016

Concerned that carbon-heavy fuels would speed up global warming, the CEO put his trust in the United Nations and federal scientists to point the way to solutions.

https://insideclimatenews.org/news/09052016/mobil-oil-chief-executive-warned-climate-change-co2-oil-sands-fuels-tar-sands-1982-exxon

----------------

More banks bailing on tar sands pipelines

2017

#DivestTheGlobe, the Indigenous-led campaign that has grown out of resistance to the Dakota Access Pipeline, claims another win in widening boycott of pipeline financiers

https://nowtoronto.com/news/banks-bailing-on-tar-sands-pipelines/

-----------------

Seven oil multinationals that are pulling out of Canada’s tar sands

March 14, 2017

https://environmentaldefence.ca/2017/03/14/seven-oil-multinationals-pulling-canadas-tar-sands/

-----------------

BP buys into offshore Brazil with $7bn Devon Energy deal

BP is finally joining the rush for Brazil's deepwater oil reserves with a $7bn (£4.7bn) deal with Devon Energy to buy assets in Brazil, Azerbaijan and the Gulf of Mexico.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/bp-buys-into-offshore-brazil-with-7bn-devon-energy-deal-1920167.html

-----------------

Canadian mining doing serious environmental harm, the IACHR is told

May 2014

Operations in nine Latin American countries continue with explicit Canadian state support, says report

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/andes-to-the-amazon/2014/may/14/canadian-mining-serious-environmental-harm-iachr

-----------------

Quit Chastising Brazil, Canada. You’re a Climate Killer, Too

30 Aug 2019

Some want global intervention against ‘rogue’ climate states. That may not end so well for us.

https://thetyee.ca/Opinion/2019/08/30/Quit-Chastising-Brazil-Canada/

-----------------

Tar Sands Threaten World’s Largest Boreal Forest

2014

https://www.wri.org/blog/2014/07/tar-sands-threaten-world-s-largest-boreal-forest

-----------------

Canada To Add Nearly 25% Of New Global Crude Oil Supply

Oct 9, 2019

https://www.forbes.com/sites/judeclemente/2019/10/09/canada-to-add-nearly-25-of-new-global-crude-oil-supply/#5aaedff97ce5

-----------------

Brazil Crude Oil Production by Year

https://www.indexmundi.com/energy/?country=br&product=oil&graph=production

-----------------

Statoil to Sell 40% of Offshore Brazil Oil Field to Sinochem for $3B Cash

21 May 2010

https://www.greencarcongress.com/2010/05/peregrino-20100521.html

-----------------

Pátria Investimentos, Shell and Mitsubishi Hitachi Power Systems announce partnership in thermal power plant

Joint venture will invest US$700 million in pioneering energy project

São Paulo, February 12, 2019 - Pátria Investimentos, the Shell Group and Mitsubishi Hitachi Power Systems (MHPS) have announced the construction and operation of the gas-based thermal power plant Marlim Azul in Macaé, Rio de Janeiro. The partnership envisages construction of the plant and the sale of energy generated by it in both the captive market, through the auction held by the Brazilian electricity regulatory agency ANEEL in December 2017, and in the free energy contracting environment (ACL), through Shell Energy Brasil S.A. Pátria Investimentos will have a 50.1% stake in the project, while the Shell Group will have 29.9% and MHPS 20%.

https://amer.mhps.com/p%C3%A1tria-investimentos%2C-shell-and-mitsubishi-hitachi-power-systems-announce-partnership-in-thermal-pow.html

-----------------

Squeezing More Oil Out of the Ground

2009

Amid warnings of a possible peak for oil production, new technologies offer options to extract every last possible drop

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/squeezing-more-oil-edit-this/

-----------------

Brazil does a U-turn on fracking. Indigenous lands protected from oil and gas exploration

Mar 1, 2016

https://www.lifegate.com/people/news/brazil-fracking-stopped-amazon-jurua-valley

-----------------

Fighting Fracking in Brazil: Images From an Ongoing Struggle

Feb. 10, 2016

https://www.ecowatch.com/fighting-fracking-in-brazil-images-from-an-ongoing-struggle-1882171198.html

-----------------

Amazon Fracking Scheme Encounters Stiff Resistance in Brazil

October 21, 2015

https://amazonwatch.org/news/2015/1021-amazon-fracking-scheme-encounters-stiff-resistance-in-brazil

-----------------

7 million people in South Brazil are about to leave oil and shale gas on the ground

2019

https://naofrackingbrasil.com.br/2019/07/17/7-million-people-in-south-brazil-are-about-to-leave-oil-and-shale-gas-on-the-ground/

-----------------

Fracktivists ‘win’ as Brazil shale gas auction flops

09/10/2015

https://www.climatechangenews.com/2015/10/09/fracktivists-win-as-brazil-shale-gas-auction-flops/

-----------------

Brazil debates for a federal law to ban Fracking in the whole country

2019

https://naofrackingbrasil.com.br/2019/08/13/federal-law-ban-fracking-brazil/

-----------------

Perspectives for use of hydraulic fracturing in oil and gas production

2014

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0370-44672014000400004

-----------------

Ecopetrol to spend $500 million on fracking over three years: CEO

March 5, 2019

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-ecopetrol-ceo/ecopetrol-to-spend-500-million-on-fracking-over-three-years-ceo-idUSKCN1QM2PA

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Colombia’s state-run oil company Ecopetrol SA is looking to spend $500 million in exploring unconventional deposits over the next three years, its chief executive said on Tuesday, starting with pilot programs in the Magdalena Medio region.

-----------------

Colombia's fracking boom risks deepening environmental conflicts

7 April 2017

https://waronwant.org/media/colombias-fracking-boom-risks-deepening-environmental-conflicts

Information from Colombia’s National Hydrocarbons Agency shows that at least forty-three new fracking concessions have been handed out to multinational companies including Exxon Mobil, ConocoPhillips and Drummond.

These concessions affect over three hundred municipalities, in the departments of Cesar, Santander, Boyacá, Cundinamarca and Tolima.

-----------------

 

Colombia environmental authority approves first fracking pilot project

2022

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/colombia-environmental-authority-approves-first-fracking-pilot-project/ar-AAVAlWj

 

-----------------

Fracking is thirsty technology – a look at Latin America

20 May 2016

https://energytransition.org/2016/05/fracking-is-thirsty-technology-a-look-at-latin-america/

The state of Fracking in Latin America

We have reason to worry because fracking is expanding rapidly throughout Latin America. The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) puts Argentina in second, Mexico in sixth and Brazil in tenth place in the world for technically recoverable shale gas reserves, based on its analysis of 42 countries.

Argentina is considered the Latin American fracking capital number one because of its numerous wells in the Neuquén Basin. This basin has more than 801.5 trillion cubic feet of wet shale gas, more than any country in the world aside from China. Just in 2015, the fracking technology was used in Argentina to drill into more than 1,000 shale gas reserves. In Mexico, meanwhile, almost one thousand wells are being fracked in 11 of the 32 Mexican states. In other Latin American countries, such as Bolivia, Colombia, Venezuela, Paraguay, Uruguay, Chile and Brazil, shale reserves have already been mapped out and initial exploration activities have begun.

As fracking is expanding in Latin America opposition to it is growing. In Brazil, organizations, researchers and activists are keeping up a constant fight against it. Last December, a federal Brazilian judge in the city of Cruzeiro do Sul, ordered the cancellation of all oil and gas exploration activities in the Amazon´s Jurúa Valley, including fracking. The judge’s decision was based on the social and environmental risks that these activities had had on the lives of the indigenous communities of the Juruá Valley (some of these communities are among the last fully remote tribes on earth) and the local ecosystems. In Mexico, the Mexican Alliance Against Fracking has carried out a number of activities under the campaign “Say no to fracking in Mexico!” A part of this campaign is a video where Mexican celebrities explain what fracking is and alert to its devastating consequences. In Argentina, several organizations have joined forces with the Cultural and Artistic Movement Against Fracking to appeal to the “precautionary principle” when it comes to fracking, i.e the need to prove that the technology is safe before engaging in it. Recently, a coalition of anti-fracking movements across Latin America called the Latin American Alliance Against Fracking has been set up to bundle anti fracking activities in international settings, such as the international climate negotiations.

One of the greatest concerns in Latin America is making sure clean water is available. In Argentina in particular, civil society is concerned about the risk of drilling into the Guaraní Aquifer, which would contaminate and destroy it. The Guarani aquifer is the largest groundwater resource in the world (45,000 km3 of water) that provides water to Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. In Mexico, the discussion is about water and contamination conflicts that fracking causes with the agricultural sector. Here, more than 50 percent of all shale resources are in areas that are already experiencing severe water shortages (according to a recent study by the World Resources Institute).

In conclusion, the debate on fracking should not be limited to productivity and gains, but should include discussions on whether increased productivity could ultimately be a self-defeating prophecy when weighed against securing water supply, especially in already water stressed regions and highly vulnerable ecosystems.

-----------------

Brazil and Mexico: Opposite political systems in 2018 and the outlook for the respective oil and gas industries

12 July 2019

https://ihsmarkit.com/research-analysis/brazil-and-mexico-opposite-political-systems-oil-gas.html

-----------------

The Brazilian Network for Shale Gas  The View of Cenpetro(IEE-USP)

2015

http://www.fapesp.br/eventos/2015/02/nerc/Colombo_Tassinari.pdf

-----------------

What a Mammoth Oil Auction Means for Brazil’s Economy

November 5, 2019

Fourteen firms have been approved to participate in the auction, including ExxonMobil, BP, Royal Dutch Shell, China’s CNOOC, and Qatar Petroleum. In a televised auction, the bidders will present percentages of their profits, measured in oil production, that they’re willing to give to the government in exchange for drilling rights off the coast. Contracts will go to the highest bidders.

https://www.americasquarterly.org/content/what-mammoth-oil-auction-means-brazils-economy

-----------------

Fracking Expands in Latin America, Threatening to Contaminate World’s Third-Largest Aquifer

December 6, 2015

https://truthout.org/articles/fracking-expands-in-latin-america-threatening-to-contaminate-world-s-third-largest-aquifer/

One of the greatest current fracking threats in South America is located in the Entre Ríos region of Argentina and the neighboring area of Uruguay in the Paraná Chaco, where the extraction of shale oil and shale gas is planned. According to Roberto Orchandio, an engineer and former oil industry employee in the United States and Argentina, contaminated water poses a serious danger. “In this region, the Guaraní Aquifer can be found, which is the third-largest in the world and holds 20 percent of South America’s water, spanning an area that includes southern Brazil and part of Paraguay, Argentina and Uruguay,” Orchandio told Truthout. “So, we are concerned that if they have to drill into the aquifer, it will be contaminated and therefore destroyed. We have to weigh up if this is worthwhile.”

“Contaminated water is a huge problem. In some places it will be a disaster, like in the north of Mexico where there isn’t any water and wasting it is illogical, because they are places where people won’t be able to live,” Orchandio said. “Every new well has a water leak rate of at least 6 percent, caused by a combination of poorly constructed foundations, pipeline accidents and corrosion.”

According to Argentina’s Observatorio Petrolero Sur, an organization that advocates for sustainable energy consumption and production, less than half of the water used is recovered. This contaminated residual water is placed in water tanks, where exposure to the open air causes the chemical compounds to evaporate. The contaminated water is sometimes reinjected into other wells.

Observatorio Petrolero Sur has documented that within the first days or weeks of fracking in a region, a significant quantity of the water used in fracking returns to the surface, after being injected into rocks under great pressure and causing fracturing. Orchandio points out that large volumes of methane are also released. “Between 0.6 and 3.2 percent of an unconventional well’s total production – be that one barrel or millions of barrels – is emitted as methane gas during the extraction process, along with the flowback fluid (the water mixed with the chemicals),” he told Truthout. “Methane has a greenhouse gas effect that is 25 times more potent than that of carbon dioxide.”

Cravioto describes the exploitation of the land for fracking as “territorial dispossession,” noting its disproportionate impact on Latin America’s Indigenous population. “In Mexico, Indigenous peoples and campesinos [peasant farmers] have been hardest hit,” he said. “Their ancestral lands are being destroyed, those lands where their history, traditions and knowledge are stored. Entire ecosystems, and superficial and subterranean aquifers are being destroyed.”

Orchandio expressed fear that Latin America may follow in the footsteps of the United States, where fracking has rapidly spread, impacting human and environmental health. In the US, lawmakers have often worked to accommodate the plans of corporations – even in the face of considerable resistance by their constituents.

-----------------

Activists Follow the Money Fueling the Amazon Fires

September 10, 2019

Protesters around the world are singling out the bad actors profiting off deforestation

https://amazonwatch.org/news/2019/0910-activists-follow-the-money-fueling-the-amazon-fires

-----------------

Keep the Oil in the Ground

According to the world's scientists at least two-thirds of all fossil fuels must remain in the ground if we are to the kind of temperature rise that will lead to catastrophic climate collapse. If we know we need to keep oil in the ground, why are we looking for more, especially in places like the Amazon rainforest? Join us in calling for the end to drilling and justice for indigenous communities in the Amazon!

https://amazonwatch.org/work/keep-the-oil-in-the-ground




----------------------------

----------------------
-------------------
-----------------

Section 3: Tectonic Plates

-----------------
-------------------
----------------------

----------------------------


Tectonic history of the Andes and Subandean zones: Implications for the development of the Amazon drainage basin

January 2010

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/239526415_Tectonic_history_of_the_Andes_and_Subandean_zones_Implications_for_the_development_of_the_Amazon_drainage_basin

-----------------

Two stage tectonic history of the SW Amazon craton in the late Mesoproterozoic: identifying a cryptic suture zone

2004

http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.538.3371&rep=rep1&type=pdf

-----------------

Amazonian Craton

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazonian_Craton

 


Approximate location of Mesoproterozoic (older than 1.3 Ga) cratons in South America and Africa. The São Luís and the Luis Alves cratonic fragments (Brazil) are shown, but the Arequipa–Antofalla Craton, the Sahara Craton and some minor African cratons are not. Other versions describe the Guiana Shield separated from the Amazonian Shield by a depression.

-----------------

 Why the earth shakes in Brazil

 May 2013

Seismologists propose a new explanation for earthquakes in Brazil

https://revistapesquisa.fapesp.br/en/why-the-earth-shakes-in-brazil-2/

-----------------

On the footprints of a major Brazilian Amazon earthquake

2014

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0001-37652014000301115

----------------

Lateral variation of crustal properties from aerogeophysical data in northern Brazil

https://library.seg.org/doi/abs/10.1190/geo2016-0206.1

-----------------

Upper mantle S  velocity structure of central and western South America

https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2001JB000338

-----------------

Stress orientations in Brazilian sedimentary basins from breakout analysis: implications for force models in the South American plate

https://academic.oup.com/gji/article/130/1/112/864031

-----------------

Geophysical structures and tectonic evolution of the southern Guyana shield, Brazil

2014

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0895981114000170

-----------------

Humans, Lakes, and Plate Tectonics in the Amazon Basin

http://retosterricolas.blogspot.com/2013/04/humans-lakes-and-plate-tectonics-in.html

-----------------

Archean crust and metallogenic zones in the Amazonian Craton sensed by satellite gravity data

2019

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6385487/

-----------------

The changing course of the Amazon River in the Neogene: center stage for Neotropical diversification

Oct 18, 2018

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1679-62252018000300306

ABSTRACT

We review geological evidence on the origin of the modern transcontinental Amazon River, and the paleogeographic history of riverine connections among the principal sedimentary basins of northern South America through the Neogene. Data are reviewed from new geochronological datasets using radiogenic and stable isotopes, and from traditional geochronological methods, including sedimentology, structural mapping, sonic and seismic logging, and biostratigraphy. The modern Amazon River and the continental-scale Amazon drainage basin were assembled during the late Miocene and Pliocene, via some of the largest purported river capture events in Earth history. Andean sediments are first recorded in the Amazon Fan at about 10.1-9.4 Ma, with a large increase in sedimentation at about 4.5 Ma. The transcontinental Amazon River therefore formed over a period of about 4.9-5.6 million years, by means of several river capture events. The origins of the modern Amazon River are hypothesized to be linked with that of mega-wetland landscapes of tropical South America (e.g. várzeas, pantanals, seasonally flooded savannahs). Mega-wetlands have persisted over about 10% northern South America under different configurations for >15 million years. Although the paleogeographic reconstructions presented are simplistic and coarse-grained, they are offered to inspire the collection and analysis of new sedimentological and geochronological datasets.


------------------------------

NASA Explores Earth's Magnetic 'Dent'

Aug 17, 2020

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qpdQcw_52iM

------------------------------

 Magnetic anomaly

August 20, 2020

https://themostbeautifulworld.com/blog/magnetic-anomaly

------------------------------


------------------------------
---------------------
-------------------
------------------

Section 4: Methane, Carbon, Nitrogen & Greenhouse gasses

------------------
-------------------
---------------------
-----------------------------





------------------------------

 Amazon trees are major source of methane emissions

12/12/17

https://www.scidev.net/global/biodiversity/news/amazon-trees-are-major-source-of-methane-emissions.html

-----------------

Trees release flammable methane—here's what that means for climate

March 25, 2019

There are more reasons than ever to conserve forests, but the surprising role of trees as a methane source adds a complication.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/2019/03/trees-release-methane-what-it-means-climate-change/

-----------------

Guest post: Trees are the dominant source of methane emissions in Amazon wetlands

4 December 2017

https://www.carbonbrief.org/guest-post-trees-are-the-dominant-source-of-methane-emissions-in-amazon-wetlands

-----------------

Amazon floodplain trees emit as much methane as all Earth's oceans combined

December 13, 2017

https://phys.org/news/2017-12-amazon-floodplain-trees-emit-methane.html


Environmental scientists from The Open University (OU) have discovered that trees growing in the Amazon floodplains surrounding the Amazon River emit as much methane (CH4) into the atmosphere as all of the world's oceans. These trees growing in seasonal wetland areas of the Amazon contribute between 15.1 and 21.2 million tonnes of CH4 to the atmosphere every year, comparable to 18 million tonnes from the oceans, or 16 – 27 million tonnes from Arctic tundra wetlands.

Conducted in collaboration with academics from the University Federal of Rio de Janeiro, the Universities of Leeds, Linköping, British Columbia, and other partners, the research measured the gas emissions from the trunks of over 2,300 Amazonian floodplain trees. It found that the trees, which act as chimneys, funnelling the methane produced in the soil, are the source of the largest diffusive emissions ever recorded in wetlands.

Co-author of the paper and a lead investigator of the research is Professor of Global Change Ecology, Vincent Gauci; he said:

"Methane is around 34 times more powerful than carbon dioxide at trapping heat in the atmosphere so it is really important to understand where this gas comes from in both natural ecosystems and from human activity.

"Great swathes of the Amazon become flooded forest for a large part of the year, which are ideal conditions for the production of methane. However, methane emissions measured from the water surface over the last few decades didn't add up to what satellites and models were suggesting was the real amount of methane coming out of the Amazon. We have discovered that large emissions from trees, sometimes flooded by up to 10 meters, fill this gap."

Whilst the process is natural, these emissions could respond to environmental change, such as the programme of dam building across the Amazon basin. However, co-author and Research Fellow at Lancaster University, Sunitha Pangala, who carried out the research whilst a post-doctoral researcher at the OU, warns that the Amazon floodplains are not the source of greenhouse gases we should be concerned about:

"We are not, in any way, saying that trees are bad for the environment – this is how natural forests function. We now have a fuller picture of the sources of greenhouse gas emissions and this could help to inform how environmental change can have a knock on effect on the tropical wetland methane source.

"Emissions from these Amazon trees are still only half as much as those created by humans in the form of landfill and waste, so we should be targeting reductions in human emissions," continued Pangala. "This also includes the dairy and meat industries, and fossil fuel emissions, such as from fracking."

The research, "Large emissions from floodplain trees close the Amazon methane budget," is published yesterday in the journal Nature.

-----------------

Amazon Rainforest Generates more Methane than initially thought

Dec 2017

https://brazilian.report/money/2017/12/28/amazon-rainforest-methane-greenhouse/

-----------------

Large emissions from floodplain trees close the Amazon methane budget.

2017

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29211724

-----------------

Methane Flux in the Amazon

Wetlands are the single largest global source of atmospheric methane (CH4), a potent greenhouse gas. Seasonally inundated tropical forests are estimated to be the main contributors of biologenic emissions of this gas. This project aims to integrate microbial and tree genetic characteristics to measure and understand methane emissions at the heart of the Amazon rainforest.

https://jgi.doe.gov/csp-2019-methane-flux-amazon/

------------------

Scientists solve mystery of missing methane source in Amazon Rainforest

December 4, 2017

https://ounews.co/science-mct/science-environment/scientists-solve-mystery-missing-methane-source-amazon-rainforest/

------------------

Tracking Nighttime Methane Signals at the Amazon Tall Tower Observatory (ATTO).

https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2018AGUFM.B33A..04B/abstract

------------------

Airborne measurements indicate large methane emissions from the eastern Amazon basin

2007

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/238582067_Airborne_measurements_indicate_large_methane_emissions_from_the_eastern_Amazon_basin

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Are South America's Tropical Wetlands Methane Sinks or Sources? New Study Offers Clues

November 6, 2017

https://nicholas.duke.edu/news/are-south-americas-tropical-wetlands-methane-sinks-or-sources-new-study-offers-clues

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Methane emissions from floodplains in the Amazon Basin:challenges in developing a process-based model for globalapplications

2014

https://www.biogeosciences.net/11/1519/2014/bg-11-1519-2014.pdf

------------------

High organic carbonburial but high potential for methane ebullitionin the sediments of an Amazonian reservoir

2019

https://www.biogeosciences-discuss.net/bg-2019-246/bg-2019-246.pdf

------------------

Methane Emissions from Pantanal, South America, during the Low Water Season: Toward More Comprehensive Sampling

2010

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es1005048

------------------

Methane emissions partially offset “blue carbon” burial in mangroves

13 Jun 2018

https://advances.sciencemag.org/content/4/6/eaao4985

------------------

Disentangling Drought and Nutrient Effects on Soil Carbon Dioxide and Methane Fluxes in a Tropical Forest

13 November 2019

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenvs.2019.00180/full

-----------------

Deforestation and methane release from termites in Amazonia

1996

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0045653596002019

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4,000-year-old termite mounds found in Brazil are visible from space

Date: November 20, 2018

Source: Cell Press

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/11/181120073648.htm

Summary:
    Researchers have found that a vast array of regularly spaced, still-inhabited termite mounds in northeastern Brazil--covering an area the size of Great Britain -- are up to about 4,000 years old.

-------------------


The Influence of Amazon Deforestation in Brazil on the Soil Microbial Community Composition and Active Methane-Cycling

https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations_2/1595/

------------------

Trump Loosens Methane Standards In A Win For Oil & Gas Industry

Sep 4, 2019

https://www.forbes.com/sites/arielcohen/2019/09/04/trump-loosens-methane-standards-in-a-win-for-oil-gas-industry/#6257a82840c1

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Green Leaf Volatile Emissions during High Temperature and Drought Stress in a Central Amazon Rainforest

2015

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4844409/

--------------------

Evolution of nitrogen cycling in regrowing Amazonian rainforest

2019

Abstract

Extensive regions of tropical forests are subjected to high rates of deforestation and forest regrowth and both are strongly affect soil nutrient cycling. Nitrogen (N) dynamics changes during forest regrowth and the recovery of forests and functioning similar to pristine conditions depends on sufficient N availability. We show that, in a chronosequence of Amazonian forests, gross nitrification and, as a result, nitrate-to-ammonium (NO3−: NH4+) ratio were lower in all stages of regrowing forests (10 to 40 years) compared to pristine forest. This indicates the evolution of a more conservative and closed N cycle with reduced risk for N leaking out of the ecosystem in regrowing forests. Furthermore, our results indicate that mineralization and nitrification are decoupled in young regrowing forests (10 years), such as that high gross mineralization is accompanied by low gross nitrification, demonstrating a closed N cycle that at the same time maintains N supply for forest regrowth. We conclude that the status of gross nitrification in disturbed soil is a key process to understand the mechanisms of and time needed for tropical forest recovery.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-43963-4

--------------------------

Tributaries of the Amazon River


07/01/2015


https://www.southernexplorations.com/tributaries-amazon-river


Amazon White Rivers and Black Rivers


The river basin has two fresh water systems, whitewater (or varzea) and blackwater (or igapo), so named for the color of their water which varies according to geology and chemical composition.


People see photos of the murky Amazon and think pollution when what they are actually seeing is sediment. The Amazon's whitewater tributaries originate in the Andes where nutrient-rich sediments wash away.  The churning of sediment makes these tributaries appear white, though most carry so much of this material that the rivers are actually milky brown in color. The Amazon whitewater tributaries are neutral to slightly acidic and periodically flood. These include the Madre de Dios, Beni, Jutai, Madeira, and Napo rivers. The Solimoes and the Amazon itself are whitewater rivers.


The blackwater tributaries are slow-moving, dark brown, very clear and very acidic, making them inhospitable to parasites, bacteria and insect larva. This is a plus for visitors since it means that mosquitoes in and around these tributaries are less of a nuisance. On the other hand, the lower diversity of trees results in a lower diversity of rainforest wildlife. This is not true of fish species. Having adapted to the conditions, they are quite diverse in these rivers and easy to see because of the water's clarity. The rainforest areas surrounding blackwater rivers are regularly inundated during flood season.


Blackwater rivers have a low pH and nutrient content because the river beds are composed of ancient rock that no longer decomposes and because tannin is leached from decaying floodplain vegetation due to almost constant flooding.  Though found elsewhere, most of the world's blackwater rivers are Amazon tributaries. Among these blackwater tributaries are the Negro and Urubu as well as the Yarapo River near Iquitos, Peru. A few Amazon tributaries are clearwater rivers, with an even lower pH than blackwater rivers. These include the Tapajos River in Brazil, the Trombetas River flowing from Venezuela and the Xingu River from the south, all east of Manaus.


The black and whitewater systems meet near Manaus, Brazil, and flow side by side for several miles described locally as "the meeting of the waters." This phenomenon makes an interesting day-trip for visitors on Amazon tours in Manaus. Southern Explorations offers many trips and tour extensions to the Amazon in Peru, Ecuador or Brazil.


----------------------


 Physical, chemical, and mineralogical attributes of a representative group of soils from the eastern Amazon region in Brazil


https://www.soil-journal.net/4/195/2018/


Abstract


Amazonian soils are heterogeneous. However, few studies have been carried out in the Amazon, mainly because of its considerable size, which complicates the collection of data and the ability to plan for the sustainable use of natural resources. In this study, the physical, chemical, and mineralogical attributes of soils in the state of Pará, Brazil, were characterized by examining the particle size, fertility, silicon extracted by sodium hydroxide, iron, and aluminum, and manganese extracted by sulfuric acid, sodium citrate-bicarbonate-dithionite, and ammonium oxalate + oxalic acid. A descriptive analysis, multivariate principal component analysis, and cluster analysis were performed. The soils had low concentrations of bioavailable P, Ca2+, Mg2+, and K and had high concentrations of Al3+, Si, and Al oxide in the Cambisols. Concentrations of Fe and Mn oxides were higher in both the Cambisols and Nitosols, which are rich in oxidic minerals. The multivariate analysis indicated an association between the organic carbon content and pH, P, Ca, Mg, and K concentrations. An additional association was observed between clay, potential acidity, and the Fe and Al oxide concentrations.


---------------------------


What makes the soil in tropical rainforests so rich?


July 12, 2013


https://wtamu.edu/~cbaird/sq/2013/07/12/what-makes-the-soil-in-tropical-rainforests-so-rich/


Actually, the soil in tropical rainforests is very poor. You would think with all that vegetation, warmth, and moisture that the soil must be very rich. But the truth is otherwise, as people who live in these regions are well aware. According to the textbook "Tropical Rainforests: Latin American Nature and Society in Transition" edited by Susan E. Place, there are several reasons for the poor soil of tropical rainforests:


    The soil is highly acidic. The roots of plants rely on an acidity difference between the roots and the soil in order to absorb nutrients. When the soil is acidic, there is little difference, and therefore little absorption of nutrients from the soil.

    The type of clay particles present in tropical rainforest soil has a poor ability to trap nutrients and stop them from washing away. Even if humans artificially add nutrients to the soil, the nutrients mostly wash away and are not absorbed by the plants.

    The high temperature and moisture of tropical rainforests cause dead organic matter in the soil to decompose more quickly than in other climates, thus releasing and losing its nutrients rapidly.

    The high volume of rain in tropical rainforests washes nutrients out of the soil more quickly than in other climates.


When farmers cut down tropical rainforests and use its soil to try to grow crops, they find little success because of the poor nature of the soil. The textbook quotes soil authority Robert Pendleton as saying,


    "In higher latitudes, and particularly in the United States, a widespread opinion prevails that such humid regions as the enormous Amazon basin, now occupied by luxuriant and apparently limitless tropical high forests, must certainly have rich soils, and hence, great potentialities for the production of food, fiber, and other agricultural crops...on the whole, the soils of the humid equatorial regions have distressingly limited possibilities for plant production... This pessimistic attitude is no longer a result of mere opinion, for in a number of widely scattered regions in the humid low latitudes agricultural scientists have been and still are seriously at work."


If the soil is so poor in tropical rain forests, how does such a dense array of shrubs and trees grow there? The answer lies above the soil. On the ground of the rain forest, there is a thick layer of quickly decaying plants and animals. Nutrients are washed by the heavy rains almost directly from the rotting surface material into the the trees without entering the soil much.


---------------------------

Some plants use hairy roots and acid to access nutrients in rock

May 22, 2019

https://www.sciencenews.org/article/some-plants-use-hairy-roots-acid-access-nutrients-rock

Fine hairs and chemicals that dissolve rocky substrates are crucial in regions with little soil




No soil? No problem. Some herbaceous shrubs living on rocky mountains in Brazil use roots equipped with fine hairs and acids to dissolve rocks and extract the key nutrient phosphorus. The discovery, published in the May Functional Ecology, helps explain how a variety of plants can survive in impoverished environments.

“While most people tend to view nutrient-poor environments as less diverse, they are actually very diverse because plants use diverse ways to get nutrients,” says coauthor Patricia de Britto Costa, a plant ecologist at the University of Campinas in Brazil.

She and other colleagues in Brazil and Australia investigated how shallow-soil regions called campos rupestres in Portuguese, or rocky grasslands, can sustain more than an estimated 5,000 plant species — 15 percent of Brazil’s vascular plant diversity — despite occupying less than 1 percent of the country’s land area. What soil there is in these regions is poor, with nearly undetectable levels of the nutrients that plants need. And some plants manage to survive on rocky patches with no soil.

Researchers used chisels and hammers to dig up the plants. “We found the roots growing into the rocks,” at least 10 centimeters deep, says coauthor Anna Abrahão, a plant ecologist now at the University of Hohenheim in Stuttgart, Germany. “The roots go deeper, and we always lose some of them.”

The root issue

Barbacenia tomentosa plants have densely packed fine hairs that grow near their root tips (left). Those hairs (seen in the scanning electron micrograph image at middle) likely secrete acids that dissolve rock to release a key nutrient. A related plant called B. macrantha has similar roots (one shown in the scanning electron micrograph image at right)



Microscopic and chemical analyses of 30 specimens of two herbaceous plant species living on quartzite rocks — Barbacenia tomentosa and B. macrantha, both of the Velloziaceae family — revealed specialized segments of densely packed hairs just behind the root tip. The roots secrete malic and citric acids, likely from the fine hairs, that dissolve rock and release phosphates that the roots then absorb to get the nutrient phosphorus. Microscopy scans suggest that the roots carve their own way into rocks, rather than growing along cracks. The scientists named these structures vellozioid roots, after the plants’ family name.

These roots, found only in these two species so far, are the first known to dissolve rocks, the team says. But the work has inspired plant physiologist Alex Valentine of the University of Stellenbosch in South Africa, who was not involved in the study. He now plans to search for such roots in Velloziaceae plants in South African mountain regions.

Home sweet home

Barbacenia tomentosa (left) and B. macrantha (middle) plants grow in rocky outcrops in Brazil. The plants have hardy roots that carve tunnels in the rock (shown in this microscope image at right, arrows) to access nutrients needed to survive.


 



Plants living in other phosphorus-poor environments around the world have evolved either cluster roots or dauciform roots, with dense root hairs and acid secretions to harvest phosphorus from poor soils and sand, but not actual rock. Vellozioid roots use the same strategy “in an entirely new way,” by “dissolving rocks and forming new sand,” Valentine says.

Quartzite rocks in Brazil’s rocky grasslands have especially low levels of phosphorus, the study found. On average, each gram of rock contains only 0.14 milligrams of the nutrient. By comparison, the lowest level found in a 2013 survey of 69 rock types worldwide was an average of 0.12 milligrams in peridotite rocks.

Further research into vellozioid roots might one day help develop more efficient crops. “If we can transfer these traits to crops,” Valentine says, “it means that crops can grow in rocky or sandy soils.”

------------------

 SOILS AND CLIMATE

http://www.fao.org/3/y5376e/y5376e06.htm

Soils

Brazil is characterized by a large diversity of soil types, resulting from the interaction of the different reliefs, climates, parent material, vegetation and associated organisms. This diversity and the consequent potential uses are reflected in the regional differences.

The North of the country comprises plains and low plateaus, with an equatorial climate, high and constant temperatures and high atmospheric humidity levels. The soils are deep, highly weathered, acidic and of low natural fertility. They are commonly saturated with exchangeable aluminum, which is toxic for most plant species. These characteristics reduce considerably the productive potential of the land, unless it is managed appropriately.

In the Northeast, the climate varies from hot and humid to hot and dry (semi-arid), with a transitional semi-humid area. In this transitional area, a large proportion of the soils are of medium to high natural fertility but most are shallow due to a low degree of weathering. A moisture deficit, sometimes associated with salinity and/or high levels of sodium, is the main factor limiting agricultural production in the Northeast.

The Brazilian Central Plateau, that is characteristic of the Center West region, is a plain formed by natural erosive processes. The predominance of a hot tropical climate with accentuated dry spells during the rainy season is very characteristic of this region. There are extensive areas of deep, well-drained soils, of low natural fertility, though easily corrected by liming and fertilization. Most of the soils in this region have favorable physical characteristics and topographical conditions that permit intensive agricultural mechanization. This is the region of Brazil where most agricultural development in grain production is occurring.

Plateaus and highland areas, with several peaks higher than 2 000 metres, characterize the Southeast region. This region has a tropical climate with hot summers in the low land and mild weather in the mountain areas. The soils are predominantly deep and usually of low natural fertility.

------------------


Chemical characteristics of rainwater at a southeastern site of Brazil

Abstract

A total of 50 rainwater samples were analyzed in order to investigate trace elements in wet precipitation of Juiz de Fora City, during February, 2010 and February, 2011. Samples were analyzed for major cations (H3O+, Na+, NH4+, K+, Mg2+ and Ca2+) and anions (NO3−, SO42−, Cl− and HCO3−), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), some trace metals (Cu2+, Zn2+, Cd2+ and Pb2+), as well as some other physicochemical aspects like pH, conductivity and redox potential. Rainwater pH mean was of 5.77 (±0.52). Cations and anions mean values ranged from 7.12 μEq L−1 (K+) to 39.6 μEq L−1 (Ca2+). Principal Component Analysis (PCA) with Varimax normalized rotation was performed, grouping the major analyzed cations and anions into different factors. Mg2+, K+, Ca2+ and HCO3− were assigned to soil contribution, Na+ and Cl− to sea–salt contribution and NO3−, SO42− and NH4+ to anthropogenic sources. Hydrogen peroxide average concentration was of 19.2 ± 17.5 μmol L−1 with higher values in summer and lower in spring and autumn, reverse case was observed for H3O+ levels. Zn2+ (7.31 ± 2.74) μg L−1 and Cu2+ (4.07 ± 0.74) μg L−1 were within the range of other studied areas, while Cd2+ and Pb2+ were below the detection limit.

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1309104215303251


--------------------------

South America’s white-sand forests: poorly known and under threat

January 2016

https://news.mongabay.com/2016/01/special-issue-of-biotropica-makes-the-case-for-protecting-south-americas-white-sand-forests/

Neotropical white-sand forests are unique rainforests found throughout tropical South America, often occurring as “habitat islands.”
  
Scientists were surprised to discover that only 23 percent of plant species in western Amazonian  white-sand forests are white-sand specialists.
  
Researchers argue that white-sand ecosystems require special protections.

-----------------

The Amazon: Nutrient-rich rainforests on useless soils

Rainforests in Brazil are burning. Their loss can never be restored. That's because these soils are not just infertile, they're the most nutrient-poor soils in the world — and they're unsuitable for agriculture.

https://www.dw.com/en/the-amazon-nutrient-rich-rainforests-on-useless-soils/a-50139632

-----------------


Terra preta

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terra_preta

Terra preta, literally "black soil" in Portuguese) is a type of very dark, fertile artificial (anthropogenic) soil found in the Amazon Basin. It is also known as "Amazonian dark earth" or "Indian black earth". In Portuguese its full name is terra preta do índio or terra preta de índio ("black soil of the Indian", "Indians' black earth"). Terra mulata ("mulatto earth") is lighter or brownish in color.


Terra preta owes its characteristic black color to its weathered charcoal content, and was made by adding a mixture of charcoal, bone, broken pottery, compost and manure to the otherwise relatively infertile Amazonian soil. A product of indigenous soil management and slash-and-char agriculture, the charcoal is stable and remains in the soil for thousands of years, binding and retaining minerals and nutrients.

Terra preta is characterized by the presence of low-temperature charcoal residues in high concentrations; of high quantities of tiny pottery shards; of organic matter such as plant residues, animal feces, fish and animal bones, and other material; and of nutrients such as nitrogen, phosphorus, calcium, zinc and manganese. Fertile soils such as terra preta show high levels of microorganic activities and other specific characteristics within particular ecosystems.

Terra preta zones are generally surrounded by terra comum ([ˈtɛhɐ koˈmũ] or [ˈtɛhɐ kuˈmũ]), or "common soil"; these are infertile soils, mainly acrisols, but also ferralsols and arenosols. Deforested arable soils in the Amazon are productive for a short period of time before their nutrients are consumed or leached away by rain or flooding. This forces farmers to migrate to an unburned area and clear it (by fire).[8][9] Terra preta is less prone to nutrient leaching because of its high concentration of charcoal, microbial life and organic matter. The combination accumulates nutrients, minerals and microorganisms and withstands leaching.

Terra preta soils were created by farming communities between 450 BCE and 950 CE. Soil depths can reach 2 meters (6.6 ft). It is reported to regenerate itself at the rate of 1 centimeter (0.4 in) per year.

--------------------------

Traditional Land Use and Shifting Cultivation

For thousands of years, and continuing today, native peoples of the Amazon basin have practiced traditional shifting cultivation, which combines farming with forested habitats. Shifting cultivation, sometimes called swidden or slash and burn, is commonly found throughout the Amazon and other tropical regions worldwide. Shifting cultivation systems are designed to adapt to the soil and climatic characteristics of the Amazon basin- low soil fertility, high precipitation, and fast leaching of nutrients.

https://globalforestatlas.yale.edu/amazon/land-use/traditional-land-use-and-shifting-cultivation

--------------------------

Human Activities Changing the Nitrogen Cycle in Brazil

2006

https://www.jstor.org/stable/20519821?seq=1

--------------------------

Nitrogen mass balance in the Brazilian Amazon: an update

Aug 2012

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842012000400007

--------------------------

Nitrogen dynamics in soils of forests and active pastures in the western Brazilian Amazon Basin

1995

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/003807179500036E

--------------------------

Long-Term Trends in Nitrogen Isotope Composition and Nitrogen Concentration in Brazilian Rainforest Trees Suggest Changes in Nitrogen Cycle

2010

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es901383g

--------------------------

The stable carbon and nitrogen isotopic composition of vegetation in tropical forests of the Amazon Basin, Brazi

January 2007

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/226713601_The_stable_carbon_and_nitrogen_isotopic_composition_of_vegetation_in_tropical_forests_of_the_Amazon_Basin_Brazil

--------------------------

Nitrogen management challenges in major watersheds of South America

2015

https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/10/6/065007

--------------------------

The Nitrogen Paradox in Tropical Forest Ecosystems

2009

https://www.nceas.ucsb.edu/~menge/pubs/2009_Hedin_etal_AREES.pdf

--------------------------

 Deep soils modify environmental consequences of increased nitrogen fertilizer use in intensifying Amazon agriculture

https://darchive.mblwhoilibrary.org/handle/1912/10570

---------------------------

Spatially explicit nitrogen and phosphorus footprinting

http://www.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:1274712/FULLTEXT01.pdf

---------------------------

Nitrogen fertilizer leaching in an Oxisol cultivatedwith sugarcane

https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/37446618.pdf

---------------------------

Pesticide Leaching and Run-off Hazard in the Ribeira de Iguape River Basin in São Paulo State, Brazil

2007

https://www.ipen.br/biblioteca/2007/12330.pdf

----------------------------

Nutrient availability and leaching in an archaeological Anthrosol and a Ferralsol of the Central Amazon basin: Fertilizer, manure and charcoal amendments

February 2003

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/226309557_Nutrient_availability_and_leaching_in_an_archaeological_Anthrosol_and_a_Ferralsol_of_the_Central_Amazon_basin_Fertilizer_manure_and_charcoal_amendments

---------------------------


Salt Leaching and Growth of Physic Nut (Jatropha curcas L.) on Oxisol under Swine Wastewater Fertigation in Southern Brazil

http://www.journalijpss.com/index.php/IJPSS/article/view/2957

----------------------------

Human activities changing the nitrogen cycle in Brazil

https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-1-4020-5517-1_4

----------------------------

Soil–Atmosphere Exchange of Nitrous Oxide, Nitric Oxide, Methane, and Carbon Dioxide in Logged and Undisturbed Forest in the Tapajos National Forest, Brazil

2005

https://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/pdf/10.1175/EI125.1

----------------------------

Deep soils modify environmental consequences of increased nitrogen fertilizer use in intensifying Amazon agriculture

07 September 2018

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-31175-1

--------------------------

Direct nitrous oxide (N2O) fluxes from soils under different land use in Brazil—a critical review

2016

https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/11/2/023001/pdf

--------------------------


Land use change and bio geochemical controls of nitrogen oxide emissions from soils in eastern Amazonia

1999

https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/1998GB900019

--------------------------

Global Biochemical Cycles

2014

Dimethyl sulfide in the Amazon rain forest

https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/2014GB004969


---------------------------

What are the Most Dangerous Greenhouse Gases?

https://rentar.com/dangerous-greenhouse-gases/

10 Most Dangerous Greenhouse Gases

1) Carbon Dioxide (CO2)
2) Methane (CH4)
3) Nitrous oxide (N2O)
4 & 5) Dichlorodifluoromethane (CCl2F2) & Chlorodifluoromethane (CHClF2)
6) Tetrafluoromethane (CF4)
7) Hexafluoroethane (C2F6)
8) Sulfur Hexafluoride (SF6)
9) Nitrogen Trifluoride (NF3)
10) Ozone (O3)
11) Water Vapor


---------------------------

10 Worst Greenhouse Gases

https://www.thoughtco.com/worst-greenhouse-gases-606789

Water Vapor
Carbon Dioxide
Methane
Nitrous Oxide
Ozone
Fluoroform or Trifluoromethane
Hexalfuoroethane
Sulfur Hexafluorid
Trichlorofluoromethane
Perfluorotributylamine and Sulfuryl Fluoride

---------------------------

Damage to the ozone layer and climate change forming feedback loop

June 24, 2019

New report finds that impacts of ozone-driven climate change span the ecosystem

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/06/190624111536.htm

----------------------------

Biomass burning in the Amazon region: Aerosol source apportionment and associated health risk assessment

2015

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1352231015303046

---------------------------

Greenhouse gas emissions from alternative futures of deforestation and agricultural management in the southern Amazon

2010

https://www.pnas.org/content/107/46/19649

---------------------------

Biomass burning emission disturbances of isoprene oxidationin a tropical forest

2017

https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/18/12715/2018/acp-18-12715-2018.pdf

---------------------------

The trouble with Brazil’s much-celebrated ethanol ‘miracle’

2010

https://grist.org/article/2010-04-13-raising-cane-the-trouble-with-brazils-much-celebrated-ethanol-mi/

----------------------------

Molecular and Isotopic Composition of Hydrate-Bound, Dissolved and Free Gases in the Amazon Deep-Sea Fan and Slope Sediments, Brazil

https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3263/9/2/73


---------------------------


Everything you need to know about climate tipping points

2017

http://blogs.edf.org/climate411/2017/11/01/everything-you-need-to-know-about-climate-tipping-points/

----------------------------

Tropical Deforestation and Climate Change

https://www.edf.org/sites/default/files/4930_TropicalDeforestation_and_ClimateChange.pdf

----------------------------

Pollution Pods at COP25 show climate change and air pollution are two sides of the same coin

3 December 2019

Immersive art installation at COP25 recreates air pollution experienced daily by millions, representing a major public health issue

https://www.who.int/news-room/detail/03-12-2019-pollution-pods-at-cop25-show-climate-change-and-air-pollution-are-two-sides-of-the-same-coin

----------------------------

 

Louis Dreyfus targets zero deforestation by end-2025
 

9 February 2022

https://www.thepoultrysite.com/news/2022/02/louis-dreyfus-targets-zero-deforestation-by-end-2025

----------------------------

Over 100 global leaders pledge to end deforestation by 2030

November 2nd, 2021

https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/international/world-news/over-100-global-leaders-pledge-to-end-deforestation-by-2030/articleshow/87477052.cms 


----------------------------

Restoring forests may be one of our most powerful weapons in fighting climate change

2019

Adding 2.2 billion acres of tree cover would capture two-thirds of man-made carbon emissions, a new study found.

https://www.vox.com/2019/7/4/20681331/climate-change-solutions-trees-deforestation-reforestation

----------------------------

World’s helium supply ‘could run out within a decade’, chemistry professor warns

2019

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/helium-supply-world-shortage-run-out-recycle-mri-scanners-deep-sea-diving-balloons-a8741081.html

----------------------------

Characterization of subaerial volcanic facies using acoustic image logs: Lithofacies and log-facies of a lava-flow deposit in the Brazilian pre-salt, deepwater of Santos Basin

January 2019

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0264817218303933

----------------------------

Hot Rocks and Oil: Are Volcanic Margins the New Frontier?

https://www.elsevier.com/__data/assets/pdf_file/0008/84887/ELS_Geofacets-Volcanic-Article_Digital_r5.pdf

----------------------------

Influence of pre-salt alignments in the post-Aptian magmatism in the Cabo Frio High and its surroundings, Santos and Campos Basins, SE Brazil: an example of non-plume-related magmatism.

http://www.mantleplumes.org/Brazil.html

----------------------------

Geologic evolution of conjugate volcanic passive margins: Pelotas Basin (Brazil) and offshore Namibia (Africa). Implication for global sea level changes

1998

https://scholarship.rice.edu/handle/1911/19338

----------------------------

Seismostratigraphy of the Ceará Plateau: Clues to Decipher the Cenozoic Evolution of Brazilian Equatorial Margin

October 2016

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2016.00090/full

-----------------------------

Brazil: volcanoes and recent earthquakes - interactive map / Volcano Discovery

https://www.volcanoesandearthquakes.com/map/Brazil


----------------------------

 Volcanoes Around The World


 

 https://www.geolsoc.org.uk/ks3/gsl/education/resources/rockcycle/page3531.html

----------------------------


Island atoll off the Atlantic coast of Brazil

Types and Severity of Threats

Tourism must continue to be monitored on Fernando de Noronha. Invasive species, includingrats, mice, and feral cats, have been a serious detriment to the islands’ native habitat (Johnson 1989). A "new", though extinct, species of rat, Noronhomys vespuccii, was described from Fernando de Noronha in 1999 (Carleton and Olson 1999). This species may have disappeared since the time of human presence on the archipelago due to the common anthropogenic causes that extirpate many vertebrate species on islands. The isolation of island ecosystems make them particularly sensitive to human pressures and the introduction of exotic species.

https://www.worldwildlife.org/ecoregions/nt0123


-----------------------------


Rio Grande Rise may have been a volcanic island

January 23, 2019

http://agencia.fapesp.br/rio-grande-rise-may-have-been-a-volcanic-island/29617/

By Elton Alisson  |  Agência FAPESP – Lava flows forced up from Earth’s mantle 80 million years ago by the separation of the African and South American tectonic plates that had begun 120 million years ago created an island like Iceland today.

The lost land of dinosaurs, forests, beaches, ravines, and plateaus the size of Wales began subsiding 40 million years ago. It is now drowned 3,000 meters under the Southwest Atlantic and 1,500 kilometers offshore Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (hence in international waters).

This hypothesis regarding the history of the Rio Grande Rise, as the oceanic ridge is known, has been reinforced by discoveries made by Brazilian and British researchers who conducted a scientific cruise to the region in late October and early November 2018 on the Royal Research Ship (RRS) Discovery.

The expedition was part of a project supported by FAPESP. The researchers are affiliated with the University of São Paulo’s Oceanographic Institute (IO-USP) in Brazil and the University of Southampton in the UK.

The aim of the project is to understand the processes underlying the formation, distribution and preservation of ferromanganese crusts – mineral deposits rich in critical metals for which there is growing demand from the electronics industry and which are vital to new low-carbon technologies. These include cobalt, used in rechargeable batteries for electric vehicles, and tellurium, used in solar power cells.

“We’re studying how these ferromanganese crusts were formed in terms of biology, geology, paleoceanography and paleoclimate,” Luigi Jovane, a professor at IO-USP and a coprincipal investigator for the project, told Agência FAPESP.

These metals and other critical materials known as e-tech elements are increasingly scarce on land. Some are highly concentrated in ferromanganese modules and crusts on the seabed. Tellurium is common on deep-ocean plateaus and seamounts, for example.

Many countries are eager to develop these mineral reserves. China, France, Germany, Norway, Japan, Russia, South Korea and the UK, among others, are on the verge of starting to mine the seabed. This activity will clearly have a significant environmental impact and cannot be considered a viable option unless it is sustainable.

“We will identify the processes that result in high-quality mineral deposits, develop a predictive model for their occurrence, and study ways of minimizing the environmental impact of their extraction,” Jovane said.

To obtain a better understanding of the processes underlying the formation and composition of these mineral deposits on the ocean floor, the researchers conducted three cruises in small deep-water basins off North Africa and Southeast Brazil.

The first cruise took place in October 2016, when RRS James Cook explored the abyssal plains of Madeira in the North Atlantic. In the second cruise, the oceanographic research ship Alpha Crucis, acquired by FAPESP for IO-USP in 2012, focused on the Rio Grande Rise in February 2018.

The Discovery sailed from the Port of Santos, São Paulo State on October 20, 2018, for the third cruise with a team of ten Brazilian and ten British researchers, returning 18 days later on November 8.

“In the third cruise, we went back to the areas studied in the second cruise in February, as these aren’t covered by the program run by the Brazilian Geological Service [CPRM] to explore cobalt-bearing crusts in the Rio Grande Rise,” Jovane said.

In 2014, the International Seabed Authority (ISA) granted Brazil 15-year rights to explore the mineral potential of 150 lots belonging to the Rio Grande Rise. CPRM must present the results to the ISA, which was established by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) to regulate mineral-related activities in the international seabed area beyond the limits of national jurisdictions.

“We set out to study areas that don’t overlap with those being explored by CPRM, in order to understand the processes that formed the Rio Grande Rise and gave it the observed morphology,” Jovane said.

-----------------------------

Waking Beasts: Underwater Volcanoes Roused by Ice Ages

February 05, 2015

https://www.livescience.com/49710-sea-level-changes-underwater-eruptions.html

-----------------------------

What is the Role of Volcanic Rocks in the Brazilian Pre-salt?

2015

https://www.earthdoc.org/content/papers/10.3997/2214-4609.201412890


Summary

Brazilian Atlantic Passive Margins Basins have registered several volcanic events, which are very well documented in the most prolific Brazilian offshore basins of Santos and Campos. Although, volcanic rocks are usually not treated as potentials reservoir in Brazil, they have become very important to Pre-Salt exploration, since volcanic rocks have been found in several Pre-salt exploration and appraisal wells. These rocks act not only as barriers for carbonate sedimentary successions but also as potential reservoirs. Several wells drilled in Pre-Salt have found volcanic with reservoir properties and significant hydrocarbon columns. However, their economic viability has not yet been fully proved at the basin scale. Thus, understanding volcanic rocks petrology and recognizing their main characteristics such as lithotypes, geometry, porosity and facies distribution can be essential for success Pre-salt exploration, appraisal and development campaigns.


-----------------------------

Advances in the Understanding of Pre-Salt Carbonate Reservoirs of Offshore Brazil and Angola from Studies of Australian Lakes.

http://rses.anu.edu.au/highlights/view.php?article=346

-----------------------------

A GEOLOGICAL AND GEOPHYSICAL STUDY OF THE SERGIPE-ALAGOAS BASIN

https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/4273993.pdf

ABSTRACT

Extensional stresses caused Africa and South America to break up about 130 Million Years. When Africa rifted away from South America, a large onshore triple junction began at about 13∞ S and propagated northward. This triple junction failed and created the Reconcavo-Tucano-Jupato rift (R-T-J), located in northeastern Brazil (north of Salvador). The extensional stress that created this rift was caused by a change in the force acting on the plate during the Aptian.

A series of offshore rifts also opened at this time, adjacent to the R-T-J rift; this series of basins are referred to as Jacuipe, Sergipe, and Alagoas (J-S-A). The basins are separated by bathymetric highs to the north and the south of the Sergipe-Alagoas basin. The Sergipe-Alagoas basin has a Bouguer gravity anomalies more negative than -35 mGal, and the other two basins have values more negative than -100 mGal; the total magnetic intensity is also about 60-80 nT higher in the Sergipe-Alagoas basin than the surrounding basins. The gravity and magnetic values in the Sergipe-Alagoas basin, when compared to the Jacuipe and the Sergipe-Alagoas basins, indicate that the depositional history and/or the formation of the Sergipe-Alagoas basin is different from the other two basins.

-----------------------------

Noronha hotspot

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noronha_hotspot

Noronha hotspot is a hypothesized hotspot in the Atlantic Ocean. It has been proposed as the candidate source for volcanism in the Fernando de Noronha archipelago of Brazil, as well as of other volcanoes also in Brazil and even the Bahamas and the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province.

The presence of a mantle plume is controversial owing to equivocal seismic tomography images of the mantle and the inconsistent age progression in the volcanoes, especially the Brazilian ones.

-----------------------------

Pleistocene alkaline rocks of Martin Vaz volcano, South Atlantic: low-degree partial melts of a CO2-metasomatized mantle plume

June 2017

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00206814.2018.1425921

-----------------------------

Iterative approach to imaging beneath volcanics: a case study in Brazil’s Santos Basin

https://www.cgg.com/technicalDocuments/cggv_0000019553.pdf

-----------------------------

Gondwana Large Igneous Provinces: plate reconstructions, volcanic basins and sill volumes

August 2017

https://sp.lyellcollection.org/content/463/1/17

-----------------------------

Seismic and Volcanic Hazards in Peru: Changing Attitudes to Disaster Mitigation

June 2005

https://www.jstor.org/stable/3451364?seq=1

-----------------------------

Volcanic Natural Resources and Volcanic Landscape Protection: An Overview

September 27th 2012

https://www.intechopen.com/books/updates-in-volcanology-new-advances-in-understanding-volcanic-systems/volcanic-natural-resources-and-volcanic-landscape-protection-an-overview

-----------------------------

Lithospheric structuration onshore-offshore of the Sergipe-Alagoas passive margin, NE Brazil, based on wide-angle seismic data

    December 2018

https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2018JSAES..88..649P/abstract

-----------------------------

Carbonate Buildups in the Pernambuco Basin, NE Brazil

2017

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0001-37652017000300841

----------------------------

The development of magmatism along the Cameroon Volcanic Line: Evidence from seismicity and seismic anisotropy

15 April 2014

https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/2013JB010583



--------------------------------------

-----------------------
-------------------
-----------------


Section 5: Sinkholes


------------------
--------------------
-----------------------

--------------------------------------


Deforestation in Rondonia (Brazil) in the nineties

Year: 2005

From collection: General archive

Cartographer: Philippe Rekacewicz, UNEP/GRID-Arendal


 

 The graph shows deforestation in Rondonia, Brazil. Brazil covers more than one quarter of the worlds tropical forests. Since 1980 the deforestation has steadily increased. Deforestration can occur as a result of the clearing of large areas for agricultural purposes, commercial logging and the construction of towns or dams. Please be advised that this graphic is likely outdated.

https://www.grida.no/resources/5448

------------------


Open Pits in the South

Oct 8, 2019

Rio Grande do Sul holds 85 percent of Brazi's coal reserves

https://brazilian.report/money/2019/10/08/coal-mining-open-pits-south-rio-grande-do-sul/

------------------

 Brazil’s Mine Disaster Reveals Its Shaky Foundation

Feb 2019

Blame pork-hungry politicians, rent-seeking regulators and corner-cutting capitalists.


https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-02-01/brazil-s-mine-disaster-reveals-its-shaky-foundation

--------------

Bus sucked into sinkhole and swept away by river, Brazil

2015

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u16iq_Umxis

--------------

WATCH: Sinkhole in Brazil swallows mother and daughter as they drive behind truck

Nov 2019

https://www.rt.com/news/474089-giant-sinkhole-swallows-car-brazil/

--------------

Mysteries Huge Hole Opens Up in Minas Gerais, Brazil

2017



http://www.geologyin.com/2017/11/mysteries-huge-hole-opens-up-in-minas.html

--------------

Video: Watch as giant sinkhole swallows up Brazilian neighbourhood house by house as terrified inhabitants look on in disbelief

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/video/news/video-1079306/CCTV-Giant-sinkhole-swallows-Brazilian-neighbourhood.html

--------------

Watch as giant sinkhole swallows up Brazilian neighbourhood house by house as terrified inhabitants look on in disbelief

2014

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2535133/Rio-slum-gets-swallowed-giant-sink-hole.html

--------------

Brazil sinkhole (Gaint Sinkholes)

https://www.cbsnews.com/pictures/giant-sinkholes/32/

---------------

SUV Goes Vertical In Massive Brazilian Sinkhole, Dog Blamed

https://www.motor1.com/news/147827/suv-massive-sinkhole-dog-blamed/

--------------

Sinkhole, mudslide swallow Brazilian port

2010

Security camera footage shows a combination sinkhole/mudslide swallowing the Brazilian port of of Chibatão.

http://failuremag.com/failure-analysis/sinkhole-mudslide-swallow-brazilian-port


-------------------------

2009 Brazilian floods and mudslides

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_Brazilian_floods_and_mudslides

-------------------------

20 photos show the aftermath of devastating flooding in Brazil that killed at least 13 people

2019

https://www.insider.com/brazil-floods-photos-deaths-news-2019-3

-------------------------

Brazil floods: 'Never seen anything like it'

14 January 2011

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-12189712

-------------------------


Floods in Brazil are a result of short-term planning

2011

Urban planning has never been part of Brazil's political agenda, so when heavy rains come cities are not able to cope

https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/poverty-matters/2011/feb/02/brazil-floods-urban-planning

-------------------------

 Brazil floods kill dozens and leave 1,000 people missing

2010

Torrential rain devastates towns and cities in Brazil's north-east, leaving as many as 97,000 people homeless

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/jun/22/brazil-floods-kill-dozens

-------------------------

At least 207 missing in Brazil floods, 741 dead

2011

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-rains/at-least-207-missing-in-brazil-floods-741-dead-idUSTRE70I68P20110120

-------------------------


Adapting to natural disaster risk: the case of Brazil's flood

2011

https://www.csmonitor.com/Business/Green-Economics/2011/0121/Adapting-to-natural-disaster-risk-the-case-of-Brazil-s-flood

-------------------------


Devastating Floods Linked to Dam Bursts in Northeast Brazil

2010

https://www.internationalrivers.org/blogs/231/devastating-floods-linked-to-dam-bursts-in-northeast-brazil

-------------------------

Flood frequency of Amazon River has increased fivefold

Date:
    September 20, 2018

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/09/180920075857.htm

-------------------

'Catastrophic' floods rising on Amazon River, say scientists

September 19, 2018

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-environment-floods/catastrophic-floods-rising-on-amazon-river-say-scientists-idUSKCN1LZ2IV

TEPIC, Mexico (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Severe flooding on the Amazon has increased amid changing weather patterns, and is harming the health and incomes of people living along the world’s biggest river, scientists said.

Analyzing more than 100 years of records measuring Amazon River levels in the port of Manaus in Brazil, they found extreme floods that occurred roughly once every 20 years in the first part of last century are now happening about every four years.

“There are catastrophic effects on the lives of the people as the drinking water gets flooded, and the houses get completely destroyed,” said Jonathan Barichivich, environmental scientist at the Universidad Austral de Chile.

“Our findings unravel the ultimate causes of the recent intensification - wet season getting wetter, and dry season getting drier - of the water cycle of the largest hydrological basin of the planet,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Droughts have also become more frequent in the past two to three decades, but the rise in flooding stood out, he noted.

In a paper published on Wednesday in the journal Science Advances, researchers from institutions including Britain’s University of Leeds said severe flooding had affected the Amazon basin nearly every year from 2009 to 2015.

They linked the increase in flooding to a combination of warmer temperatures over the Atlantic Ocean and cooler temperatures over the Pacific.

Known as the Walker circulation, this effect influences tropical weather patterns, and can partly be attributed to shifts in wind belts caused by global warming, the study said.

With temperatures in the Atlantic expected to rise more than in the Pacific, flood risks on the Amazon River will persist, the scientists predicted.

“We think that it’s going to continue for at least a decade,” said Barichivich, formerly a University of Leeds research fellow.

The paper also noted that deforestation and construction of hydro-power plants could play a role in water-level changes.

Besides disrupting cattle ranching and agriculture on the river’s flood plains, heavy flooding has health consequences for communities in Brazil, Peru and other Amazon nations, as it contaminates water and helps spread disease, said the study.

Monitoring changes in river levels is important because the Amazon basin and its tropical rainforest play a major role in the world’s hydrological and carbon systems, said Barichivich.


-------------------

The extreme 2014 flood in south-western Amazon basin: the role of tropical-subtropical South Atlantic SST gradient

2014

https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/9/12/124007



-------------------------

The Town That Floods on Purpose

2015

https://www.ozy.com/good-sht/the-town-that-floods-on-purpose/41603/

-------------------------

A Flood Submerged This Brazilian Park And The Underwater Footage Is Beautiful

2018

https://www.simplemost.com/flooded-brazil-park-video-underwater-tour/

--------------

Sinkholes: When the Earth Opens Up

https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2018/08/sinkholes-when-the-earth-opens-up/568762/

--------------


Brazil Moves to Open Indigenous Lands to Mining

Mar 2019




According to the MPF, mining companies and individuals have altogether lodged 4,073 requests with the ANM for mining-related activities on indigenous land since 1969, seemingly in preparation for an eventual land rush. The companies say that they are only registering their interest, but MPF argues that, until the required constitutional amendments have been written and approved by Congress, such requests should not even be permitted.

Brazil's indigenous peoples have clearly indicated that if the mining plan goes forward they will fight back. Most don't want mining on their land. Munduruku female warrior Maria Leuza Munduruku told Mongabay: "We've had a lot of outsiders coming onto our land to mine. Many fish disappear and the ones that remain we can't eat, as they're dirty."


https://www.ecowatch.com/brazil-mining-indigenous-lands-2631737058.html

--------------

THE LEGACY OF ABANDONED MINES

https://ec.europa.eu/environment/waste/mining/pdf/Appendix_III_to_Annex3.pdf

------------------

Isotopes in environmental research

Studies of Brazil's  Amazon  Basin  are  helping to evaluate effects  of changing  land  use  on  the  ecology and climate

https://www.iaea.org/sites/default/files/32406480508.pdf

------------------

The Global Distribution of Acidifying Wet Deposition

2002

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es020057g

Abstract

The acid−base status of precipitation is a result of a balance between acidifying compoundsmainly oxides of sulfur and nitrogenand alkaline compoundsmainly ammonia and alkaline material in windblown soil dust. We use current models of the global atmospheric distribution of such compounds to estimate the geographical distribution of pH in precipitation and of the rate of deposition of hydrogen ion or bicarbonate ion. The lowest pH valuesmainly due to high concentration of sulfuric acidoccur in eastern parts of North America, Europe, and China. A comparison with observed pH values shows fair agreement in most parts of the world. However, in some areas, e.g. western North America, southwestern Europe, and northern China the estimated pH is too low, indicating that we have underestimated the deposition flux of alkaline material, probably mainly CaCO3. Our neglect of organic acids may have contributed to an overestimate of pH especially in certain tropical areas. To illustrate the potential effects of acidifying deposition on nitrogen saturated terrestrial ecosystems we also calculate the deposition of “potential acidity” that takes into account the microbial transformation of ammonium to nitrate in such ecosystems, resulting in the release of hydrogen ion. Compared to the deposition of acidity, with its maxima over Europe, eastern North America, and southern China, the deposition of potential acidity exhibits an additional maximum in India and Bangladesh and in several other smaller hot spots where the cycling of ammonia is enhanced by a dense cattle population. To the extent that soils in these areas of high potential acidity deposition actually become nitrogen saturated a depletion of base cations and other changes in soil chemistry and biology should be expected. Potential problem areas for future soil acidification include several regions with sensitive soils in southern, southeastern, and eastern Asia as well as in central parts of South America.


------------------

Formic and acetic acid over the central Amazon region, Brazil: 1. Dry season

20 February 1988

https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/JD093iD02p01616

 Abstract

We have determined the atmospheric concentrations of formic and acetic acid in the gas phase, in aerosols, and in rain during the dry season (July–August 1985) in the Amazonia region of Brazil. At ground level the average concentrations of gas phase formic and acetic acid were 1.6±0.6 and 2.2±1.0 ppb, respectively. The diurnal behavior of both acids at ground level and their vertical distribution in the forest canopy point to the existence of vegetative sources as well as to production by chemical reactions in the atmosphere. Dry deposition of the gaseous acids appears to be a major sink. The concentrations of formic and acetic acid in the gas phase were about 2 orders of magnitude higher than concentrations of the corresponding species in the atmospheric aerosol. About 50–60% of the aerosol (total) formate and acetate were in the size fraction below 1.0 μm diameter. The highest levels of aerosol formate and acetate were found in haze layers derived from biomass burning. In precipitation, (total) formate and acetate represented about one half of the anion equivalents. This is in contrast to the atmospheric aerosol, where they contributed less than 10% of the soluble anionic equivalents. Furthermore, the precipitation contained considerable acidity (average 36 μeq L−1 during the study period), again in contrast to the aerosol, which was acid‐base neutral. The mean hydrogen ion concentration in rain was about 21–26 μeq L−1 (pH 4.6–4.7). Most of the precipitation acidity can be attributed to the organic acids, with sulfuric and nitric acids contributing only about 10–20% of the hydrogen ion concentration. Aerosol scavenging can explain only a small fraction of the observed amounts of formate and acetate in rain. The observed levels of these ions in rain are most likely the result of a combination of chemical reactions in hydrometeors and scavenging of the gaseous acids by cloud droplets.


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Endophytic fungal communities of Polygonum acuminatum and Aeschynomene fluminensis are influenced by soil mercury contamination

July 25, 2017

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0182017


Abstract

The endophytic fungal communities of Polygonum acuminatum and Aeschynomene fluminensis were examined with respect to soil mercury (Hg) contamination. Plants were collected in places with and without Hg+2 for isolation and identification of their endophytic root fungi. We evaluated frequency of colonization, number of isolates and richness, indices of diversity and similarity, functional traits (hydrolytic enzymes, siderophores, indoleacetic acid, antibiosis and metal tolerance) and growth promotion of Aeschynomene fluminensis inoculated with endophytic fungi on soil with mercury. The frequency of colonization, structure and community function, as well as the abundant distribution of taxa of endophytic fungi were influenced by mercury contamination, with higher endophytic fungi in hosts in soil with mercury. The presence or absence of mercury in the soil changes the profile of the functional characteristics of the endophytic fungal community. On the other hand, tolerance of lineages to multiple metals is not associated with contamination. A. fluminensis depends on its endophytic fungi, since plants free of endophytic fungi grew less than expected due to mercury toxicity. In contrast plants containing certain endophytic fungi showed good growth in soil containing mercury, even exceeding growth of plants cultivated in soil without mercury. The data obtained confirm the hypothesis that soil contamination by mercury alters community structure of root endophytic fungi in terms of composition, abundance and species richness. The inoculation of A. fluminensis with certain strains of stress tolerant endophytic fungi contribute to colonization and establishment of the host and may be used in processes that aim to improve phytoremediation of soils with toxic concentrations of mercury.

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The radiological  accident  in  Goiania

https://www-pub.iaea.org/MTCD/publications/PDF/Pub815_web.pdf

EXECUTIVE  SUMMARYPART  I.   THE ACCIDENT

It  is now known that at about the  end of  1985 a private radiotherapy institute, the  Institute  Goiano  de  Radioterapia  in  Goiania,  Brazil,  moved  to  new  premises, taking  with  it  a  cobalt-60  teletherapy  unit  and  leaving  m  place a  caesium-137  tele-therapy unit without notifying  the licensing authority as required  under the terms ofthe institute's licence. The former premises were subsequently partly demolished. As a  result,  the  caesium-137  teletherapy   unit  became  totally  insecure.  Two  people entered  the premises and,  not knowing what the unit was but thinking it might havesome  scrap  value,  removed  the  source  assembly  from  the  radiation  head  of  the machine.  This  they  took  home  and  tried  to  dismantle. In the attempt the source capsule was ruptured. The radioactive  source was in the  form  of  caesium  chloride  salt,  which  is  highly soluble  and  readily  dispersible. Contamination of the environment ensued, with one result being the external  irradiation and internal contamination of several  persons.  Thus began one of the most  serious  radiological  accidents  ever  to  have  occurred. After  the  source  capsule  was  ruptured, the  remnants of  the  source  assembly were sold for scrap to a junkyard owner.  He noticed that the source material glowed blue  in the dark.  Several  persons  were  fascinated by  this and over  a period  of days friends  and  relatives  came  and  saw  the  phenomenon. Fragments  of  the  source  the size of rice grains were distributed  to several  families. This proceeded for five days, by which time a number of  people  were showing gastrointestinal  symptoms arising from  their  exposure  to  radiation  from  the  source. The  symptoms  were  not  initially  recognized  as  being  due  to  irradiation. However,  one  of  the  persons  irradiated  connected  the  illnesses  with  the  source capsule and took the remnants to the public health department in the city.  This action began  a  chain  of  events  which  led  to  the  discovery  of  the  accident. A local physicist was the first to assess, by monitoring, the scale of the accidentand  took  actions  on  his  own  initiative to  evacuate  two areas.  At  the  same time the authorities were  informed, upon which the  speed  and the  scale of the response were impressive.  Several  other  sites  of  significant contamination were quickly identified and  residents  evacuated.


------------------


Tropical South Atlantic influence on Northeastern Brazil precipitation and ITCZ displacement during the past 2300 years

2019

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-38003-6

------------------



 Project Amazonia: Threats - Pollution


http://web.mit.edu/12.000/www/m2006/final/threats/threat_pollution.html




Acidification and pH

            Acidification is a naturally occurring process in nature.  In tropical areas with high rainfall, natural acidification of soils and surface waters is common.  However, tropical areas are especially sensitive to further acidification by increased atmospheric deposition of sulfate and nitrate ions (Rodhe et al, 1988).  The following describes the three conditions for an aquatic ecosystem to be acidified by atmospheric deposition:

·        Atmospheric deposition of sulfate or nitrate or of some anion must increase.

·        Adjacent soils to the aquatic ecosystem must not retain the anion that is increased in deposition.

·        Aquatic ecosystem must have a low alkalinity for acidification to result in biological damage (Rodhe et al, 1988).

The major rivers and tributaries (see map below) of the southeastern region of Brazil have varying levels of pH. The tables give the measurements of pH, SO4-2, and NH4+ for these rivers and their tributaries (Moreira-Nordemann, 1988).

According to the authors of Chapter 8:  Acidification in Southeastern Brazil,1 “The differences in nitrogen and sulfur concentrations observed in river waters of the southeastern region of Brazil cannot be explained by geological, pedological, or climatic factors.  Higher NO3-, NH4+ and SO42- contents were determined in rivers crossing urban and industrial areas, the same areas that also present a polluted atmosphere.”

        These increases may result from acid deposition.  “Acid deposition” is caused by pollution from motor vehicles, industrial process, and the burning of fossil fuels in power-stations in the form of sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, and hydrocarbons.  These react with water and sunlight to form dilute sulphuric acid, nitric acid, ammonium salts, and other mineral acids2.

There are two types of “acid deposition” from the atmosphere:  wet and dry (Fig. 3).

Wet deposition refers to acid rain, fog, and snow.  According to the Environmental Protection Agency, “the strength of the effects [of acidic water] depends on a variety of factors, including how acidic the water is, the chemistry and buffering capacity of the soils involved, and the types of fish, trees, and other living things that rely on the water.”

            Dry deposition refers to acidic gases and particles.  Acidity in the atmosphere falls down as dry particles.  These particles are deposited onto buildings and other structures, or are washed from trees and other surfaces by rain.  This run off water adds acids to the acid rain, thereby increasing the acidity of the rain3.

            Many organisms cannot tolerate high levels of acidity, and even those who can, face the problem that their food sources (such as insects) cannot survive in highly acidic environments.  As acidity in a water system increases, the number and diversity of organisms decreases.  Also, when acid rain flows through soils in a watershed, aluminum is released into the watershed, which is toxic to fish.  At levels of pH5, most fish eggs cannot hatch4.  Table 6 clearly shows that the effects of acidification on aquatic biota can be harmful.




Table 17: Effects of acidification on aquatic biota5



Physical and chemical changes

bulletWater transparency has increased, along with rates of hypolimnetic heating and thermo cline deepening
bulletConcentrations of Mn, Na, Zn, H+, S2O4-, Al increased
bulletAluminum has been implicated as a major cause of fish mortality during lake acidification 
bulletS2O4-was reduced by bacteria to sulfide, followed by permanent sedimentation as FeS. Alkalinity, generated as byproduct of sulfate reduction, has neutralized approximately one-third of the hydrogen ion added to the lake.  Therefore, a pH refuge has persisted below throughout the acidification, but the long-term trend has been for this refuge to become progressively more acidic, although temporally lagging behind the epilimnion.

 Primary production and Invertebrates

bulletPrimary production has increase in Lake 223 above pre-acidification levels
bulletPhytoplankton species composition has changed with Chlorophyceae and Peridineae replacing Chrysophyceae
bulletAppearance of hypolimnetic algal peak of Chlorella
bulletThree members of the zooplankton community Mysis relicta, Epischura lacustris, Diaptomus sicilis disappeared as pH declined to 5.4 while Daphnia catawba x schoedleri appeared as the pH of Lake 223 was lowered from 6.7 to 5.1

Responses of Fish Populations to Acidification

bulletThe fathead minnow population declined rapidly and almost disappeared when pH was 5.6. In addition, complete reproductive failure and rapid collapse of population were observed
bulletThe pearl dace population rapidly expanded to become the major minnow species when pH was 5.4. This was most likely due to its greater tolerance to low pH by pearl dace than fathead minnow
bulletWhite sucker (seen as relatively acid-tolerant species) showed no stress as the pH of the lake was lowered. Its individual fish growth remained consistently high. 
bulletLake trout (relatively acid sensitive) showed decrease in population when pH was lowered from 6.7 to 5.4. However, its population did not decrease at the rate which was expected - it was much slower.

                Because the water system of the Amazon is such a large and complex one, it is difficult to understand the true nature of acidity and acid deposition’s effects on the water although there are clearly relationships between changes in the acidity of water and pollution.



HUMAN ALTERATION OF THE NITROGEN CYCLE



                Most of the human activities responsible for the increase in global nitrogen are local in scale, from the production and use of nitrogen fertilizers to the burning of fossil fuels in automobiles, power generation plants, and industries.

Nitrogen Fertilizers

                Industrial fixation of nitrogen for use as fertilizer currently totals approximately 80Tg per year and represents the largest human contribution of new nitrogen to the global cycle. This figure does not include manure and other organic nitrogen fertilizers. (8) The use of fertilizer application in developed countries has stabilized. However, it has risen drastically for developing countries. Human population growth and increasing urbanization ensures that the rate of industrial fertilizer production will continue to accelerate for decades in order to meet the escalating demand for food. This scenario is the present case in the Amazon Basin Rainforest Ecosystem (ABRE). Due to migration and other factors, the indigenous population in the ABRE is currently rising. In addition, improved transportation is attracting more migrants into the area. Their destruction of rainforest land and their use of fertilizers further impacts the nitrogen cycle.

Fossil Fuel Burning

                The burning of fossil fuels (i.e. coal and oil) releases previously fixed nitrogen back to the atmosphere in the form of nitrogen-based trace gases such as nitric oxide. High- temperature combustion also fixes a small amount of atmospheric nitrogen directly. Together, the operation of automobiles, factories, power plants, and other combustion processes emit more than 20 Tg per year of fixed nitrogen to the atmosphere.

Mobilization of Stored Nitrogen

                Besides enhancing fixation and releasing nitrogen from geological reservoirs, human activities, such as burning of forests, wood fuels, and grasslands also liberate nitrogen from long- term biological storage pools such as soil organic matter and tree trunks, contributing further to the release of biologically available nitrogen. One of the major consequences of human- driven alterations in the nitrogen cycle has been regional and global changes in the chemistry of the atmosphere- specifically increased emissions of nitrogen- based trace gases including nitrous oxide, nitric oxide, and ammonia.  If left unattended, these gases can have detrimental long term effects. Nitrous oxide contributes to the greenhouse affect while nitric oxide is an important precursor of acid rain and photochemical smog.

                Nitrous oxide is a very effective heat- trapping gas in the atmosphere. This is in part because it absorbs outgoing radiant heat from the Earth in infrared wavelengths that are not captured by other major greenhouse gases. Although it is fairly unreactive in the lower atmosphere, when it rises into the stratosphere, it can trigger chain reactions that deplete and thin the stratoshperic ozone layer that shields the Earth from damaging ultraviolet radiation.

                Both nitric oxide and ammonia are highly reactive in the lower atmosphere. Nitric oxide plays several crucial roles in atmospheric chemistry, including catalyzing the formation of photochemical smog. In the presence of sunlight, nitric oxide and oxygen react with hydrocarbons emitted by automobile exhausts to form ozone- the most dangerous component of smog.  Ground- level ozone has serious detrimental effects on human health as well as the health and productivity of crops and forests. Nitric oxides, along with other nonmetal oxides, can be transformed in the atmosphere into nitric acid and sulfuric acid (for example), which are major components of acid rain.

                Among these many sources of nitric oxide emissions, combustion is the dominant one. A chief danger of the increasing levels of nitrogen is the threat that it poses to the carbon cycle. Experiments in Europe and America indicate that a large portion of the extra nitrogen retained by forest, wetland, and tundra ecosystems stimulates carbon uptake and storage (can you add specific details of the project: name of project, who ran the experiment, etc and citations?). On the other hand, this nitrogen can also stimulate microbial decomposition and thus releases of carbon from soil organic matter. On balance, however, the carbon uptake through new plant growth appears to exceed the carbon losses, especially in forests. The most recent analysis of the global carbon cycle by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change concluded that nitrogen deposition could represent a major component of the missing carbon sink.

Nitrogen Saturation

                There is a limit to how much plant growth can be increased by nitrogen fertilization. Eventually, when the natural nitrogen supplies are replenished, plant growth becomes limited by scarcity of other nutrients, such as phosphorus, calcium, and water. When the vegetation can no longer respond to further additions of nitrogen, the ecosystem reaches a state described as nitrogen saturation. When an ecosystem is fully nitrogen- saturated and its soils, plants, and microbes cannot use or retain any more, all new nitrogen deposits will be dispersed to streams, groundwater, and the atmosphere.

                Nitrogen saturation has a number of damaging consequences for the health and functioning of ecosystems. These effects were first observed in Europe when scientists noticed a large increase in nitrate concentration in some lakes an streams. As ammonium builds up in the soil, it is increasingly converted to nitrate by bacterial action. This process releases hydrogen ions and helps acidify the soil. The buildup of nitrate enhances emissions of nitrous oxides from the soil and also encourages leaching of highly water- soluble nitrate into streams or groundwater. As these negatively charged nitrates seep away, they carry with them positively charged alkaline minerals such as calcium, magnesium, and potassium. This in turn alters the soil composition and depletes it of other nutrients necessary for healthy plant growth. As calcium is depleted and the soil acidified, aluminum ions are mobilized, eventually reaching toxic concentrations that can damage tree roots or kill fish if the aluminum washes into streams. The trees are starved of calcium, magnesium, and potassium, a nutrient imbalance arises in their roots and leaves. This can potentially reduce the photosynthetic rate and efficiency of the plant, stunt its growth, and even increase tree death.

Nitrogen saturation plays a deeper role and also influences biodiversity, species mix, and aquatic ecosystems.

Soil Contamination

                Soil contamination is the mixing of hazardous substances with the soil. These contaminants get physically or chemically attached to the soils or are trapped within its particles. This contamination is one of the natural results of extensive land use which occurs in the Amazon Basin Rainforest Area. The main types of soil contamination in the Amazon Basin Rainforest are from mercury, cyanide and contamination from pesticides. 

Mercury

 Mercury contamination is found in many areas of the Amazon basin especially along the Tapajos River where gold mining is carried out by an estimated million miners. For several years it was believed that the mercury in the rivers of the Amazon came solely from the mining operations conducted by the miners. Miners use mercury to clean the gold that they extract from the river, and due to lack of interest in environmental matters, and a lack of education, much of this mercury is released into the environment, some into the soil, some into the waters, but most is sent to the atmosphere, returning to the earth in rain.

To clean the gold, the miners mix the silted-gold with mercury which separates the gold from the silt. The mercury is then burned off the gold, at which point it evaporates. Mercury vapor is subsequently sent to the atmosphere. There have been attempts to educate these miners on the use of fume cupboards to prevent the excess mercury from escaping to the atmosphere, and on alternative gold-cleaning methods, but the majority still utilizes mercury without fume cupboards.

Though most of this mercury contamination is found in the river water, some of it eventually travels to the land in the form of silted soil deposited on river plains during flooding. Mercury contamination also results from the exposure of naturally occurring deposits in locations where a lot of vegetation is lost during deforestation. Continuous loss of vegetation accelerates the erosion, which in turn wears away the earth and reaches the underlying mercury layers.

Recent studies show that mercury from mining operations contributes a small percentage of the total mercury found in the Amazon. Research demonstrates that mercury levels at several hundred kilometers down stream mining operations are in the same range as levels of mercury a few kilometers downstream. Mercury then has more than one source in the Amazon, and has increased in the last forty or so years. The scientists have linked the increase in Mercury with the initiation of slash-and-burn agriculture which is prevalent in the Amazon today.

By removing trees, loggers and 'slash and burn' farmers remove that which holds the soil together. In the soil are natural accumulating Mercury deposits bounded to soil particles. These deposits are unavailable for organisms as the mercury is in its inorganic form. When deforestation occurs, the exposed soil is easily washed away by rains into the water ways. This is the point where mercury becomes poisonous, by separating from the soil particles, the mercury is converted to its organic form called methylmercury by the equation:

Hg+ + CH3- => CH3Hg

            Mercury concentrations in the rivers of the Amazon have been estimated at 0.0002ppm8. Methylmercury is extremely poisonous, and in that form, it can be absorbed by fish and other aquatic fauna, and travel up the food-chain. Accumulation will occur, where the concentrations of mercury in organisms higher in the food chain increases as they consume the lower organisms. Mercury concentrations in humans can get to be several magnitudes greater than their previous concentrations by having mercurial fish in their diet. The locals living along the Amazon rivers are therefore at risk of mercury poisoning. The miners are experiencing Mercury Poisoning or Miramata Disease as well.

The main source of cyanide contamination is gold mining operations as well. A notable site of this pollution is the Omai gold mines in Guyana to the north of Brazil.

Pesticides

Pesticide contamination is most prevalent in areas where agriculture is used. Although agriculture is not responsible for as much deforestation as cattle ranching, the effects are still extensive. The immigrants from the cities are ill equipped with agricultural and environmental conservation skills and so use chemicals of various kinds recklessly to reduce weed and insect infiltration to their crops.

The effects of the pollution on soil are observed in many ways. Soil contamination makes it largely impossible for healthy vegetation to grow on the affected land. When the plants absorb these contaminants through their roots, they either develop weak stems, deformed leaves, or reproductive failures. Some of the contaminants also slow the growth and development of the vegetation making recovery in areas where the forest has been cleared ineffective. Animals in the rain forest are also impacted by these adverse effects. Burrowing animals come into direct contact with the mercury in the soil. The interaction with the chemicals interferes with respiratory processes and causes brain damage. Both effects lead to immature deaths of these animals. Some of the soil contaminants, especially mercury and cyanide, are carried in the air due to wind erosion and are then inhaled by the fauna in varying quantities. Additionally, animals absorb contaminants when they feed on contaminated vegetation.

Nitrogen Oxides

Background:

              Nitrogen oxides are emitted by the burning of fuels, by industry, and through natural (nitrogen cycle) processes. They cause ozone depletion and acid rain and are short-lived in the atmosphere Nitrogen oxides are reactive, greenhouse gases, including NO and NO210.  When released into the atmosphere through natural (nitrogen cycle) and artificial sources (combustion of fuel, industry), these compounds enter a complex reactionary period of a few days.  The main products of this reaction period are tropospheric ozone (O3) and nitric acid (HNO3).

NO2 + hv (wavelength less than 410 nm) à NO + O

O + O2 + catalyst à O3 + catalyst

NO + O3 à NO2 + O2

And

R + O2 + catalyst à RO2 + catalyst

RO2 + NO à NO2 + RO

These reactions show the creation of ozone gas and its concurrent consumption.  However, in the presence of organic molecules of solely carbon and hydrogen (R), NO favors the second group of reactions and the ozone is not re-consumed.  This process creates high levels of tropospheric ozone.

 A self cleaning process is constantly breaking NOx molecules into nitric acid (HNO3) through reaction with hydroxyl radicals.

 HO + NO2 + catalyst à HNO3 + catalyst

Nitric acid is unreactive in the gas phase, but quite soluble in water(Graedel 152).  Thus the acid concentrates in water droplets.  The resulting acidic rain is damaging to soil processes and at very low pH can directly damage flora and fauna.

Relevance to Rain Forest

            Due to the short life of these compounds in the troposphere, areas of concern for the preservation of the rainforest are industrial and urban sites near or within the rainforest and the burning of the rainforest.  All other sources of NOx will be filtered out of the atmosphere by natural processes long before reaching the Amazon River Basin Rainforest ecosystem.

Sulfur Compounds

Background:

            Atmospheric sulfur is critical to atmospheric acid-base chemistry. However, in more recent times, human industry has thrown the sulfur cycle out of balance, leading directly to acidic rain and increasing aerosol levels13. The main atmospheric sulfur compounds are sulfates: sulfuric acid, ammonium hydrogen sulfate, and ammonium sulfate.

The following reactions occur in the troposphere:

HSO3- + H2O2 --> HSO4- + H2O
HSO3-+ O3 --> HSO4- + O2

            While this reaction appears to be beneficial through the decomposition of tropospheric ozone, the product HSO4- quickly forms H2SO4, or sulfuric acid. This compound, along with nitric acid, dissolves into water droplets, concentrates in clouds, and results in acidic rain14.

Relevance to Rain Forest:

            Sulfur, as with Nitrogen, plays its damaging role not in the atmosphere itself, but once it is converted into water soluble compounds which collect in water droplets within clouds. These compounds are deposited by rainfall and cause damage to plant life, animal life, and water sources.

Sulfur

Background:

            Sulfur dioxide and hydrogen sulfide both are toxic gases that can form from elemental sulfur in the atmosphere. They are emitted by the use of Diesel gas and by coal burning power plants. Sulfur also causes ozone depletion and acid rain.  However, sulfur also causes some global cooling and function as a nutrient to some plants.  It helps them form proteins and aids photosynthesis.   A lack of sulfur would impede growth in at least some plants.

In conditions with abundant sulfur, plants incorporate sulfur into organosulfur and involve sulfur in energy transfers.  Below is an example of this in Chlorella.

Obviously, sulfur can be an important part of algae and plants’ metabolic pathways.

             According to the Iris Hypothesis, availability of Sulfur is also important in counteracting the greenhouse effect.  Excess sulfur in the atmosphere called aerosols forms clouds that are effective in reflecting sunlight, causing global cooling18,19. (More information about the Iris hypothesis is given in research regarding climate.)


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Study of wet precipitation and its chemical composition in South of Brazil

June 2008

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0001-37652008000200016


ABSTRACT

The purpose of this study is to analyze the chemical composition of wet precipitation in samples collected at three stations in the Candiota region in the Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul (RS). Samples were collected in 2004. Variables analyzed in wet precipitation were pH, conductivity, and concentration of Cl–, NO3–, SO42– F–, Na+, Ca2+, Mg2+, K+, NH4+, Cu, Zn, Fe, Mn, Pb, Ni, Cd, Co, and Cr. SO2 and NO2 distribution over the time were also evaluated. Results have showed that pH < 5.6 are found mostly at Candiota airport (85%), followed by Aceguá (72%) and Três Lagoas (65%). Enrichment Factor of the studied ions in wet deposition revealed higher Ca2+ and SO42– enrichment in Três Lagoas. Factor Analysis applied to metals and major ions allowed identifying the major sources. While Cl–, Na+, Mg2+ are of marine origin, SO42–, NO3–, NH4+ ,F– come from anthropogenic sources. Except for Fe and Mn originating from the soil dust, the metals studied showed to have anthropogenic influence The average SO2 and NO2 concentration, as well as SO42– and NO3– in wet precipitation in the Candiota region showed higher concentrations during the warmer months.

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Iron Oxides in Selected Brazilian Oxisols: I. Mineralogy

1990

https://dl.sciencesocieties.org/publications/sssaj/abstracts/55/4/SS0550041143

Abstract

Twelve Oxisols from the Triangulo Mineiro region, Minas Gerais state, Brazil, derived from four different parent materials were studied to provide insight into their Fe-oxide mineralogy. The clay fraction (<2 µm) of all soils consisted of kaolinite and Fe oxides (hematite and/or goethite); gibbsite and anatase were found in most of the soils; maghemite was detected in several of them. Citratedithionite (CD) treatment of the soil clays showed hematite preferentially dissolved compared with goethite, and a higher dissolution rate for poorly crystalline than for well-crystalline goethite. The calculated values for Al substitution in the Fe oxides, based on the CD extracts of the total clay corrected for Al soluble in acid ammonium oxalate, and of clay treated for gibbsite removal gave fair to good agreement with Al substitution determined by differential x-ray diffraction (DXRD) for those samples in which the Fe-oxide fraction was dominated by either goethite or hematite. Aluminum-substituted maghemite, detected by DXRD, was present only in soils from mafic rocks, suggesting its formation through oxidation of the magnetite present in the parent material. Aluminum substitution, determined by DXRD, varied from 17 to 36 mol % for goethites, 6 to 15 mol % for hematites, and 16 to 26 mol % for maghemites. The mean crystallite dimension (MCDkkl) of some hematite samples determined from DXRD showed preferential crystal development in the X-Y direction, suggesting a platy nature.

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The Mariana mining disaster

60 million cubic metres of iron ore waste and mud hit the town of Bento Rodrigues.




http://webdoc.france24.com/brazil-dam-mining-disaster-mariana/


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High Uranium Concentrations in the Groundwater of the Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil, Mountainous Region

2019

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-50532019000200224

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Uranium mining in Caetite, Brazil

The project consists basically in the mining and milling of uranium in the municipality of Caetite, Bahia state, Brazil. The method of uranium extraction is open-pit mining and the milling process is lixiviation in piles. All mined uranium is to be used domestically, after conversion and enrichment abroad (Canada and Netherlands, respectively). The amount of uranium explored is sufficient to supply the two Brazilian nuclear power plants currently in operation. This case involves workplace accidents, tailing spills, potential soil and water contamination, and uncertain risks (e.g. cancer) to the health of the workers and the population which lives in the surrounded area of the mine.

https://ejatlas.org/conflict/uranium-mining-in-caetite-brazil


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Nuclear activities in Brazil


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_activities_in_Brazil


Contents


    1 Brazilian nuclear activities

        1.1 Early years (1930–60)

        1.2 1961–72

        1.3 1973–78

        1.4 The "autonomous" / "parallel" nuclear program (1978–87)

        1.5 1988–2000

        1.6 2001–present

    2 Nuclear cooperation with Argentina

        2.1 Initial bilateral talks

        2.2 The path to mutual inspections

        2.3 Recent developments

    3 Brazil and the nuclear non-proliferation regime

        3.1 Opposition to the NPT

        3.2 Critical adhesion to the international nuclear regime

        3.3 Safeguards

        3.4 A Brazilian bomb?

    4 Main controversies

        4.1 American criticism of the Brazil – West Germany nuclear deal and the Carter crusade

        4.2 Problems related to mining, storage and transportation of radioactive material

            4.2.1 Minas Gerais

            4.2.2 Bahia

            4.2.3 Ceará

            4.2.4 Goiás

            4.2.5 São Paulo

        4.3 Radiological accidents and incidents

        4.4 Oversight, control and nuclear security

        4.5 Transparency

        4.6 Costs of nuclear activities

        4.7 Contested legality of Angra 3

        4.8 2010 Joint Tehran Declaration (Brazil, Iran and Turkey)

    5 References





A Brazilian bomb?


While Brazil was conducting its nuclear activities outside of the nuclear non-proliferation regime, many in the international community doubted its stated peaceful intention. In addition to Brazil's refusal to sign the NPT, the fact that the country was ruled by a hard-line military regime fuelled the suspicion that Brasília was pursuing a nuclear bomb. This opinion was manifested openly and implicitly by different nations as well as the international anti-nuclear movement. The most vehement of skeptics was the U.S., with countries like France, Canada, the UK and the Soviet Union also following suit in their doubts of Brazil.


Domestically, the lack of transparency in the Brazilian government and the little information made available about the nuclear program also led some people to believe that the military government would move forward with weaponization. Environmentalists, peace activists and members of the political opposition voiced their condemnation to the idea.


The suspicion intensified in the second half of the 1980s. As domestic media reports were published, uncovering secret nuclear developments, rumors about a possible Brazilian nuclear test emerged. One of the main Brazilian newspapers, Folha de S. Paulo, published an interview in April 1985 with a retired military officer who stated that the government planned to develop a nuclear device and explode it in 1990. During that same period, international papers denounced covert nuclear activities in Brazil, which reignited external questioning of its nuclear aspirations.


Writing in the Christian Science Monitor in 1992 Eric Ehrmann and Christopher Barton discussed Brazil's nuclear cooperation with Iraq, and noted the views of CIA Director Robert Gates to wit that Brazil has the capability to sell nuclear technology to Iran and that issues regarding dual use deals would drive the cost of maintaining global security upward.


In the 1990s, the country created the bilateral ABACC commission with Argentina, signed the Quadripartite Agreement with the IAEA, adhered to the NPT, and reiterated its peaceful nuclear ambitions on several occasions.


The Lula administration (2003–2011) resuscitated the dormant Brazilian nuclear program, issued new investments in achieving industrial-scale uranium enrichment capacity and revived the nuclear-propulsion submarine project.


Despite Brazil's repeated claims of peaceful nuclear development, in 2003, Science and Technology Minister Roberto Amaral made a controversial statement. During an interview with popular Brazilian daily O Globo, Amaral stated that Brazil should seek to obtain all nuclear knowledge and knowhow; when asked if his description included the knowledge to develop a nuclear bomb, he replied positively. After the statement was disseminated across national and international media, Amaral refuted it and called it a misunderstanding.


One year later, Brazil denied IAEA inspectors full visual access to the Resende enrichment plant's centrifuges, which led to months of Brazil–IAEA disagreements. The two parties finally reached a compromise for Brazil to reduce the size of the panels covering the machinery. Nonetheless, Brazil's reluctance to these verification measures and constant refusal to sign the Additional Protocol have been interpreted by some as an attempt to hide undeclared activities. There were also rumors stating that the reason for concealing parts of the centrifuges was to hide technology Brazil had covertly obtained in the past, "possibly the Urenco G-2 design from Germany or another design from Pakistan."


In 2008, Brazil issued its National Defense Strategy (Estratégia Nacional de Defesa), in which it reaffirmed its ambition to develop and master nuclear technology and conclude the nuclear-propulsion submarine. That year, Brazil established a cooperation agreement with France to construct the submarine. Even though the two countries will collaborate on this project, the nuclear reactor for the submarine is excluded from the contract and should be built by the Brazilian Navy on its own.


Today, as a non-nuclear-weapon state party to the NPT, Brazil has the right under international norms to manufacture a naval reactor and produce highly enriched uranium to fuel it.[186] While that has not happened yet, the possibility of Brazil enriching uranium at a level higher than the 20-percent threshold and employing it at a military facility has prompted continued concerns over its nuclear intentions.


Vice President José Alencar (2003–11) made controversial remarks in 2009, telling the press that Brazil should have nuclear weapons as a means to protect itself. According to Alencar, nuclear weapons were useful as a means of dissuasion, particularly in the case of a vast country with valuable natural resources such as Brazil. Additionally, Alencar linked the possession of a nuclear bomb to higher international relevance, stating that a poor country like Pakistan had its voice heard in international affairs because of its nuclear arsenal. Once his observations were mass-produced, Brasília affirmed that Alencar had expressed his own personal views, which did not reflect Brazil's official position.


In that same year, a leaked U.S. diplomatic cable revealed Argentine concerns related to Brazilian nuclear ambitions. It stated that the Argentine foreign ministry was thinking about what Argentina's reaction should be in case Brazil backed out of ABACC or developed a nuclear weapon. According to the document, one of the responses under consideration by Buenos Aires could be the development and deployment of advanced peaceful nuclear technology—such as a nuclear-powered icebreaker—to demonstrate capacity. ABACC did not comment, but one of its Brazilian officials stated that the information expressed in the leaked cable was contrary to the Brazilian–Argentine experience, which was enshrined in mutual trust.


International experts have also weighed in on the controversies surrounding Brazil's nuclear program. Hans Rühle, a former official from the German defense ministry who also worked with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) wrote an article in 2010 in which he indicated that Brazil might be on the path toward getting the bomb. He based his argument on the submarine project, which may involve the production of highly enriched uranium, and the fact that Brazil seeks to develop capacity to conduct all phases of the nuclear fuel cycle indigenously. While Rühle affirms that there is no hard proof of a nuclear weapons program in Brazil, he suggests that Brazil's relations with Iran and defense of the Iranian nuclear program should be seen as a clue of the path Brazil wants to tread. Commenting on Rühle's article, the Argentine scholars Federico Merke and Florencia Montal said that Brazil might develop the capacity to manufacture a bomb but that it didn't seem to have the intention to do so.


The most recent White Book of National Defense (Livro Branco de Defesa Nacional), issued in 2012 and published by the ministry of defense, reaffirms Latin America as a nuclear-weapons-free zone and states Brazil's support for nuclear disarmament. The white paper also states that the nuclear-propulsion submarine would contribute to the protection of commercial routes, keep navigation free, help protect natural resources, and promote technological development in the country.


The white paper, on top of myriad official explanations, has not curbed the domestic and international public of suspecting Brazil's nuclear intentions. For instance, the Argentine edition of Le Monde Diplomatique, published an article in its Spanish-language edition dated from February 2013 and titled, "Brasil, ¿detrás de la bomba atómica?" (Brazil: Behind the Atomic Bomb)? Despite other similarly expressed pieces of skepticism, the evidence remains inconclusive that a nuclear weapons program is underway in Brazil.



Main controversies

American criticism of the Brazil – West Germany nuclear deal and the Carter crusade


As a response to India's nuclear test conducted 18 May 1974, the United States adopted more restrictive policies regulating the transfer of nuclear fuel and related technologies to different countries, including Brazil. In addition to suspending USAEC contracts of uranium supply, U.S. officials also pressed the European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom) Supply Agency to cease all transfers of special nuclear material to Brazil. Likewise, the U.S. pushed West Germany to remove ultracentrifugation technology from its agreement with Brazil and tried to craft a complementary safeguards agreement with the IAEA.


During the 1976 presidential campaign, Jimmy Carter voiced strong criticisms of the Brazil-West Germany deal as well as the Gerald Ford administration's handling of the matter. In Carter's view, a more assertive stance on non-proliferation was necessary.


Once he assumed office in January 1977, Carter dispatched his vice president, Walter Mondale, to West Germany for his first official visit. In Bonn, Mondale met with President Helmut Schmidt to discuss the Carter administration's efforts to prevent nuclear proliferation. Mondale suggested to Schmidt that the West German-Brazilian agreement be suspended temporarily for review. Although Schmidt did not fully embrace it, Mondale's proposal was badly received in Brazil and led to complications in U.S.-Brazil relations.


In June 1977, U.S. First Lady Rosalynn Carter visited Brazil and met with Geisel and his foreign minister, Azeredo da Silveira, in Brasília. Mrs. Carter was accompanied by Robert Pastor, U.S. National Security Advisor for Latin America, and Joseph Nye, Assistant Secretary of State for nuclear affairs. Although Mrs. Carter and Geisel talked about non-proliferation and the Treaty of Tlateloco, no substantive agreements on nuclear policy were created during this visit.


In the following year, President Carter signed into law the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Act, reducing U.S. production of plutonium and further restricting exports of nuclear fuel. As a consequence, Brazil was required to adopt comprehensive safeguards on all its nuclear facilities in order to receive from the U.S. the first delivery of replacement nuclear fuel for the Angra 1 nuclear power plant.


The constraints imposed by external actors led to significant delays in the construction of nuclear plants and represented high political and technological costs for the Brazilian government. In this context, in 1978 Brazil decided to carry out covert nuclear activities—in essence, the beginning of its "Autonomous" / "Parallel" nuclear program.

Problems related to mining, storage and transportation of radioactive material



Minas Gerais


The Ore Treatment Unit (Unidade de Tratamento de Minério – UTM) in the rural area of Caldas, Minas Gerais (MG), was active from 1982 to 1995. During that period, 1,200 tons of yellowcake were produced in order to provide fuel for Angra 1.


Since its decommissioning, Caldas’ mine pit, which is approximately 180 meters (590 feet) deep and contains a diameter of about 1,200 meters (3,937 feet), has turned into a giant lake of acid water. Additionally, radioactive residues remain in the unit – approximately 11,000 tons of torta 2, a combination of uranium concentrate and thorium, and thousands of tons of mesothorium – making Caldas the country's biggest radioactive waste deposit.


Local residents and politicians have expressed their concern about the health and environmental impact of the radioactive waste and the acid water. So far, there is no available technology to neutralize the water and mitigate its environmental and health risks.


There have also been complaints about incidences of cancer, where the amount of those affected is higher than the average for Minas Gerais. Similarly, a recent study points to an excessive number of cancer-related deaths in the part of the state where uranium extraction is occurring.


The poor condition of the storage facilities led to a judicial ruling in 2011 that fined the INB, ordered it to treat the mining residues, and mandated that company must provide regular analyses of the radiation levels in the soil, animals, plants, groundwater and rivers that run through the city.


In 2000, 15 years after uranium mining activities had ceased in Caldas, radioactive residues of torta 2 and mesothorium from decommissioned plants in São Paulo were to be transported to Caldas, where they would be stored. Amid popular mobilizations against it, then-MG Governor Itamar Franco issued a decree prohibiting the entry of radioactive waste into MG from other states. The radioactive material remains stored in São Paulo.


Bahia


The sole active mine in Brazil, the Uranium Concentrate Unit (Unidade de Concentrado de Urânio – URA), is located in Bahia, possessing an estimated 100,000 tons of uranium reserves. This amount could supply the three Angra power plants currently in operation, in addition to four other planned ones, until the end of their life cycles.[85] Since 1998, when mining activities started in Caetité, annual uranium production at URA has varied; it peaked in 2008, when 400 tons of uranium concentrated were produced.


Mining activity in Caetité has generated detrimental environmental effects, including contamination of water in nearby districts. An independent study commissioned by international environmental Non-governmental organization (NGO) Greenpeace showed that the concentration of uranium in some wells located 8 kilometers away from the uranium mine, in the district of Juazeiro, BA, was seven times higher than the limit established by the World Health Organization (WHO).


In April 2010, the Institute for Water and Climate Management (Instituto de Gestão das Águas e Clima – INGA), the agency responsible for water and climate management within the Bahia state government, recommended shutting down the water fountain that served Juazeiro due to the district's high uranium levels. A few months later, a technical mission led by Dhesca Brasil, a network of human rights organizations, observed that the fountain continued to be in use and the residents had not been informed about the risks of consuming its water.


In May 2011, after learning that 13 trucks loaded with radioactive material were about to leave from São Paulo to Caetité, local residents and activists asked for official explanations and requested that safety measures be taken. In a letter sent to local authorities, the claimers inquired about the nature of the material being transported, why it was destined for Caetité, potential risks associated with the transportation, and whether proper permission had been granted.


When their letter went unanswered, the population organized a vigil constituting thousands of people. More than 3,000 protestors made a human chain and impeded 13 trucks from coming into the city. INB published a note in its website claiming that the cargo consisted of chemical compounds of uranium, coming from the Navy Technological Center (Centro Tecnológico da Marinha em São Paulo – CTMSP) to Caetité to be repackaged. The message further revealed that the final destination would be Europe for enrichment purposes. After four days of impasse, the parties came to an agreement and the material proceeded to the URA in Caetité.

Ceará


Another uranium mining complex, known as Itataia, is underway in Santa Quitéria, Ceará. Itataia is supposed to be the largest uranium reserve in Brazil, containing 79,319 tons of the mineral. In the first years of extraction, the expected annual uranium production capacity is 1,200 tons per year. But projections assert that after the fifth year, this figure should rise to 1,600 tons annually.


In 2008, officials stated that mining activities in Itataia would begin in 2013. The first of its type, this would be a joint venture between state-owned INB and Brazilian private construction company Galvani. The latter would be in charge of the mining activities, extracting phosphate for fertilizer production and separating it from uranium, which Galvani would pass on to INB. However, since federal authorities have requested further studies of environmental impact, activities have been delayed.

Goiás


The remaining radioactive waste from the 1987 radiological accident in Goiânia, Goiás, was quickly transferred to the nearby city of Abadia, generating resistance from local residents suspicious of risks associated with nuclear material. It has been reported that people from neighboring cities avoided Abadia's citizens, fearing radioactive contamination.


After a decade of provisional storage, the material was moved to a permanent deposit built within the state park of Telma Ortegal, which has an area of 1.6 million m2 (17.2 million ft²). The structure housing the deposit was designed to last for 300 years and withstand eventual disasters.

São Paulo


Currently, there are approximately 1,150 tons of radioactive residues – primarily uranium and thorium – stored among 80 tons of heavy mineral sand in Interlagos, a busy neighborhood in the city of São Paulo. This material is reminiscent of the monazite plants of Santo Amaro (Usan) and Interlagos (Usin), which were deactivated in the 1990s.


In 2000, the remaining radioactive waste was supposed to go the mining unit of Caldas (MG), where the residues of Usan and Usin were usually disposed. However, popular pressure against it led then-MG Governor Itamar Franco to issue a decree prohibiting radioactive waste from coming into the state. Faced with this restriction, the residues remained in São Paulo.


The storage building in Interlagos has been criticized for its poor signage and safety protocols. There are few signs indicating radiation in the area, but they are small and some are covered by grass. According to Fernanda Giannasi, a public auditor from the Ministry of Labor, there are holes in the fence surrounding the building, which means people can enter the site. Giannasi has also noted risks faced by employees at the storage building. There are also complaints concerning the lack of instructions to residents in the vicinity advising certain steps in case of a radiological accident.


When Usin was built, the population of the surrounding area was less dense. And the human presence in the area is expected to increase; the Santuário Theotokos Mãe de Deus, a large church with a capacity of 20,000 worshippers that will rise to 100,000 upon the completion of its construction, has been built only 300 meters (984 feet) away from the radioactive waste site.


The company in charge of the uranium production in São Paulo was the former Nuclemon Mínero-Química, which has now been absorbed into INB. In 2007, the Brazilian Labor Court mandated that INB provide lifelong, free health insurance to the former workers of Nuclemon. This verdict was the outcome of a long lawsuit, which argued that throughout the 1980s and 1990s Nuclemon workers had no substantial information about the risks they faced and were constantly exposed to radioactive and toxic substances.


A report from a parliamentary working group on nuclear safety noticed that, even though Brazil signed and ratified the International Labour Organization (ILO) Radiation Protection Convention (No. 115), it has not provided national measures that implement Article 12, which obliges signatories to commit medical services to former workers who have been in contact with radioactive substances. Discussions to implement Article 12 have been ongoing in Brazil's federal legislative body since 2006.

Radiological accidents and incidents


    In 1986, roughly 20,000 to 25,000 liters of radioactive water accidentally leaked from the Angra 1 nuclear power plant, becoming a front-page story on the popular Brazilian daily Folha de S. Paulo on 9 October.

    In September 1987, a radioactive accident occurred in Goiânia, Goiás, after a radiotherapy device was stolen from an abandoned hospital site in the city. As different people subsequently handled it, men, women, children, animals, and plants were contaminated. In the cleanup operation, topsoil had to be removed from several sites and entire houses were demolished, with their contents removed, examined and eventually destroyed. According to the official account, about 112,000 people were examined for radioactive contamination, 297 were found to have significant levels of radioactive material in or on their body, and 4 people died. However, these numbers are in dispute, as a victims’ association argues these statistics do not take into consideration the subsequent injuries and deaths resulting from the Goiânia accident.

    In April 2000, there was a leak of 5,000 m3 (176,573 ft3) of uranium liquor at the Lagoa Real industrial mining complex, located in Caetité, Bahia. INB, the company responsible for the facility, tried to keep the accident secret, but nine employees broke their silence six months later and informed authorities. In turn, INB was fined R$119,130 (US $57,600) and had its activities suspended from November 2000 to July 2001.

    On 28 May 2001, another leak of radioactive water occurred at Angra 1, this time 22,000 liters and attributed to human error. Authorities considered it a minor accident and stated that the workers and the residents of the area did not face contamination risks.

    In October 2001, uranium hexafluoride gas leaked at the Resende fuel factory due to a failure of the facility's safety and detection system. This radioactive, lethal gas invaded a 60 m2 (646 ft2) room but was contained. According to news reports, the gas leak did not affect any of the 450 workers or the 8,000 residents of the nearest district. However, the communities in the area nearby complained about not being informed about the accident.

    In April 2002, two INB workers told Caetité's Radio Educadora that another leak of uranium liquor had happened at "Area 170" but was being kept as a secret by INB.

    In Caetité, between January and June 2004 the reservoir for radioactive water flooded seven times, which spread liquid effluents of uranium-238, thorium-232 and radium-226 to the Riacho das Vacas creek and the surrounding environment. This accident motivated in loco, or on-the-spot, inspections of CNEN's Coordination of Nuclear Facilities (Coordenação de Instalações Nucleares – CODIN). The inspectors produced a technical report which listed various irregularities, such as constant overflows of contaminated water and inadequate excavation measures, which could lead to landslides and lack of hydro-geological studies to prevent the contaminated water from reaching the groundwater. Despite the critiques of the report, Caetité's mining license was renewed. According to an article in Folha de S.Paulo, the report authors resigned from their positions.

    On 15 May 2009, a human error during a decontamination procedure at Angra 2 resulted in the release radioactive particles, affecting – but not severely contaminating – the six workers located near the incident site. Even though the Brazilian company in charge of nuclear energy production Eletrobras Eletronuclear claimed to have reported the accident to relevant authorities when it occurred, news about it only surfaced the media 11 days later.

    In Caetité, on 2 May 2010, a pipe broke at INB and 900 liters of uranium liquor spilled onto the soil.

    On 18 October 2012, an operational fault at the INB mine in Caetité, poured roughly 100 kilograms (220 pounds) of uranium onto the ground. INB claimed that it followed requisite protocol and cleaned the area.

    On 26 June 2013, a man who works for INB as a night watchman at Caetité's Uranium Concentrate Unit fell into a pool filled with 20,000 m³ of radioactive fluids. The incident became public through a local NGO, which reported the worker's fall and denounced the insufficient safety measures in place at the uranium plant; such as the absence of guardrails around radioactive storage pools. After the event made the news, INB released a note in which the company affirmed it had granted medical assistance to the worker. According to this statement, the worker went through checkups and his health has not been affected.


Oversight, control and nuclear security


While CNEN is responsible for promoting and fostering nuclear industry in Brazil, it also supervises and regulates the country's nuclear sector—a duality of responsibilities that can undermine the independence of the supervision system. It has also been pointed out that this goes against Article 8 of the Convention on Nuclear Safety, which states that


    "each Contracting Party shall take the appropriate steps to ensure an effective separation between the functions of the regulatory body and those of any other body or organization concerned with the promotion or utilization of nuclear energy."


Brazil has been a signatory to that accord since 2 June 1997.


Since early 2013, the Brazilian government is weighing a proposal to establish a nuclear regulatory agency. Some in the nuclear sector have voiced their support for the measure, which would separate regulation, licensing and control of nuclear activities from the fomentation, promotion and support for research and production of nuclear energy.

Transparency


From the outset, Brazil's nuclear program has been shrouded in secrecy. Nuclear issues are still considered a matter of national security and sovereignty, despite Brazil's democratic makeup and transition away from military dictatorship. There is little transparency regarding the various nuclear activities under the government's purview and the potential impact these can have on public health and the environment. Moreover, numerous attempts to keep radioactive accidents and incidents secret have undermined credibility of nuclear enterprises and led to distrust among the public.


In particular, local stakeholders based near uranium mines and nuclear facilities have expressed various nuclear-related concerns, ranging from impacts of uranium mining to the feasibility of the emergency plans. Political authorities and civil society organizations also complain about the lack of mechanisms to facilitate dialogue with the nuclear sector. The 2004 episode in which Brazil denied IAEA inspectors full visual access to its centrifuges also adds to these accusations, as does Brazil's persistent refusal to adhere to the Additional Protocol (AP).

Costs of nuclear activities


Throughout the decades, nuclear activities in Brazil have absorbed a huge amount of taxpayer money. While it is difficult to determine the total cost of the country's nuclear program across its history, the construction of Angra 1 and Angra 2 cost US$12.5 billion.


In 2008, the costs for the construction of Angra 3 were estimated in R$7.2 billion (US$3.4 billion). However, in 2010, that number was raised to R$10.4 billion (US$4.9 billion). This amount is in addition to the BR$1.5 billion (US$702 million) previously spent on the construction and the US$20 million spent annually with maintenance and storage of the equipment bought over 20 years ago.


In December 2012, the official estimate for the total cost of this project was R$13.9 billion (US$6 billion).


Several experts, like physicists Luiz Pinguelli Rosa and José Goldemberg, have voiced their opposition to Brazil's nuclear endeavor, calling it a very expensive source of energy. Indeed, the vast costs associated with nuclear energy are considered an obstacle to Brazilian development of a domestic renewable energy market according to Greenpeace.

Contested legality of Angra 3


In November 2007, Greenpeace filed legal motions to block the construction of Angra 3, arguing it was unlawful and unconstitutional. Greenpeace's lawyer, José Afonso da Silva, issued a legal opinion contending that the creation of Angra 3 was not a legal act of the executive branch. Da Silva's legal opinion also affirmed that Articles 21, 49 and 225 of the Constitution required that the construction of a nuclear power plant must be discussed beforehand in the parliament—an action that did not happen.


In January 2008, Federal Judge Renata Costa Moreira Musse Lopes ruled against Greenpeace's motion.

2010 Joint Tehran Declaration (Brazil, Iran and Turkey)


The nuclear program of Iran has been the topic of heated international argument since 2003. As a major player in the global non-proliferation regime, the United States has been one of the main actors in this debate.


During the Lula administration (2003-2011), Brazil promoted an emphatic defense of the right of Iran, as an NPT signatory, to enrich uranium. While this action was in accordance with the argument usually put forward by Brazil – that affirms developing countries can acquire technology considered important for their national development – it represented a source of disagreement between Brazil and the United States. According to reports of then-Foreign Minister Celso Amorim and leaked U.S. diplomatic cables, the United States had been trying to impress on Brazil the need to convince Iran to come to an agreement with the IAEA regarding its nuclear program. Following the U.S. requests, Brazilian diplomats, together with their Turkish counterparts, brokered an agreement with Iran which became public in May 2010. The deal was formalized via the tripartite Tehran Declaration that allowed Iran to send 1,200 kilograms of 3.5%-enriched uranium to Turkey in exchange for 20%-enriched nuclear fuel for a scientific reactor.



However, the initiative failed to win support of the five permanent members (P-5) of the United Nations Security Council. One reason cited was that the agreed-upon quantity of 1,200 kilograms was considered too low because it did not take into account Iran's accumulation of a larger amount of low-enriched uranium in the time since the IAEA first proposed the agreement, in late 2009. Additionally, the Tehran Declaration did not address Iran's production of 20%-enriched uranium. Thus, the United States and other Western powers worried that this agreement did not require Iran to curtail its enrichment program or even resolve outstanding questions about the possible military purposes of its nuclear activities. Shortly after the deal was announced, then-U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton declared that the P-5 had agreed on a draft text for a new set of sanctions on Iran.


The rejection of this joint venture with Iran and Turkey was a big source of frustration for Brazilian diplomacy. However, despite being called naïve and accused of prolonging a controversial activity of a dubious regime, President Lula maintained that "engaging Iran – not isolating it – was the best way to push for peace and stability in the Middle East." In Lula's view, ‘‘the existence of weapons of mass destruction is what makes the world more dangerous, not agreements with Iran."





------------------------------


Brazilian nuclear plant uranium convoy attacked by armed men: police

March 19, 2019

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-uranium-violence/brazilian-nuclear-plant-uranium-convoy-attacked-by-armed-men-police-idUSKCN1R02UV

RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - Armed men shot at members of a convoy transporting uranium to one of Brazil’s two working nuclear power plants on a coastal road in Rio de Janeiro state on Tuesday, police and the company managing the plant said.

They said the truck carrying the nuclear fuel and its police escort came under attack when it was passing by the town of Frade, about 30 km (19 miles) from Angra dos Reis, where the reactor is located.

Policemen guarding the convoy returned the attackers’ fire, police said. They said there were no injuries or arrests and the armed men fled.

Eletronuclear, the Centrais Elétricas Brasileiras SA subsidiary that manages the Angra nuclear plants, said in a statement that the uranium being transported was not dangerous and that the shipment was not delayed by the attack.

It said the incident occurred when police escorting the truck fanned out alongside the road as a precautionary measure after hearing nearby gunshots. The armed men then started firing on some of the heavily armed “shock battalion” accompanying the shipment, Eletronuclear said.

The nuclear fuel used in the two reactors in Brazil, Angra 1 and Angra 2, is produced in a government installation in Resende, a city in the interior of Rio de Janeiro state located 130 km (80.78 miles) from Angra dos Reis.

Brazil only processes uranium to be used as fuel for power plants, under the supervision of the International Atomic Energy Agency...




-------------------------------


Goiânia accident


The Goiânia accident was a radioactive contamination accident that occurred on September 13, 1987, in Goiânia, in the Brazilian state of Goiás, after a forgotten radiotherapy source was taken from an abandoned hospital site in the city. It was subsequently handled by many people, resulting in four deaths. About 112,000 people were examined for radioactive contamination and 249 of them were found to have been contaminated.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goi%C3%A2nia_accident

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Natural Fertility and Metals Contents in Soils of Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil)

19/Jan/2018

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/natural-fertility-and-metals-contents-in-soils-of-rio-grande-do-sul-brazil/

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Baseline and Quality Reference Values for Natural Radionuclides in Soils of Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil

2018

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/baseline-and-quality-reference-values-for-natural-radionuclides-in-soils-of-rio-de-janeiro-state-brazil/

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Reclamation of a Degraded Coal-Mining Area with Perennial Cover Crops

2016

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/reclamation-of-a-degraded-coal-mining-area-with-perennial-cover-crops/

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Rare Earth Element Concentrations in Brazilian Benchmark Soils

2016

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/rare-earth-element-concentrations-in-brazilian-benchmark-soils/

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Phytoextractor Potential of Cultivated Species in Industrial Area Contaminated by Lead

2016

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/phytoextractor-potential-of-cultivated-species-in-industrial-area-contaminated-by-lead/

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Growth, Biomass and Carbon Stocks in Forest Cover Planted in an Area of Bauxite Mining in Rehabilitation

2019

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/growth-biomass-and-carbon-stocks-in-forest-cover-planted-in-an-area-of-bauxite-mining-in-rehabilitation/

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Brazil’s actual forest-related CO2 emissions could blow by Paris pledge

19 April 2018

https://news.mongabay.com/2018/04/brazils-actual-forest-related-co2-emissions-could-blow-by-paris-pledge/

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The Carbon Brief Profile: Brazil

2018

https://www.carbonbrief.org/the-carbon-brief-profile-brazil

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Amazon carbon sink could be ‘much less’ due to lack of soil nutrients

Aug 2019

https://www.carbonbrief.org/amazon-carbon-sink-could-be-much-less-due-to-lack-of-soil-nutrients

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Carbon dioxide levels are at a record high. Here's what you need to know.

Carbon dioxide, a key greenhouse gas that drives global climate change, continues to rise every month. Find out the dangerous role it and other gases play.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/global-warming/greenhouse-gases/

--------------------------

Changes in soil carbon stocks in Brazil due to land use: paired site comparisons and a regional pasture soil survey

2013

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/307660183_Changes_in_soil_carbon_stocks_in_Brazil_due_to_land_use_paired_site_comparisons_and_a_regional_pasture_soil_survey

--------------------

Brazil Carbon (CO2) Emissions 1960-2019

https://www.macrotrends.net/countries/BRA/brazil/carbon-co2-emissions

Carbon dioxide emissions are those stemming from the burning of fossil fuels and the manufacture of cement. They include carbon dioxide produced during consumption of solid, liquid, and gas fuels and gas flaring.

    Brazil carbon (co2) emissions for 2014 was 529,808.16, a 5.19% increase from 2013.
    Brazil carbon (co2) emissions for 2013 was 503,677.12, a 7.16% increase from 2012.
    Brazil carbon (co2) emissions for 2012 was 470,028.73, a 6.97% increase from 2011.
    Brazil carbon (co2) emissions for 2011 was 439,412.94, a 4.68% increase from 2010.


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Can Cows Help Mitigate Climate Change? Yes, They Can!

December 19, 2018


https://daily.jstor.org/can-cows-help-mitigate-climate-change-yes-they-can/

Livestock emit greenhouse gases. They also can sequester carbon and boost biodiversity.

If managed grazing could be amped up worldwide, it could sequester over 16 gigatons of carbon by 2050.


--------------------

Scientists Zero in on Trees as a Surprisingly Large Source of Methane

By Fred Pearce • June 24, 2019

https://e360.yale.edu/features/scientists-probe-the-surprising-role-of-trees-in-methane-emissions

Recent research is showing that trees, especially in tropical wetlands, are a major source of the second most important greenhouse gas in the atmosphere, methane. The knowledge that certain woodlands are high methane emitters should help guide reforestation projects in many parts of the world.

There are many mysteries in the Amazon. Until recently, one of the most troubling was the vast methane emissions emerging from the rainforest that were observed by satellites but that nobody could find on the ground. Around 20 million tons was simply unaccounted for.

Then Sunitha Pangala, a British post-doc researcher, spent two months traveling the Amazon’s waterways strapping gas-measuring equipment to thousands of trees. She found that trees, especially in the extensive flooded forests, were stimulating methane production in the waterlogged soils and mainlining it into the atmosphere.

Her 2014 expedition plugged a gaping hole in the planet’s methane budget. And she had discovered a hitherto ignored major source of the second most important greenhouse gas in the atmosphere. It now seems that most of the world’s estimated 3 trillion trees emit methane at least some of the time.

Nobody is arguing that trees are therefore bad for climate and should be cut down. Indeed, in most cases, their carbon storage capability easily outweighs their methane emissions. But in a world where corporations plant trees to offset their carbon emissions, we badly need to know if their numbers add up, or if they are undermined by the complex chemistry of trees and methane.



Tropical wetlands, such as this mangrove forest in Bali, give off the most intense tree-based emissions of methane.


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 The expansion of Brazilian agriculture: Soil erosion scenarios

https://experts.umn.edu/en/publications/the-expansion-of-brazilian-agriculture-soil-erosion-scenarios

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Impact of logging and forest fires on soil erosion in tropical humid forest in Kalimantan (Indonesia)

https://www.cifor.org/library/934/

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Eroding the resilience of tropical forests

Understanding the relationships between forest resilience and soil erosion in tropical forests affected by human and natural disturbances

https://www.stockholmresilience.org/research/research-news/2019-09-09-eroding-the-resilience-of-tropical-forests.html

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Deforestation, erosion exacerbate mercury spikes near Peruvian gold mining
Modeling mercury release from soil erosion could help mine-heavy, deforested regions create helpful policies

Date:
    December 12, 2019
Source:
    Duke University
Summary:
    Scientists have developed a model that can predict the amount of mercury being released into a local ecosystem from deforestation. The research could point toward ways to mitigate the worst effects of mercury poisoning in regions already experiencing elevated mercury levels caused by small-scale gold mining practices, such as those in the Peruvian Amazon.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/12/191212122546.htm

------------

Gold mining in Venezuela: a “perfect storm” of illegality, deforestation and mafias

March 2016

Investigators and activists are pointing out that traditional miners throughout Venezuela, Brazil and Guyana are causing environmental destruction through hydraulic ground erosion, deforestation and the indiscriminate and inappropriate use of mercury –-a “perfect storm”.

https://news.mongabay.com/2016/03/gold-mining-in-venezuela-a-perfect-storm-of-illegality-deforestation-and-mafias/

------------

Pyrogenic Carbon Erosion: Implications for Stock and Persistence of Pyrogenic Carbon in Soil

2018

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2018.00026/full

------------

Sedimentation and Erosion

http://cep.unep.org/publications-and-resources/marine-and-coastal-issues-links/sedimentation-and-erosion

------------


Brazil's threatened slice of paradise

20 September 2012

Despite remaining largely off limits for most of this century, Ilha Grande’s recent tourism explosion means that preservation and sustainability have become more important than ever.

http://www.bbc.com/travel/story/20120914-brazils-threatened-slice-of-paradise

-----------------


What is Soil Erosion?

https://www.conserve-energy-future.com/causes-effects-solutions-of-soil-erosion.php

------------

Oil palm monoculture induces drastic erosion of an Amazonian forest mammal fauna

2017

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0187650

Abstract

Oil palm monoculture comprises one of the most financially attractive land-use options in tropical forests, but cropland suitability overlaps the distribution of many highly threatened vertebrate species. We investigated how forest mammals respond to a landscape mosaic, including mature oil palm plantations and primary forest patches in Eastern Amazonia. Using both line-transect censuses (LTC) and camera-trapping (CT), we quantified the general patterns of mammal community structure and attempted to identify both species life-history traits and the environmental and spatial covariates that govern species intolerance to oil palm monoculture. Considering mammal species richness, abundance, and species composition, oil palm plantations were consistently depauperate compared to the adjacent primary forest, but responses differed between functional groups. The degree of forest habitat dependency was a leading trait, determining compositional dissimilarities across habitats. Considering both the LTC and CT data, distance from the forest-plantation interface had a significant effect on mammal assemblages within each habitat type. Approximately 87% of all species detected within oil palm were never farther than 1300 m from the forest edge. Our study clearly reinforces the notion that conventional oil palm plantations are extremely hostile to native tropical forest biodiversity, which does not bode well given prospects for oil palm expansion in both aging and new Amazonian deforestation frontiers.

------------

Mulching Materials for Control of Soil Erosion September 2013

https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_PLANTMATERIALS/publications/mipmctn11904.pdf

------------

The Most Important Effects of Soil Erosion on Biodiversity

Feb 2016

https://greentumble.com/the-most-important-effects-of-soil-erosion-on-biodiversity/


-------------

Shrimp ponds lead to massive loss of soil carbon and greenhouse gas emissions in northeastern Brazilian mangroves.

2018

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29938071

Abstract

Mangroves of the semiarid Caatinga region of northeastern Brazil are being rapidly converted to shrimp pond aquaculture. To determine ecosystem carbon stocks and potential greenhouse gas emissions from this widespread land use, we measured carbon stocks of eight mangrove forests and three shrimp ponds in the Acaraú and Jaguaribe watersheds in Ceará state, Brazil. The shrimp ponds were paired with adjacent intact mangroves to ascertain carbon losses and potential emissions from land conversion. The mean total ecosystem carbon stock of mangroves in this semiarid tropical landscape was 413 ± 94 Mg C/ha. There were highly significant differences in the ecosystem carbon stocks between the two sampled estuaries suggesting caution when extrapolating carbon stock across different estuaries even in the same landscape. Conversion of mangroves to shrimp ponds resulted in losses of 58%-82% of the ecosystem carbon stocks. The mean potential emissions arising from mangrove conversion to shrimp ponds was 1,390 Mg CO2e/ha. Carbon losses were largely from soils which accounted for 81% of the total emission. Losses from soils >100 cm in depth accounted for 33% of the total ecosystem carbon loss. Soil carbon losses from shrimp pond conversion are equivalent to about 182 years of soil carbon accumulation. Losses from mangrove conversion are about 10-fold greater than emissions from conversion of upland tropical dry forest in the Brazilian Caatinga underscoring the potential value for their inclusion in climate change mitigation activities.

-------------------

Diversities and potential biogeochemical impacts of mangrove soil viruses

Published: 11 April 2019

https://microbiomejournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s40168-019-0675-9


Abstract

Background

Mangroves are ecologically and economically important forests of the tropics. As one of the most carbon-rich biomes, mangroves account for 11% of the total input of terrestrial carbon into oceans. Although viruses are considered to significantly influence local and global biogeochemical cycles, little information is available regarding the community structure, genetic diversity and ecological roles of viruses in mangrove ecosystems.


Methods

Here, we utilised viral metagenomics sequencing and virome-specific bioinformatics tools to study viral communities in six mangrove soil samples collected from different mangrove habitats in Southern China.


Results

Mangrove soil viruses were found to be largely uncharacterised. Phylogenetic analyses of the major viral groups demonstrated extensive diversity and previously unknown viral clades and suggested that global mangrove viral communities possibly comprise evolutionarily close genotypes. Comparative analysis of viral genotypes revealed that mangrove soil viromes are mainly affected by marine waters, with less influence coming from freshwaters. Notably, we identified abundant auxiliary carbohydrate-active enzyme (CAZyme) genes from mangrove viruses, most of which participate in biolysis of complex polysaccharides, which are abundant in mangrove soils and organism debris. Host prediction results showed that viral CAZyme genes are diverse and probably widespread in mangrove soil phages infecting diverse bacteria of different phyla.


Conclusions

Our results showed that mangrove viruses are diverse and probably directly manipulate carbon cycling by participating in biomass recycling of complex polysaccharides, providing the knowledge essential in revealing the ecological roles of viruses in mangrove ecosystems.

-------------------

Assessing the potential of soil carbonation and enhanced weathering through Life Cycle Assessment: A case study for Sao Paulo State, Brazil

October 2019

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959652619320578

-------------------

Soil carbon stock and Plinthosol fertility in smallholder land-use systems in the eastern Amazon, Brazil

2018

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/17583004.2018.1530026

-------------------

The southern Brazilian grassland biome: soil carbon stocks, fluxes of greenhouse gases and some options for mitigation

2012

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842012000400006

--------------------

Changes in soil carbon stocks in Brazil due to land use: paired sitecomparisons and a regional pasture soil survey

https://www.biogeosciences.net/10/6141/2013/bg-10-6141-2013.pdf

--------------------

Brazil’s Amazonian forest carbon: the key to Southern Amazonia’s significance for global climate

11 July 2016

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10113-016-1007-2

--------------------


Brazil has the world’s weirdest carbon footprint

November 8, 2013

https://qz.com/144995/brazil-has-the-worlds-weirdest-carbon-footprint/

--------------------


Evidence of limited carbon sequestration in soils under no-tillage systems in the Cerrado of Brazil

2016

https://www.nature.com/articles/srep21450

--------------------

Greenhouse gas emissions from soils—A review

October 2016

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0009281916300551

-------------------


Tropical Forests Are Flipping From Storing Carbon to Releasing It

Illegal logging and land seizures are driving this ominous yet overlooked scientific trend.

August 30, 2018

https://www.thenation.com/article/tropical-forests-are-flipping-from-storing-carbon-to-releasing-it/

-------------------

Is Soil The Secret to Slowing Climate Change?

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3cswvxl

-------------------

 Carbon emissions from warming soils could trigger disastrous feedback loop

2017

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/oct/05/carbon-emissions-warming-soils-higher-than-estimated-signalling-tipping-points

26-year study reveals natural biological factors kick in once warming reaches certain point, leading to potentially unstoppable increase in temperatures

-------------------

Farmers in Brazil Use Legumes to Reduce Costs, Greenhouse Gas Emissions

https://www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/farmers-in-brazil-use-legumes-to-reduce-costs-greenhouse-gas-emissions


-------------------


Study: As forests, grasslands gave way to farms, soil carbon emissions soared

10 Mar 2015

https://forestsnews.cifor.org/27137/soil-carbon-emissions-agriculture-brazil-argentina?fnl=en



-------------------

Heavy Metal Contamination in Brazilian Agricultural Soils due to Application of Fertilizers

March 2014

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/300713950_Heavy_Metal_Contamination_in_Brazilian_Agricultural_Soils_due_to_Application_of_Fertilizers

The Brazilian grain production reaches record productivities each year and among the major crops, stand out the maize (Zea mays L.) and soybean (Glycine max L.). For these two cultures, the obtaining of the maximum yield has a fundamental importance in the current global scenario. In this relentless pursuit of higher productivities, farmers use technologies related to various areas, such as new forms of fertilizer and pesticide application, different fertilizers, crop breeding, equipment and techniques of planting and harvesting. In order to increase the efficiency in this activity, due to the increased requirement for competitiveness of economic globalization, one of the tools found by farmers is the use of fertilizers containing micronutrients in their crops. Among the various factors of production, the need of balanced and sustainable fertilizers occupies a prominent place, which should include not only the primary and secondary macronutrients, but also micronutrients, which are not considered in routine fertilization by most farmers. Currently, with the advancement of the industries of fertilizers, micronutrients are added directly in the formulation of basic fertilizers (N:P2O5:K2O), which can be found in the market of domestic and imported agricultural inputs. Among the several micronutrients used in Brazilian and Global agriculture, zinc (Zn) is a major one, having its need scientifically established over 70 years being its main functions related to photosynthesis, respiration, protein synthesis and plant membrane permeability.

-------------------

Climate change being fuelled by soil damage - report

29 April 2019


 


https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-48043134

-------------------

Mineralogy and Concentration of Potentially Toxic Elements in Soils of the São Francisco Sedimentary Basin

2018

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/mineralogy-and-concentration-of-potentially-toxic-elements-in-soils-of-the-sao-francisco-sedimentary-basin/

--------------------

Uatuma-Trombetas moist forests

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uatuma-Trombetas_moist_forests

Status

The World Wildlife Fund classes the ecoregion as "Relatively Stable/Intact". The habitat is fairly intact in the interior, but continues to suffer from deforestation along the main roads and rivers, around and to the north of Manaus, and in the region from Óbidos to Monte Alegre along the Amazon. Cattle ranchers have cleared large areas of forest, as have commercial plantations around the Jari River and forestry in the east of the region. Some species are threatened by the trade in wildlife, by hunting and by selective logging. Upland areas have been destroyed by mining, which has polluted the rivers. Huge areas of upland forest were submerged by the Balbina Dam in the southwest.

The 3,850 square kilometres (1,490 sq mi) Rio Trombetas Biological Reserve and the 2,271 square kilometres (877 sq mi) Jari Ecological Station protect parts of the ecoregion.

--------------------

Rearing cattle produces more greenhouse gases than driving cars, UN report warns

2006

https://news.un.org/en/story/2006/11/201222-rearing-cattle-produces-more-greenhouse-gases-driving-cars-un-report-warns

-------------------

 Amazon rainforest absorbing less carbon than expected

20-Aug-2019

New study finds that insufficient nutrient supply has not been properly accounted for in ecosystem models

Agriculture, forestry, and other types of land use account for 23% of human-caused greenhouse gas emissions, yet at the same time natural land processes absorb the equivalent of almost a third of carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels and industry, according to the International Panel on Climate Change, which issued the first-ever comprehensive report on land and climate interactions earlier this month. How long will the Amazon rainforest continue to act as an effective carbon sink?

https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-08/dbnl-ara081919.php


--------------------

Brazil’s carbon emissions rose 8.9% in 2016, despite recession

27/10/2017

https://www.climatechangenews.com/2017/10/27/brazils-carbon-emissions-rose-8-9-2016-despite-recession/

Despite Brazil’s worst recession in history, national greenhouse gases emissions are estimated to have risen 8.9% in 2016 and reached the highest level since 2008, agriculture and illegal deforestation were the main culprits.

--------------------

The carbon offset market: Leveraging forest carbon's value in the Brazilian Amazon
A government-run program implements a new model for carbon credits

Date: April 5, 2019

Source: Dartmouth College


Summary:
    As companies seek and are required to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions, the world's carbon markets are expanding. A government-run program in the Amazon rainforest in northwestern Brazil transforms forest carbon value into public wealth by focusing on labor rather than land rights. In the Brazilian state of Acre, some of the revenue from carbon credits is distributed to rural laborers and family farmers without land rights. A new study examines the benefits and risks associated with Acre's unique approach.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/04/190405170454.htm


--------------------

Initial Recovery of Organic Matter of a Grass-Covered Constructed Soil after Coal Mining

2016

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/initial-recovery-of-organic-matter-of-a-grass-covered-constructed-soil-after-coal-mining/

---------------------

Perennial grasses for recovery of the aggregation capacity of a reconstructed soil in a coal mining area in southern Brazil

01/Feb/2014

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/perennial-grasses-for-recovery-of-the-aggregation-capacity-of-a-reconstructed-soil-in-a-coal-mining-area-in-southern-brazil/


-------------------

Assessing arsenic, cadmium, and lead contents in major crops in Brazil for food safety purposes

2013

https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/82456001.pdf

------------------

 Soil Contamination by a Lead Smelter in Brazil in the View of the Local Residents

2018

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6210486/

---------------------

Background and Reference Values of Metals in Soils from Paraíba State, Brazil

2016

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/background-and-reference-values-of-metals-in-soils-from-paraiba-state-brazil/


---------------------


ASSESSMENT OF BIOAVAILABILITY OF HEAVY METALS AFTER VERMICOMPOSTING IN THE PRESENCE OF ELECTRONIC WASTE

01/Dec/2015

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/assessment-of-bioavailability-of-heavy-metals-after-vermicomposting-in-the-presence-of-electronic-waste/

---------------------

SOIL PHOSPHORUS THRESHOLDS IN EVALUATING RISK OF ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSFER TO SURFACE WATERS IN SANTA CATARINA, BRAZIL

01/Jul/2015

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/soil-phosphorus-thresholds-in-evaluating-risk-of-environmental-transfer-to-surface-waters-in-santa-catarina-brazil/

--------------------

PROCESS OF GENERATING ACID MINE DRAINAGE AND HEAVY METAL CONTAMINATION IN PROFILES OF REBUILT SOIL IN A COAL MINING AREA

01/Dec/2015

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/process-of-generating-acid-mine-drainage-and-heavy-metal-contamination-in-profiles-of-rebuilt-soil-in-a-coal-mining-area/

--------------------

Coal mining in Brazil

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal_mining_in_Brazil

Environmental impact
Further information: environmental impact of the coal industry

Coal mining activity has a large impact on the environment, especially in the areas directly surrounding the mines. These environmental problems are the result of over 120 years of unregulated mining activity, lack of accountability and enforcement in regards to waste disposal, lack of knowledge, and different economic priorities. Since the first boom coal exploration in the mid-20th century, immediate and long-term physical, chemical, and biological changes in local ecosystems have resulted. (Zocche, et al. 2010) One of the biggest environmental threats related to coal mining is posed by waste disposal. Brazilian coal is characterized by high sulfide contents, pyrite and marcasite. The waste contains a broad array of elements including metals such as copper, cobalt, mercury, arsenic, and zinc among others. The contact of this waste material with air and water results in acid mine drainage (AMD), which can be detrimental to terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Intense rains contribute to the seepage of waste deposits into the groundwater supply, generating and carrying the acid drainage from abandoned mines into the nearby rivers and streams. It increases turbidity and siltation, which in turn affects the food supply for the organisms in the affected areas. Seriously polluted sites may be environmentally hazardous despite the natural capacity of soils to reduce the solubility and bioavailability of toxic metals. Despite this capacity, environmental risks may persist at seriously polluted sites, including those that were abandoned decades ago. This is of relevance considering the 1000 abandoned mines in the state of Santa Catarina alone.

Waste disposal is the principal cause of water pollution in the state of Santa Catarina. Coal strip mining methods and the surface disposal of waste rock results in the contamination of surface and ground waters. The Tuburão, Urussanga, and Araranguá Rivers in the state of Santa Catarina comprise the state's coal basin where there are 134 strip mine sites, 115 waste deposit areas, 77 sites with acidic pools, and hundreds of mines, and thus receive the majority of the waste generated. Coal drainage from each of these locations is responsible for high levels of water contamination. The resulting acidic streams affect local vegetation and prevent re-vegetation of affected areas.

Polluted water sources also means that the plants and sediments within them are contaminated. Organisms that feed off of these elements as well as terrestrial animals that are higher up in the food chain may accumulate toxic levels in their tissues. Open mines may fill with water and become lakes, and the toxic levels of heavy metals are thus transmitted to animals that drink and eat from the water source. Accumulation of these elements may also destroy the physical habitat by encrusting streambeds and aquatic plants.

Soil degradation is another concern. Coal mining changes the morphology of the land and requires deforestation and vegetation removal. This, combined with improper waste disposal, increased erosion and instability of river and stream slopes, and the opening of caves, is responsible for soil degradation. In addition, thousands of hectares of land are now infertile and unusable for agriculture and other farming activities.

Improper management of chemicals used in the mining process has led to incidences of spontaneous combustion, thus contributing to air pollution. The extraction and transportation of coal also causes atmospheric pollution. Coal fires from poor mining practices release fly ash, greenhouse gases, and toxic chemicals into the atmosphere, the results of which may be long lasting considering that these fires may burn for decades. Mining also releases coalmine methane, a greenhouse gas twenty times more powerful than carbon dioxide.

--------------------

Fertility Evaluation of Limed Brazilian Soil Polluted with Scrap Metal Residue

2013

https://www.hindawi.com/journals/aess/2013/543095/

Abstract

The aim of this work was to characterize the main inorganic contaminants and evaluate the effect of lime addition, combined with soil dilution with uncontaminated soil, as a strategy for mitigation of these contaminants present in a soil polluted with auto scrap. The experiment was performed in a greenhouse at Campinas (São Paulo State, Brazil) in plastic pots (3 dm−3). Five soil mixtures, obtained by mixing an uncontaminated soil sample with contaminated soil (0, 25, 50, 75, and 100% contaminated soil), were evaluated for soil fertility, availability of inorganic contaminants, and corn development. In addition to the expected changes in soil chemistry due to the addition of lime, only the availability of Fe and Mn in the soil mixtures was affected, while the available contents of Cu, Zn, Cd, Cr, Ni, and Pb increased to some extent in the soil mixtures with higher proportion of contaminated soil. Liming of 10 t ha−1 followed by soil dilution at any proportion studied was not successful for mitigation of the inorganic contaminants to a desired level of soil fertility, as demonstrated by the available amounts extracted by the DTPA method (Zn, Pb, Cu, Ni, Cr, Cd) and hot water (B) still present in the soil. This fact was also proved by the phytotoxicity observed and caused by high amounts of B and Zn accumulating in the plant tissue.

--------------------

BRACHIARIA IN SELENIUM-CONTAMINATED SOIL UNDER SULPHUR SOURCE APPLICATIONS

01/Dec/2015

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/brachiaria-in-selenium-contaminated-soil-under-sulphur-source-applications/

--------------------

Concentrations of potentially toxic elements in soils and vegetables from the macroregion of São Paulo, Brazil: availability for plant uptake

2016

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10661-016-5100-2

--------------------

Sheep Excreta as Source of Nitrous Oxide in Ryegrass Pasture in Southern Brazil

01/Sep/2015

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/sheep-excreta-as-source-of-nitrous-oxide-in-ryegrass-pasture-in-southern-brazil/


--------------------

Organic Matter Fractions and Quality of the Surface Layer of a Constructed and Vegetated Soil After Coal Mining. I – Humic Substances and Chemical Characterization

01/May/2015

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/organic-matter-fractions-and-quality-of-the-surface-layer-of-a-constructed-and-vegetated-soil-after-coal-mining-i-humic-substances-and-chemical-characterization/

--------------------

Environmental risk of trace elements in P-containing fertilizers marketed in Brazil

2017

https://scielo.conicyt.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0718-95162017000300007

-------------------

Mercury Content in Soils of Southeastern Brazil Without Anthropogenic Influence and its Correlation with Soil Characteristics

01/May/2015

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/mercury-content-in-soils-of-southeastern-brazil-without-anthropogenic-influence-and-its-correlation-with-soil-characteristics/

--------------------

Remediation of Clay Soils Contaminated with Potentially Toxic Elements: The Santo Amaro Lead Smelter, Brazil, Case

12 Jul 2018

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/15320383.2018.1493717

ABSTRACT

The remediation of clayey soil contaminated by potentially toxic elements is a challenging task, especially because of the low permeability and strong affinity of such toxic elements, which prevent the effective use of low-cost in situ remediation methods. The clay soil from the region of the former Santo Amaro primary lead smelter has high concentrations of potentially toxic elements, especially Pb, Cd, Sb, and Zn. This study presents a preliminary evaluation of remediation by soil washing and thermal stabilization, which can support clean-up initiatives for this site. The treatment results indicate that soil washing using EDTA can be an effective method to clean up the soil; however, the solid-liquid separation step by filtration is slow. Soil thermal treatment at temperatures higher than 800°C in an oxidant atmosphere results in the formation of ceramic structure because of the high smectite content, which stabilizes the potentially toxic elements. The estimated cost for remediation by soil excavation, replacement, and stabilization, of the critically contaminated site at the Santo Amaro region is estimated at about 20 to 30 million US$.

-------------------

Contamination and Soil Biological Properties in the Serra Pelada Mine – Amazonia, Brazil

05/Feb/2018

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/contamination-and-soil-biological-properties-in-the-serra-pelada-mine-amazonia-brazil/

-------------------

Brazil faces chronic pollution scenario after mine disaster

28/09/18

https://www.scidev.net/global/environment/news/brazil-faces-chronic-pollution-scenario-after-mine-disaster.html


    1,500 hectares destroyed in Brazil’s worst environmental disaster in 2015
    Study shows toxic metals stored in soil gradually released back into environment
    Town that relies on fishing and tourism at risk from chronic contamination





Toxic effluent with mud and oxides travelled along 600 kilometres, causing destruction in its path.



------------------

Acid rain, explained

The fossil fuels that humans burn for energy can come back to haunt us as acid rain.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/global-warming/acid-rain/

------------------

Acid Rain in Downtown São Paulo City, Brazil

2005

https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-1-4020-5885-1_10

During the period from July 2002 to June 2004, the chemical characteristics of the rainwater samples collected in downtown São Paulo were investigated. The analysis of 224 wet-only precipitation samples included pH and electrical conductivity, as well as major ions (Na+, NH4 +, K+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Cl−, NO3 −, SO4 2− ) and carboxylic acids (acetic, formic and oxalic) using ion chromatography. The volume weighted mean, VWM, of the anions NO3 −,SO4 2− and Cl− was, respectively, 20.3, 12.1 and 10.7 μmol 1−1. Rainwater in São Paulo was acidic, with 55% of the samples exhibiting a pH below 5.6. The VWMof the free H+ was 6.27 μmol 1−1), corresponding to a pH of 5.20. Ammonia (NH3), determined as NH4 + (VWM=32.8 μmol 1−1), was the main acidity neutralizing agent. Considering that the H+ ion is the only counter ion produced from the non-seasalt fraction of the dissociated anions, the contribution of each anion to the free acidity potential has the following profile: SO 4 2− (31.1%), NO 3 − (26.0%), CH3COO− (22.0%), Cl− (13.7%), HCOO− (5.4%) and C 2 O 4 2− (1.8%). The precipitation chemistry showed seasonal differences, with higher concentrations of ammonium and calcium during autumn and winter (dry period). The marine contribution was not significant, while the direct vehicular emission showed to be relevant in the ionic composition of precipitation.

--------------


Acid Precipitation Research in Brazil: A Short Review

January 1991

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/300055107_Acid_Precipitation_Research_in_Brazil_A_Short_Review

Abstract
The acid precipitation phenomenon has been extensively studied in various regions of the northern hemisphere, where anthropogenic influences have disrupted natural biogeochemical cycles. The impact of this acidity ranges from acidification of lakes, rivers, groundwater and soils, to changes in agricultural and forest crop productivity (Mason & Seip, 1985).

--------------

ENVIRONMENT: Uruguay and Brazil at Loggerheads over Acid Rain

Aug 28 1996

http://www.ipsnews.net/1996/08/environment-uruguay-and-brazil-at-loggerheads-over-acid-rain/

--------------

Precipitation chemistry in the coast of the Metropolitan Region of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

 2001

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11504346

Abstract

Precipitation chemistry was studied in the Metropolitan Region of Rio de Janeiro (MRRJ). This study reveals that rainwater in the MRRJ is affected by emissions of air pollutants and provides essential data for future estimates of regional biogeochemical cycles and the impacts of acid deposition on tropical ecosystems. The volume-weighted mean (VWM) pH was 4.77, varying from 3.50 to 6.85. Sea-salt aerosols were the dominant sources of the Na+, Cl- and Mg2+. Excess SO4(2-), Ca2+ and K+ comprised 82, 91, and 87% of their total VWM concentrations, respectively. There were very strong correlations (r > 0.75, P > 0.01) for NO3- and H+, NO3- and excess(exc-)SO4(2-), NH4+ and exc-K+, and exc-SO4(2-) and exc-Ca2+, suggesting causal relationships between these ion pairs. The VWM concentrations of all major ions, except H+, were higher in the dry season, with dry to wet VWM concentration ratios varying from 1.1 (NH4+) to 4.7 (for total K+).


---------------

Acid pollution said to threaten soils and crops in third world

October 16, 1985

https://www.csmonitor.com/1985/1016/oacid.html

---------------

Ocean Acidification

June 18 2013

Addressing the Impacts of Ocean Acidification from thePerspective of Developing Countries

https://www.un.org/depts/los/consultative_process/ICP14_Presentations/WAINER_ICP_PRESENTATION.pdf


---------------------------------------------------


Brazil’s pesticide poisoning problem poses global dilemma, say critics

27 August 2018

https://news.mongabay.com/2018/08/brazils-pesticide-poisoning-problem-poses-global-dilemma-say-critics/

------------------

Brazil’s Pesticide Industry Is Creating Massive PFOS Contamination

April 29 2019

https://theintercept.com/2019/04/29/brazil-pfos-sulfluramid-pesticide/

DuPont used to produce sulfluramid in the U.S., where it was sold in products marketed to kill ants, roaches, and termites. New York banned sulfluramid in the 1990s. And in 2001, when the state levied the largest penalty in its history against a company distributing a sulfluramid-containing pesticide, the New York attorney general noted that “if a child ingested the bait, he or she could suffer irreversible reproductive damage, and boys could be rendered infertile.” In 2008, DuPont voluntarily canceled its registration of the chemical.

The ongoing use of sulfluramid in Brazil despite widespread knowledge of its dangers shows just how difficult it is to control the entire family of toxic chemicals to which PFOS belongs. Those chemicals, known as PFAS, now pollute water around the world. While delegates of the Stockholm Convention will be debating how to close the loopholes around PFOS and whether to enact a global ban on the closely related chemical PFOA, well over 1,000 other PFAS chemicals are still in active use.


-----------------

Analysis of heavy metals and aromatics compounds in soil layers of a sanitary landfill

06 March 2019

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/tqem.21607


Abstract

Solid waste presents the potential for contamination of the soil when it is improperly managed. One of the great challenges of today's society is to promote the proper disposal of municipal solid waste in order to guarantee the safety of public health and to avoid risks to the environment. In this context, the objective of this study is to analyze the concentration profiles of heavy metals and aromatic hydrocarbons of risk that human health in landfill soil. Such works provides an important tool to evaluate the possible presence of contaminants from inappropriate waste disposal, as well as to assist in the management of waste and to prevent environmental contamination. In order to analyze cadmium (Cd), lead (Pb), nickel (Ni), arsenic (As), and mercury (Hg), which are toxic elements, and aromatic hydrocarbons, including benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, o‐xylene, m‐xylene, and p‐xylene, soil samples were collected at different sites and depths. Neither Cd nor As was detected in any of the samples that were analyzed. Pb levels ranged from 5.34 milligrams per kilograms (mg/kg) to 7.40 mg/kg, Ni levels ranged from 2.17 mg/kg to 3.00 mg/kg, and Hg levels ranged from 75.4 micrograms per kilograms (μg/kg) to 88.3 μg/kg. The aromatic hydrocarbon compounds of benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and o‐xylene were below 5.5 μg/kg, and m‐, p‐xylene was below 11 μg/kg. The analysis of heavy metals and aromatic hydrocarbons present in the landfill soil showed concentrations below the soil quality guideline values of the Brazilian National Environment Council (CONAMA) Resolution 420, which has criteria for the presence of chemical substances in soil for Brazil. Therefore, the low levels of chemicals may be related to the operational time of the landfill or to the population profile of the municipality, which is predominantly composed of persons involved in family‐based agriculture.



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Atrazine Transportation in a Sandy Soil in the Brazilian Cerrado

https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2018AGUFM.B33G2772Z/abstract

Savanna regions in Brazil are largely explored for agriculture production. This biome is also important for surface and groundwater availability, once it houses the springs of large river basins and parts of the Guarani Aquifer System outcrop zone. In the last 20 years, Brazil has experienced an exceptional increasing in agricultural production and this increase can be directly related to the use of mechanization, fertilizers and pesticides. The herbicides are the most sold among the agrochemicals. Atrazine is an herbicide used to grow sugarcane, sorghum, and corn plantation; and the states placed in Cerrado biome are the greatest consumers. Although this chemical was banned in many countries due to its toxic effects, in Brazil it is still in use. Despite of being a compound used since 1960, information of atrazine behavior in tropical soils is still missing. A wide variety of soil types in Brazil and the lack of information on tropical soils made the risk of contamination by atrazine even greater. In order to understand the behavior of this compound in Cerrado soils, experimental plots studies in a Cerrado region of São Carlos-SP have been carried out since 2017. The region presents an Entisol (82% sand). The current experiment has 6 experimental plots, 3 of them containing sugarcane and 3 without plant cover (bare soil). After rainfall events that generate runoff in the plots (rainfall events greater than 8 mm), samples of runoff, eroded soil, and leached solution are collected to perform atrazine balance in the unsaturated soil. The quantification of atrazine has been carried out using HPLC. The results indicated that the transport by runoff in the exposed soil plots reaches 10 times greater than in the sugarcane plots. Regarding the leaching process, they implied the high mobility of atrazine in sandy soil. Even in plots with sugarcane, where the organic matter content is higher, it was possible to identify the herbicide at 60 cm depth right in the first monitored rainfall. The experiment confirms the high mobility of the herbicide atrazine in a sandy soil, with potential for soil-water contamination. The results will also help to predict the potential for contamination of groundwater by atrazine.

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 'The river is dying': the vast ecological cost of Brazil's mining disasters

Jan 2019


https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/jan/29/the-river-is-dying-the-vast-ecological-cost-of-brazils-mining-disasters

Water resources are tapped with often reckless abandon and poor regulation. And it looks set to go on under new president

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Brazil dam disaster: How do you clear tonnes of toxic sludge?

1 February 2019


 


https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-47061559

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Heavy Metal Contamination in Brazilian Agricultural Soils due to Application of Fertilizers

March 26th 2014

https://www.intechopen.com/books/environmental-risk-assessment-of-soil-contamination/heavy-metal-contamination-in-brazilian-agricultural-soils-due-to-application-of-fertilizers

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Rio Is Closing This Enormous, Odorous Dump After 34 years

Jun 2, 2012

https://www.businessinsider.com/jardim-gramacho-rio-closing-brazil-2012-6

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — One of the world's largest open-air landfills, a vast, seaside mountain of trash where thousands of people have made a living sorting through the debris by hand, will close this weekend after 34 years in malodorous service.

Long a symbol of ill-conceived urban planning and environmental negligence, Rio de Janeiro's Jardim Gramacho dump is being transformed into a vast biogas facility that will harness the greenhouse gases generated by the rotting rubbish and turn them into fuel capable of heating homes and powering cars. Environmentalists had blamed Gramacho for the high levels of pollution in Rio's once pristine Guanabara Bay, where tons of run-off from the garbage had leaked.

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Garbage Outgrowing Rio’s Landfill

October 26, 2010

https://riotimesonline.com/brazil-news/rio-politics/garbage-outgrowing-rio%E2%80%99s-landfill/

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Smuggling Europe’s Waste to Poorer Countries

SEPT. 26, 2009

https://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/27/science/earth/27waste.html

ROTTERDAM, the Netherlands — When two inspectors swung open the doors of a battered red shipping container here, they confronted a graveyard of Europe’s electronic waste — old wires, electricity meters, circuit boards — mixed with remnants of cardboard and plastic.

“This is supposed to be going to China, but it isn’t going anywhere,” said Arno Vink, an inspector from the Dutch environment ministry who impounded the container because of Europe’s strict new laws that place restrictions on all types of waste exports, from dirty pipes to broken computers to household trash.

Exporting waste illegally to poor countries has become a vast and growing international business, as companies try to minimize the costs of new environmental laws, like those here, that tax waste or require that it be recycled or otherwise disposed of in an environmentally responsible way.

Rotterdam, the busiest port in Europe, has unwittingly become Europe’s main external garbage chute, a gateway for trash bound for places like China, Indonesia, India and Africa. There, electronic waste and construction debris containing toxic chemicals are often dismantled by children at great cost to their health. Other garbage that is supposed to be recycled according to European law may be simply burned or left to rot, polluting air and water and releasing the heat-trapping gases linked to global warming.

While much of the international waste trade is legal, sent to qualified overseas recyclers, a big chunk is not. For a price, underground traders make Europe’s waste disappear overseas...

In July, a shipment of 1,400 metric tons of British household garbage that was illegally sent to South America — labeled as clean plastic for recycling — was apprehended only after it landed in Brazil...

 

---------------------

Illegal traffic under  the Basel Convention

http://www.basel.int/Portals/4/Basel%20Convention/docs/pub/leaflets/leaflet-illegtraf-2010-en.pdf

National reports submitted in the framework of the Basel Convention suggest that nearly 180 million tonnes of hazardous and household wastes are generated annually around the world1. According to the same reports, at least 9.3 million tonnes of these wastes move from country to country each year, and this waste is presumably received as a welcome source of business. This leaves some 170 millions tonnes of hazardous and household wastes that are assumed to be disposed of nationally in an environmentally sound manner. But is this the case?

Many countries complain that they are receiving shipments which they never agreed to or that they are unable to properly dispose of. From Brazil to Singapore, from Belgium to Ghana, or from Canada to Russia, it would be challenging to find a single country that has never suffered a case of illegal traffic of waste.

---------------------

 

Disturbing Photos Of Children In Garbage Show Just How Bad Pollution Can Be.

Apr 16, 2015

https://www.nairaland.com/2259819/disturbing-photos-children-garbage-show

 

---------------------

 

Chile’s desert dumping ground for fast fashion leftovers

8 Nov 2021

Chile’s Atacama, the driest desert in the world, is increasingly suffering from pollution caused by fast fashion.

https://www.aljazeera.com/gallery/2021/11/8/chiles-desert-dumping-ground-for-fast-fashion-leftovers

 

---------------------


Toxic Futures: Untold Stories of Chemical Pollution

(Earth Focus: Episode 56) Exposure to toxic chemicals affects people in both the industrialized and developing world. Earth Focus looks at how Toms River, a New Jersey town, fought back to save its drinking water from toxic waste dumping by dye manufacturer Ciba Geigy and by Union Carbide. Then, a look at the new film Amazon Gold, which addresses illegal gold mining in Peru and its tragic impact on human health and the environment.

https://www.kcet.org/shows/earth-focus/episodes/toxic-futures-untold-stories-of-chemical-pollution

---------------------


Arsenic contamination of groundwater

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arsenic_contamination_of_groundwater


Arsenic contamination of groundwater is a form of groundwater pollution which is often due to naturally occurring high concentrations of arsenic in deeper levels of groundwater. It is a high-profile problem due to the use of deep tubewells for water supply in the Ganges Delta, causing serious arsenic poisoning to large numbers of people. A 2007 study found that over 137 million people in more than 70 countries are probably affected by arsenic poisoning of drinking water. The problem became serious health concern after mass poisoning of water in Bangladesh. Arsenic contamination of ground water is found in many countries throughout the world, including the US.

Approximately 20 major incidents of groundwater floarsenic contamination have been reported. Of these, four major incidents occurred in Asia, in Thailand, Taiwan, and Mainland China. Locations of potentially hazardous wells have been mapped in China.

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Section 6: Deforestation & Cattle

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Beef Companies Failing in Effort to Slow Amazon Deforestation, Study Says

Oct 19, 2016

America's top beef buyers have vowed to help stop the clearing of rainforest land for beef production, but haven't gone far enough, says advocacy group

https://insideclimatenews.org/news/17102016/beef-companies-failing-effort-slow-amazon-rainforest-deforestation-climate-change-mcdonalds-burger-king-walmart

   
-------------------

Project Amazonia: Threats - Agriculture and Cattle Ranching

http://web.mit.edu/12.000/www/m2006/final/threats/threat_agg.html

-------------------

 Agriculture in Brazil

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agriculture_in_Brazil

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 Asymmetries of cattle and crop productivity and efficiency during Brazil’s agricultural expansion from 1975 to 2006

https://www.elementascience.org/articles/10.1525/elementa.187/

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The Expansion of Intensive Beef Farming to the Brazilian Amazon

2019

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0959378018312093

--------------

Deforestation of the Amazon rainforest


Brazil once had the highest deforestation rate in the world and in 2005 still had the largest area of forest removed annually.[1] Since 1970, over 700,000 square kilometres (270,000 sq mi) of the Amazon rainforest have been destroyed. In 2012, the Amazon was approximately 5,400,000 square kilometres (2,100,000 sq mi), which is only 87% of the Amazon's original size.





A NASA observation of forest cover and deforestation in the state of Mato Grosso for 2004.





A NASA satellite observation of forest fires resulting from deforestation in August 2007. The red dots represent areas of fire.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deforestation_of_the_Amazon_rainforest


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Deforestation has become big business in the Brazilian Amazon

April 2017

https://news.mongabay.com/2017/04/deforestation-has-become-big-business-in-the-brazilian-amazon/

---------------------

The destruction of the Amazon, explained

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SAZAKPUQMw0

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Deforestation of the Amazon rainforest




Deforestation for the use of clay in the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro. The hill depicted is Morro da Covanca, in Jacarepaguá.




Deforestation in the Maranhão state of Brazil, 2016


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deforestation_of_the_Amazon_rainforest

---------------------

 Amazon Rainforest Deforestation

https://www.ecowatch.com/search/?q=deforestation

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Deforestation in Brazil



(Deforestation in the state of Pará).



 


 (The zig-zag patterns across the road resulting from deforestation in Brazil can be seen from space).





(Slash-and-burn forest clearing along the Rio Xingu (Xingu River) in the state of Mato Grosso).





(Map of deforestation in Brazil from 2002 to 2008 for each biome. Bases: PRODES (INPE) and Biome Monitoring (IBAMA). Note: The monitoring does not cover areas of Cerrado and Campinarama (savannahs) located in the Amazon biome).




Contents

    1 History
    2 Causes
        2.1 Cattle ranching and infrastructure
        2.2 Hydroelectric
        2.3 Mining activities
        2.4 Soybean production
        2.5 Logging
    3 Effects
        3.1 Climate change
        3.2 Biodiversity
        3.3 Indigenous people
        3.4 Land degradation
        3.5 Pollution
        3.6 Water supply
        3.7 Impact on local temperature
        3.8 NASA survey
    4 Measured rates
    5 Response
    6 The Current State as of 2019 and its Future
    7 See also
    8 References
    9 External links

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deforestation_in_Brazil


--------------------------

 

Deforestation is high, despite COP26 promises

28 Apr 2022

Halting deforestation was one of the major commitments to come out of the international climate talks last year in Glasgow, Scotland, but there was scant evidence of progress in 2021, according to a report released Thursday.

The annual report by the World Resources Institute, a research group based in Washington, DC, found that tropical regions lost 9.3 million acres of primary old-growth forest in 2021. That resulted in 2.5 billion metric tons of emissions of carbon dioxide, or about 2 1/2 times as much as emitted by passenger cars and light trucks in the United States each year.

Brazil had by far the largest share of forest loss, accounting for more than 40 percent of the total, followed by Congo and Bolivia.

Last year’s total was a decline of 11 percent from 2020, but it was about equal to the amount lost in 2018 and 2019.

https://bdnews24.com/environment/2022/04/28/deforestation-is-high-despite-cop26-promises

 

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Environmental issues in Brazil

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_issues_in_Brazil

Environmental issues in Brazil include deforestation, illegal wildlife trade, illegal poaching, air, land degradation, and water pollution caused by mining activities, wetland degradation, pesticide use and severe oil spills, among others.[1] As the home to approximately 13% of all known species, Brazil has one of the most diverse collections of flora and fauna on the planet. Impacts from agriculture and industrialization in the country threaten this biodiversity.


Contents

    1 Deforestation
    2 Endangered species
    3 Waste
        3.1 Collection services
        3.2 Landfills
        3.3 Waste-to-energy
        3.4 Recycling
    4 Production of first-generation biofuels
    5 Pollution
        5.1 Air pollution
        5.2 Industrial pollution
        5.3 Water pollution
    6 Solutions and policies
        6.1 Governmental organizations
        6.2 Non-governmental organizations
        6.3 International agreements
    7 See also
    8 References

Deforestation

Deforestation in Brazil is a major issue; the country once had the highest rate of deforestation in the world. By far the most deforestation comes from cattle ranchers that clear rainforest (sometimes illegally, sometimes legally), so as to make room for sowing grass and giving their cattle the ability to graze on this location. An important route taken by cattle ranchers and their cattle is the Trans-Amazonian Highway.

Deforestation has been a significant source of pollution, biodiversity loss, and greenhouse gas emissions worldwide, but deforestation has been Brazil's foremost cause of environmental and ecological degradation. Since 1970, over 600,000 square kilometers of Amazonian rainforest have been destroyed and the level of deforestation in the protected zones of Brazil's Amazon rainforest increased by over 127 percent between 2000 and 2010. Recently, further destruction of the Amazon Rainforest has been promoted by an increased global demand for Brazilian wood, meat, and soybeans.


Landfills

While waste collection in Brazil is improving slightly, the ultimate disposal of waste commonly takes place in inadequate landfills. While landfills are often viewed as the last option for waste disposal in European nations, preferring waste-to-energy systems instead, Brazil favors landfills and believes they are efficient modes of disposal. The preference for landfills has hindered the creation of alternative methods of waste disposal. Often, this hesitation is in response to the initial costs of adopting new solutions. For example, incinerators are expensive to purchase, operate and maintain, eliminating them as an option for most cities in Brazil. According to the Integrated Municipal Solid Waste Management Manual, landfill usage will begin to fall due to new regulation and laws. As the risks and environmental hazards of open air landfills are understood by municipality administrators in Brazil, more dumps are being closed in favor of sanitary landfills. However, these policy changes will only happen with appropriate financing.


Waste-to-energy

Waste-to-energy is one way to dispose of all combustible waste in which recycling alone is not economically viable. As income levels rise in the southern region of Brazil, citizens are urging officials to improve waste management systems. However, the results are limited as no commercial facilities are currently being constructed. Even though citizens and officials are beginning to understand the harm of landfills and the importance of waste management, most do not understand waste-to-energy systems. On the other hand, waste-to-energy industry leaders do not understand the current waste condition in Brazil. In order to provide specific solutions to problems in Brazil, the Waste to Energy Research Technology Counsel in Brazil is developing a hybrid municipal solid waste (MSW)/natural gas cycle. This system burns a small amount of natural gas that is 45% efficient and 80% of the energy that is produced by MSW is 34% efficient. Their patented system takes a small gas turbine and mixes it with preheated air. Another benefit of using low amounts of natural gas is the possibility of replacing it with landfill gas, ethanol, or renewable fuels. Another benefit is that this system does not change current incinerator technology, which allows it to use components that already exist in other waste-to-energy plants. Private sector involvement in the waste-to-energy industry includes companies such as Siemens, CNIM, Keppel-Seghers, Hitachi Zosen Inova, Sener, Pöyry, Fisia-Babcock, Malcolm Pirnie and others who are already established in Brazil and developing waste-to-energy projects. Some cities currently considering such projects are Belo Horizonte, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, São José dos Campos, São Bernardo do Campo and others. Clean development mechanism projects are also beginning to develop at some Brazilian landfills. These projects are established to collect gases produced on-site and convert them into energy. For example, at a landfill in Nova Iguaçu (Rio de Janeiro area), methane is being collected and converted into electricity. This process is expected to eliminate 2.5 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions by 2012.

Recycling

According to data from the Brazilian Association of Public Cleaning and Special Waste Companies including sewage, Brazil is a leader in aluminum can recycling without government intervention with ten cans being recycled every year. In 2007, more than 96% of cans available in the market were recycled. This leadership comes from informal waste scavengers that make their living by collecting aluminum cans. However, recycling in general in Brazil is low. Brazil produces 240 thousand tons of waste every day. Out of this amount, only 2% is recycled with the remainder dumped in landfills. In 1992, private companies in Brazil established the Brazilian Business Commitment for Recycling (CEMPRE), a nonprofit organization that promotes recycling and waste elimination. The organization issues publications, conducts technical research, holds seminars and maintains databases. Nevertheless, only 62% of the population has access to the garbage collection. Even within these collection systems, the collection of recyclable material is not common. The success of informal waste pickers provided evidence to lawmakers and citizens that solutions that are low tech, low cost, and labor-intensive can provide sustainable solutions to waste management while also providing social and economic benefits.

Industrial pollution

The city of Cubatão, designated by the Brazilian government as an industrial zone due in part to its proximity to the Port of Santos, became known as the "Valley of Death" and "the most polluted place on Earth". The area has historically housed numerous industrial facilities including an oil refinery from Petrobras and a steel mill from COSIPA. Operation of such facilities was done so "without any environmental control whatsoever" prompting tragic events throughout the 1970s and 1980s including mudslides and birth defects potentially attributable to heavy pollution in the region. Since that time, efforts have been made to improve environmental conditions in the area including, since 1993, COSIPA's $200 million investment in environmental controls. In 2000, Cubatão's center registered 48 micrograms of particles per cubic meter of air, down from 1984 measurements registering 100 micrograms of particles per cubic meter.

Likely due to trade liberalization, Brazil has a high concentration of pollution-intensive export industries. Studies point to this as evidence of Brazil being a pollution haven. The highest of levels of pollution intensity are found in export-related industries such as metallurgy, paper and cellulose, and footwear.

Water pollution

Brazil’s major and medium size metropolitan areas face increasing problems of water pollution. Coastal cities such as Rio de Janeiro and Recife suffer effects of upstream residential and industrial sewage contaminating feeder rivers, lakes, and the ocean. In 2000, only 35% of collected wastewater received any treatment.

For example, the Tietê River, which runs through the São Paulo metropolitan area (17 million inhabitants), has returned to its 1990 pollution levels. Despite the support from the IDB, the World Bank and Caixa Econômica Federal in a US$400 million cleanup effort, the level of dissolved oxygen has returned to the critical level of 1990 at 9 mg per liter due to increased levels of unregulated sewerage, phosphorus, and ammonia nitrogen discharged into the river. As of 2007, the state water company Sabesp projects that a minimum of R$3 billion (US$1.7bn) would be necessary to clean up the river.

The South and Southeast regions of Brazil experience water scarcity due to overexploitation and misuse of surface water resources, mostly attributable to heavy pollution from sewage, leaking landfills, and industrial waste.

According to an investigation by Unearthed, more than 1,200 pesticides and weedkillers, including 193 containing chemicals banned in the EU, have been registered in Brazil between 2016 and 2019.

Water pollution is also derived from ethanol production. Due to the size of the industry, its agroindustrial activity in growing, harvesting, and processing sugarcane generates water pollution from the application of fertilizers and agrochemicals, soil erosion, cane washing, fermentation, distillation, the energy producing units installed in mills and by other minor sources of waste water.

The two greatest sources of water pollution from ethanol production come from mills in the form of waste water from washing sugarcane stems prior to passing through mills, and vinasse, produced in distillation. These sources increase the biochemical oxygen demand in the waters where they are discharged which leads to the depletion of dissolved oxygen in the water and often causes anoxia. Legislation has banned the direct discharge of vinasse onto surface waters, leading it to be mixed with waste water from the sugarcane washing process to be reused as organic fertilizer on sugarcane fields. Despite this ban, some small sugarcane mills still discharge vinasse into streams and rivers due to a lack of transportation and application resources. Furthermore, vinasse is sometimes mishandled in storage and transport in mills.

Guanabara Bay has had three major oil spills as well as other forms of pollution.

The Tietê River has for over twenty years been afflicted with heavy pollution from sewage, primarily from São Paulo, and manufacturing. In 1992, the Tietê Project was initiated in an effort to clean up the river. São Paulo today processes 55% of its sewage and is expected to process 85% by 2018.


Production of first-generation biofuels


See also: Ethanol fuel in Brazil and Ethanol_fuel_in_Brazil

Brazil is the second-largest producer of ethanol in the world. Ethanol production in Brazil uses sugarcane as feedstock and relies on first-generation biofuel technologies based on the use of the sucrose content of sugarcane. First-generation biofuels

Pollution

Air pollution

See also: Air pollution from ethanol fuel in Brazil

Due to its unique position as the only area of the world which extensively utilizes ethanol, air quality issues in Brazil relate more to ethanol-derived emissions. With about 40% of fuel used in Brazilian vehicles sourced from ethanol, air pollution in Brazil differs from that of other nations where predominately petroleum or natural gas-based fuels are used. Atmospheric concentrations of acetaldehyde, ethanol and possibly nitrogen oxides are greater in Brazil than most other areas of the world due to their emissions being higher in vehicles using ethanol fuels. The larger urban areas of São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and Brasilia suffer from substantial ozone issues because both acetaldehyde and nitrogen oxides are significant contributors to photochemical air pollution and ozone formation. On the other hand, by the mid-1990s, lead levels in the air had decreased by approximately 70% after the widespread introduction of unleaded fuels in Brazil in 1975.

Numbers of automobiles and levels of industrialization in Brazilian cities highly influence levels of air pollution in urban areas which have an important impact on health for large population groups in major Brazilian urban areas. Based on annual air pollution data gathered in the cities of Belo Horizonte, Fortaleza, Porto Alegre, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, and Vitória between the years of 1998 and 2005, 5% of total annual deaths in the age groups of children age five and younger and adults age 65 and older were attributed to air pollution levels in these cities.[14] Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo were ranked the 12th and 17th most polluted cities in an evaluation based on World Bank and United Nations data of emissions and air quality in 18 mega-cities. The multi-pollutant index used to perform the evaluation did not include any of the pollutants specific to the air quality impacts of ethanol fuel use.

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13 Photos Explain What's Going On In The Amazon And What You Can Do

2019

https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/katebubacz/amazon-rainforest-photos-fires-damage

--------------


Amazon Rainforest: deforestation

https://www.britannica.com/video/22061/Deforestation-Amazon-River-basin-pattern-grazing-farming

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CATTLE RANCHING'S IMPACT ON THE RAINFOREST

July 22, 2012

 The majority deforestation in the Amazon Basin since the 1960s has been caused by cattle ranchers and land speculators who burned huge tracts of rainforest for pasture. Brazilian government data indicates that more than 60 percent of deforested land ends up as cattle pasture. But conversion to cattle pasture isn't limited to Brazil — in the 1970s and early 1980s vast tracts of rainforest in Costa Rica, Honduras, and El Salvador were burned and converted into cattle pasture lands to meet American demand for beef...



 



https://rainforests.mongabay.com/0812.htm


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Amazon Destruction Forces Brazil's Cowboys to Ranch Like Texans

2018

https://www.drovers.com/article/amazon-destruction-forces-brazils-cowboys-ranch-texans


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AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY AND DEFORESTATION IN BRAZIL

DECEMBER 2016

https://climatepolicyinitiative.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Agricultural-Productivity-and-Deforestation-in-Brazil-CPI.pdf


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 Revealed: rampant deforestation of Amazon driven by global greed for meat

2019

Investigation exposes how Brazil’s huge beef sector continues to threaten health of world’s largest rainforest

    ‘We must not barter the Amazon rainforest for burgers and steaks’


https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/jul/02/revealed-amazon-deforestation-driven-global-greed-meat-brazil


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Brazil beef scandal highlights dangers of industrial livestock farming

27.03.2017

https://www.chinadialogue.net/article/show/single/en/9698-Brazil-beef-scandal-highlights-dangers-of-industrial-livestock-farming


-------------


Project Amazonia: Threats - Agriculture and Cattle Ranching

http://web.mit.edu/12.000/www/m2006/final/threats/threat_agg.html


--------------


Transitions to sustainable management of phosphorus in Brazilian agriculture

February 2018

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-20887-z

Abstract

Brazil’s large land base is important for global food security but its high dependency on inorganic phosphorus (P) fertilizer for crop production (2.2 Tg rising up to 4.6 Tg in 2050) is not a sustainable use of a critical and price-volatile resource. A new strategic analysis of current and future P demand/supply concluded that the nation’s secondary P resources which are produced annually (e.g. livestock manures, sugarcane processing residues) could potentially provide up to 20% of crop P demand by 2050 with further investment in P recovery technologies. However, the much larger legacy stores of secondary P in the soil (30 Tg in 2016 worth over $40 billion and rising to 105 Tg by 2050) could provide a more important buffer against future P scarcity or sudden P price fluctuations, and enable a transition to more sustainable P input strategies that could reduce current annual P surpluses by 65%. In the longer-term, farming systems in Brazil should be redesigned to operate profitably but more sustainably under lower soil P fertility thresholds.


--------------------------------------------


 What's Hidden Behind 2,124,000 Square Miles of the Unexplored Amazon Forest?


Jun 23, 2020

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eEoSnIHMB7Q


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Brazil's indigenous land is being invaded


Nov 25, 2019

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oGjRNbXeRXI


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Section 7: Pesticides & Fungicides

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The Diverse Uses of Fish-Poison Plants in Northwest Guyana

2000

Abstract

Although prohibited by law, fish poison plants are still widely used by indigenous tribes in Guyana. The latest ethnobotanical collections date from the first half of the 20th century and, from recent anthropological studies, it cannot be deduced whether the same species are still used today. The present study attempts to clarify the taxonomy and ethnobotany of the fish poisons, in particular those containing rotenone, currently used by Amerindians in northwest Guyana. Specimens were collected from 11 species known to be ichthyotoxic, both from wild and cultivated sources. It was found that fish poisons not only serve as a quick method of providing food in times of shortage, but also play an important role in magic rituals and traditional medicine. Particularly striking was the use of Lonchocarpus spp. and Tephrosia sinapou in the treatment of cancer and AIDS. Further ethnobotanical and pharmacological research should focus on the medicinal applications of rotenone-yielding plants.

https://www.jstor.org/stable/4256362?seq=1

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Neuroprotective Effects of Açaí (Euterpe oleracea Mart.) against Rotenone In Vitro Exposure

2016

https://www.hindawi.com/journals/omcl/2016/8940850/

Abstract

Neuropsychiatric diseases, such as bipolar disorder (BD) and schizophrenia (SCZ), have a very complex pathophysiology. Several current studies describe an association between psychiatric illness and mitochondrial dysfunction and consequent cellular modifications, including lipid, protein, and DNA damage, caused by cellular oxidative stress. Euterpe oleracea (açaí) is a powerful antioxidant fruit. Açaí is an Amazonian palm fruit primarily found in the lowlands of the Amazonian rainforest, particularly in the floodplains of the Amazon River. Given this proposed association, this study analyzed the potential in vitro neuropharmacological effect of Euterpe oleracea (açaí) extract in the modulation of mitochondrial function and oxidative metabolism. SH-SY5Y cells were treated with rotenone to induce mitochondrial complex I dysfunction and before and after we exposed the cells to açaí extract at 5?µg/mL. Treated and untreated cells were then analyzed by spectrophotometric, fluorescent, immunological, and molecular assays. The results showed that açaí extract can potentially increase protein amount and enzyme activity of mitochondrial complex I, mainly through NDUFS7 and NDUFS8 overexpression. Açaí extract was also able to decrease cell reactive oxygen species levels and lipid peroxidation. We thus suggest açaí as a potential candidate for drug development and a possible alternative BD therapy.

1. Introduction

Neuropsychiatric diseases are an important problem in public health around the world. Bipolar disorder (BD) is a chronic mental illness that causes significant impairment in life quality and is an important cause of disability in young people. The prevalence of BD in the world is around 3%, and it can affect populations independently of socioeconomic status or nationality. Patients with BD present recurrent episodes of mania and depression, but the etiology of the disease is still not completely clear. Usually subjects with BD have a genetic component that interacts with the environment to develop the disease. Some evidence suggests the significant role of mitochondria in BD [6–8]. Current research has demonstrated that BD is associated with mitochondrial complex I deficiency and it can decrease ATP production and increase reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels. Consequently, the cells present oxidative stress followed by different cell damage, including lipid peroxidation, protein oxidation, and DNA damage [9, 10]. The brain is one of the tissues most affected by mitochondrial dysfunction due to its high sensitivity to oxidative stress and energy demands for normal neurotransmission.

------------------------

Timbós: ichthyotoxic plants used by Brazilian Indians.

1984

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6087034

Abstract

The pharmacology of serjanosides, active principles isolated from the fish-poison plant Serjania lethalis St. Hil, a Sapindaceae, was investigated by comparing their actions in fishes and mammals with those of rotenone and certain saponins. The ichthyocid activity of the serjanosides was 2.5 times greater than that of the crude plant extract, approximately 10 times lower than the activity of rotenone, but from 10 to 50 times greater than the activity of the other saponins. When injected in mammals, the serjanosides induced deep prostration, dyspnea, cyanosis, ectopic heart beats, cardiovascular failure and respiratory arrest. These effects, leading to death that was not prevented by artificial respiration, indicated several mechanisms for the toxic action of the serjanosides. In vitro studies with these substances have shown that membrane depolarization and muscle contracture were probably due to unspecific surface actions. Rotenone, under the same experimental conditions induced hypotension, bradycardia and respiratory arrest. Death was prevented by artificial respiration. Ectopic foci, membrane depolarization, contractures and neuromuscular block were not observed after rotenone. Apparently, death from rotenone poisoning was a consequence of respiratory failure of central origin. The serjanosides are rather potent fish poison saponins. Mammals, however, are apparently insensitive to the same specific action since other toxic effects induced by those substances in rats and mice were also observed by employing saponins devoid of fish-killing activity.

------------------------

Effect of Serjania lethalis ethanolic extract on weed control

June 2013

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-83582013000200001

ABSTRACT

The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of the ethanolic extract of Serjania lethalis leaves and stems on the diaspore germination and seedling growth of wild poinsettia (Euphorbia heterophylla) and barnyardgrass (Echinochloa crus-galli). The crude ethanolic extract was prepared from 100 g of dry plant material dissolved in 500 ml of ethanol. The extracts were solubilized in a buffer solution containing dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) at concentrations of 10.0, 7.5, 5.0 and 2.5 mg mL-1. The effect of these extracts was compared with herbicide oxyfluorfen in bioassays. The ethanolic extracts of S. lethalis leaves and stems inhibited the germination and seedling growth of barnyardgrass and wild poinsettia in a concentration-dependent manner. The reduction in the root length of E. heterophylla seedlings might be attributed to the reduced elongation of metaxylem cells. The phytotoxicity of the extracts ranged according to the receptor species, and for some variables, the inhibitory effect was similar, and even superior, to that of the commercial herbicide. Thus, S. lethalis extracts might be a promising alternative for sustainable weed management.

------------------------

ALLELOPATHIC POTENTIAL OF Serjania lethalis: EVIDENCE FROM Sesamum indicum

2014

http://www.scielo.org.co/pdf/abc/v20n1/v20n1a04.pdf


ABSTRACT

This study was designed to test the effect of different fractions of ethanolic extracts of young (y) and mature (m) leaves of Serjania lethalis A. St- Hil (Sapindaceae) on sesame (Sesamum indicum L.) seedling growth and metaxylem cells. Crude ethanolic extracts were prepared  from  the  powder  of  young  and  mature  S.  lethalis  leaves  and  fractionated  by  means  of  column  chromatography.  For  the  seedling growth bioassay, sesame seeds germinated at concentrations of 0.8, 0.4 and 0.2 mg mL-1 were used. After seven days, the lengths of the aerial part and of the primary root were measured. The sesame metaxylem cell growth bioassay was performed with seedlings grown in solutions containing the different fractions in the same concentrations as above. The tested fractions (Fy2; Fy3; Fy5 e Fm1) showed inhibitory activity on seedling growth, interfering mainly in root growth. The fraction Fy5 showed similar activity to the one caused by the herbicide Oxyfluorfen. This fraction was also responsible for causing the greatest inhibition of metaxylem cell growth in sesame roots at the concentration 0.8 mg mL-1. The results permitted to conclude that the different fractions found in the ethanolic extract of S. lethalis young leaves are promising sources of substances with phytotoxic properties.



------------------------

 

Central South America: Southwestern Brazil, into Bolivia and Paraguay

https://www.worldwildlife.org/ecoregions/nt0907


Current Status

While cattle ranching is not intense, this type of land use causes some degree of habitat modification. The majority of the Pantanal is in close to pristine condition with most of its biota still extant. Only two dirt roads cross the area from the northern end near Cuiabá, and one road bisects the area between Campo Grande and Corumbá (Heckman 1998). Less than 3 % of the Pantanal is currently included in protected areas; the remainder of the land is privately owned (Quigley and Crawshaw 1992). The Pantanal National Park covers 1,370 km2 area along the Rio Paraguay, but unfortunately it is dominated by areas completely inundated during the wet season and protects little savanna or forest habitat (Por 1995).

Types and Severity of Threats

The principle threats currently affecting the Pantanal are pesticide runoff from agricultural lands within the 500,000 km2 watershed of the Rio Paraguay and gold mining. Pesticides such as DDT, Parathion, and possibly Agent Orange have been used in great quantity within the Pantanal watershed. But there has not been any pollution monitoring and its effect on the biota (Por 1995). In 1996 there were over 700 gold-mining dredges operating along the Cuiabá River alone, and the mercury used to separate out gold is now found at high levels in many fish populations. In one survey, over 50% of fish collected had tissue mercury levels higher than the limit set by the Brazilian government and World Health Organization (Alho and Vieira 1997). Legal and illegal poaching has also had an impact within the area. Up to 1,000,000 caiman were killed each year during the 1970s and 1980s until the government attempted to control trade and facilitate the farming of caiman on ranches (Mourao-Guilherme et al. 2000). Predators such as jaguar continue to be killed for trade and for their perceived threat to cattle (Quigley and Crawshaw 1992).

Perhaps the greatest future threat to the Pantanal is the possibility that the Brazilian, Bolivian, and Paraguayan governments will attempt a massive modification of the Rio Paraguay and Paraná Rivers to provide a navigable waterway for shipping, and dams for hydroelectricity generation. This project, known as the "Hidrovia", has the potential to completely alter the entirety of the Pantanal wetlands. But there are hopes that the increase in ecotourism in the Pantanal and the more efficient network of roads being developed outside the area will negate any need for such a potentially catastrophic project (Heckman 1998).

--------------------------

Bolsonaro administration approves 290 new pesticide products for use

12 August 2019

https://news.mongabay.com/2019/08/bolsonaro-administration-approves-290-new-pesticide-products-for-use/

----------------

Endemic shrimp Macrobrachium pantanalense as a test species to assess potential contamination by pesticides in Pantanal (Brazil)

February 2017

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0045653516314291

------------------

Brazil’s Dangerous Open Door for Toxic Pesticides

July 26, 2019

https://www.hrw.org/news/2019/07/26/brazils-dangerous-open-door-toxic-pesticides

-----------------

 

Brazil's Jair Bolsonaro will be investigated over unproven voter fraud claims

August 5, 2021

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/brazil-s-jair-bolsonaro-will-be-investigated-over-unproven-voter-fraud-claims/ar-AAMYfBK


-----------------

 Hundreds of new pesticides approved in Brazil under Bolsonaro

June 2019

Many of those permitted since far-right president took power are banned in Europe

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/jun/12/hundreds-new-pesticides-approved-brazil-under-bolsonaro

-----------------

Respiratory Condition of Family Farmers Exposed to Pesticides in the State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

2018

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6025513/

------------------

Organophosphorus pesticides toxicity on brine shrimp artemia

January 2018

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/322191047_Organophosphorus_pesticides_toxicity_on_brine_shrimp_artemia


------------------

Taura syndrome

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taura_syndrome

Taura syndrome (TS) is one of the more devastating diseases affecting the shrimp farming industry worldwide.

Geographic distribution

TSV has been reported from virtually all shrimp-growing regions of the Americas, including Ecuador, Colombia, Peru, Brazil, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Belize, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Costa Rica, and Venezuela, as well as from the states of Hawaii, Texas, Florida and South Carolina.[6] Until 1998, it was considered to be a Western Hemisphere virus. The first Asian outbreak occurred in Taiwan. It has more recently been identified in Thailand, Myanmar, China, Korea, and Indonesia, where it has been associated with severe epizootics in farmed Penaeus vannamei and Penaeus monodon.

------------------


Some imported farmed seafood is a toxic cocktail

2013

Imported farmed seafood is sometimes laced with antibiotics and pesticides that are not allowed in Canadian food production.


https://www.straight.com/life/372946/some-imported-farmed-seafood-toxic-cocktail


--------------------

DDT and Other Organohalogen Pesticides in Aquatic Organisms

2011

https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1247&context=usepapapers

--------------------------

Pesticides in surface water, sediment, and rainfall of the northeastern Pantanal basin, Brazil.

2002

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12371181

Abstract

Within the last 25 years an intensive agriculture has developed in the highland regions of Mato Grosso state (Brazil), which involves frequent pesticide use in highly mechanized cash-crop cultures. To provide information on pesticide distribution and dynamics in the northeastern Pantanal basin (located in southern Mato Grosso), we monitored 29 pesticides and 3 metabolites in surface water, sediment, and rainwater of the study area during the main application season. In environmental samples, 19 pesticides and 3 metabolites were detected in measurable quantities, resulting in at least one pesticide detection in 68% of surface water samples (n = 139), 62% of sediment samples (n = 26), and 87% of rainwater samples (n = 91). Surface water samples were most frequently contaminated by endosulfan compounds (alpha-, beta-, -sulfate), ametryn, metolachlor, and metribuzin, although in low (< 0.1 microgram L-1) concentrations. Sediment samples exhibited concentrations up to 4.5 micrograms kg-1 of p,p'-DDT, p,p'-DDE, endosulfan-sulfate, beta-endosulfan, and ametryn. In contrast, rainwater was polluted with substantial amounts of endosulfan, alachlor, metolachlor, trifluralin, monocrotofos, and profenofos (maximum concentrations = 0.3 to 2.3 micrograms L-1) in the highlands. Lowland rainwater samples taken 75 km from the next application area contained 5- to 10-fold lower mean pesticide concentration than in the highlands. Cumulative deposition rates of the pesticide sum within the study period ranged from 423 micrograms m-2 in the highlands to 14 micrograms m-2 in the lowlands. The atmospheric input of pesticides to ecosystems seemed to be of higher relevance in the tropical study area than known from temperate regions.


--------------------


Currently used pesticides in water matrices in Central-Western Brazil

2012

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-50532012000800010

ABSTRACT

This study provides data on the presence of the pesticides atrazine, chlorpyrifos, α-endosulfan, β-endosulfan, flutriafol, malathion and metolachlor in water matrices in urban and rural areas of Campo Verde and Lucas do Rio Verde Cities, Mato Grosso State, Brazil. Surface, rain, and groundwater samples were collected in the rainy and dry seasons during 2007 and 2008 in these important grain-producing areas. The findings revealed a higher diversity of compounds and frequency of detection in the rain water than in surface and groundwater samples. Concentrations of atrazine, endosulfan and malathion above those permitted by Brazilian regulations were found in some surface and groundwater samples, and the degradation products DIA (deisopropylatrazine) and endosulfan sulfate, rather than their parental compounds, were found at higher levels in some samples. Our findings show the vulnerability of water systems in these areas and point to the risk of pesticide contamination in important headwater streams.

--------------------

Environmental dynamics of pesticides in the drainage area of the São Lourenço River headwaters, Mato Grosso State, Brazil

2012

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-50532012000900018


--------------------

An integrated assessment of water quality in a land reform settlement in northern Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil

March 2019

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844018355609


--------------------

Drinking water quality in schools of the Santarém region, Amazon, Brazil, and health implications for school children

2018

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1980-993X2018000600302

--------------------

Risk assessment of trihalomethanes from tap water in Fortaleza, Brazil

April 2009

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10661-008-0273-y

----------------------

Chemicals in tap water could cause 100,000 cases of cancer in U.S.

September 19, 2019

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/chemicals-in-tap-water-could-cause-100000-cases-of-cancer-in-u-s/

----------------------


Study Finds Roughly 19 Million Exposed To Toxic Compounds In Drinking Water

05/07/2019

A series of manufactured chemicals called PFAS were found in 43 states, a new environmental study shows.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/pfas-chemicals-drinking-water-study_n_5cd1f18ae4b0a7dffcce0257

----------------------

A preliminary nationwide survey of the presence of emergingcontaminants in drinking and source waters in Brazil

2016

https://sites.usp.br/adox/wp-content/uploads/sites/84/PQI-5861/emerging-compounds-in-brazil-2016.pdf


----------------------


Is the Drinking Water Safe in Brazil?

07/20/19

https://www.tripsavvy.com/drinking-water-safety-in-brazil-1467423

------------------------

Brazil finds worrying levels of pesticides in water of 1,400 towns

26 Apr 2019

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/apr/26/brazil-finds-worrying-levels-of-pesticides-in-water-of-1400-towns

----------------------

Zika virus: Brazil dismisses link between larvicide and microcephaly

2016

One state has suspended use of pyriproxyfen in drinking water after claims the chemical, rather than the Zika virus, could be behind the rise of the birth defect

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/zika/12157747/Zika-virus-Brazil-dismisses-link-between-larvicide-and-microcephaly.html

----------------------

25 Countries Where You Shouldn't Drink the Tap Water


#3. Brazil


https://bestlifeonline.com/countries-with-worst-tap-water/

----------------------


Forget worrying about Brazil’s water, we have our own problems here

Aug 9 2016

https://www.cnbc.com/2016/08/09/forget-worrying-about-brazils-water-we-have-our-own-problems-here.html

----------------------

 Pesticide Degradates of Concern to the Drinking Water Community

https://wwwtest.waterrf.org/PublicReportLibrary/2938.pdf

-----------------------

Is the Drinking Water Safe in Brazil?

2019

https://www.tripsavvy.com/drinking-water-safety-in-brazil-1467423

-------------------------

Arsenic exposure in US public and domestic drinking water supplies: A comparative risk assessment

2009

https://www.nature.com/articles/jes200924

-------------------------

Evaluation of Cancer from Exposure to Cyanotoxins in Drinking Water at Grand LakeSaint Marys

2011

https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1075&context=mph

-------------------------

Chromium in Drinking Water: Sources, Metabolism, and Cancer Risks

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/tx200251t

-------------------------

ALGAE POISONS LURK IN FLORIDA DRINKING WATER

https://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/os-xpm-2001-05-27-0105270298-story.html

--------------------------


Study of radon concentration and toxic elements in drinking and irrigated water and its implications in Sungai Petani, Kedah, Malaysia

2015

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1687850715000564


--------------------------

Pesticides in Water

https://www.waters.com/waters/en_US/pesticides_enviro/nav.htm?cid=134804892&locale=en_US

--------------------------

EWG News Roundup (5/3): Dirty Duke Energy, Assessing the Combined Risk of Water Contaminants and More

https://www.ewg.org/news-and-analysis/2019/05/ewg-news-roundup-53-dirty-duke-energy-assessing-combined-risk-water

--------------------------

SF officials running tests on drinking water in Sunset after complaint about pesticides

2018

https://www.sfchronicle.com/news/article/SF-officials-running-tests-on-drinking-water-in-13291713.php

--------------------------

Monitoring Pesticide Residues in Surface and Ground Water in Hungary: Surveys in 1990–2015

2015

https://www.hindawi.com/journals/jchem/2015/717948/

--------------------------


8 Million Californians Have Been Drinking Polluted Water For Years

2017

If you want to know how difficult it is to get a water contaminant regulated in the U.S., take a look at the Golden State.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/drinking-water-pesticides-california_n_58efe05de4b0bb9638e299ee

--------------------------

How much atrazine needs to be in our water until Canada bans this harmful pesticide?

2017

https://environmentaldefence.ca/2017/03/22/atrazine-water-canada-ban/

--------------------------

Ottawa ignoring hazards of top pesticides sold in Canada

2017

https://www.nationalobserver.com/2017/08/09/news/ottawa-ignoring-hazards-top-pesticides-sold-canada


-----------------------


Pesticides in Drinking Water – The Brazilian Monitoring Program

December 2015

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/283615489_Pesticides_in_Drinking_Water_-_The_Brazilian_Monitoring_Program


--------------------

To Spray or Not to Spray: Pesticides, Banana Exports, and Food Safety

2002

https://www.iatp.org/sites/default/files/To_Spray_or_Not_to_Spray_Pesticides_Banana_Exp.htm


---------------------

Climate change effects on Black Sigatoka disease of banana

2019

https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rstb.2018.0269


--------------------------

A fungal disease is ruining banana crops; blame climate change

2019

Black Sigatoka disease was first reported in Honduras in 1972.

https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/magazines/panache/a-fungal-disease-is-ruining-banana-crops-blame-climate-change/articleshow/69201108.cms?from=mdr

--------------------------

Deadly banana fungus reaches Latin America

https://www.ft.com/content/fbd2510c-c29e-11e9-a8e9-296ca66511c9

--------------------------

Why do bananas require so many pesticides?

2014

https://www.chemservice.com/news/2014/08/why-do-bananas-require-so-many-pesticides/

-------------------------

Pesticide Use Practices in Root, Tuber, and Banana Crops by Smallholder Farmers in Rwanda and Burundi

2019

https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/16/3/400/htm

----------------------


Pesticide residues in river sediments from the Pantanal Wetland, Brazil

https://ainfo.cnptia.embrapa.br/digital/bitstream/item/105414/1/56722.pdf

---------------------

Blood fish: why prawns should be blacklisted from all our shopping baskets

October 2012

https://theecologist.org/2012/oct/02/blood-fish-why-prawns-should-be-blacklisted-all-our-shopping-baskets

Food security

But it is not just in Asia that shrimp farming has wreaked havoc: in Brazil, I witnessed first-hand the impact our taste for prawns was having on poor coastal communities. In the village of Curral Velho, in Ceara state, residents complained bitterly that wild stocks of snails, mussels and crabs – all vital to local people's diets – had decreased since the arrival of industrial shrimp farms, and that salt water flooding from prawn ponds had destroyed their ability to successfully grow crops. Similar stories were repeated elsewhere. 

I was also taken to see evidence of mangrove and carnauba forests being cut down to make way for shrimp farms. In some places huge construction sites had replaced once intact ecosystems as the shrimp 'boom' took off. In the town of Aracati, we were taken to a site where a major shrimp company was constructing a major canal to divert water supplies away from a nearby river to feed planned shrimp producing ponds; ironically, many of the town's population had no fresh water supply and had to rely on water being specially trucked in.

In Curral Velho, residents were determined to fight back however. In an interview, community leader Joao Jaime Honorio defiantly outlined their campaign of resistance:

'Ever since these shrimp farmers and their companies came to our area, we saw that they would not bring anything good for us, so from that moment on we have resisted this invasion... 'Why resist?, to defend precisely this territory where we live...  I'll tell you that our families have been here for more than 100 years. We have lived here on our land for generations; it has been passed on from father to son. Everybody here works and survives because of the rivers, the shellfish and the sea. So we know that this shrimp farming is not a good thing for us. It brings only destruction.'

Those resisting the shrimp farms in Curral Velho were to pay a heavy price. A few months later, half a dozen fishermen and community activists, including children, were shot during an attack by gunmen reportedly hired by a major shrimp farming company. Other Curral Velho inhabitants were seized, handcuffed and beaten.

The attack  took place after residents say they confronted employees of the shrimp farm over what they believed was the unlawful expansion of the farm's boundaries into nearby mangrove forests used by the community for fishing and docking boats. Despite constructive discussions with the farm owners, two fishermen were shot at later in the day by armed guards from the farm.

According to eyewitnesses, when a larger group of sixteen residents returned to demand an explanation for the violence, three gunmen from the shrimp farm opened fire indiscriminately – injuring six of the group, including three children.  As some of the fishermen sought help from the nearby village, they were accosted by the gunmen, handcuffed and beaten. Victims of the attack said afterwards that they had been threatened with death if they told anyone of the incident.

-----------------------

Organochlorine pesticides residues in feed and muscle of farmed Nile tilapia from Brazilian fish farms

2011

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0278691511002390


----------------------

Ecotoxicological effects of carbofuran and oxidised multiwalled carbon nanotubes on the freshwater fish Nile tilapia: nanotubes enhance pesticide ecotoxicity.

2015

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25450925

----------------------

Monitoring of Pesticide Residues in Surface and Subsurface Waters, Sediments, and Fish in Center-Pivot Irrigation Areas

2015

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-50532015001102269


----------------------

Trace elements and microbiological parameters in farmed Nile tilapia with emphasis on muscle, water, sediment and feed

10 Jan 2019

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/03601234.2018.1550308


----------------------

Bioconcentration and Acute Intoxication of Brazilian Freshwater Fishes by the Methyl Parathion Organophosphate Pesticide

https://www.hindawi.com/journals/bmri/2015/197196/


----------------------

Effects of the organophosphate pesticide Folidol 600 (R) on the freshwater fish, Nile Tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus)

March 2011

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/229097792_Effects_of_the_organophosphate_pesticide_Folidol_600_R_on_the_freshwater_fish_Nile_Tilapia_Oreochromis_niloticus


----------------------


Pesticide residues in water, sediment and fish from Tono Reservoir and their health risk implications

(2016)

https://springerplus.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s40064-016-3544-z


----------------------


Highly hazardous profits

How Syngenta makes billions by selling toxic pesticides

https://www.publiceye.ch/fileadmin/doc/Pestizide/2019_PublicEye_Highly-hazardous-profits_Report.pdf

----------------------

 

Warning issued to Britons over 'food containing toxic pesticides' from Brazil

Feb 26, 2022

A SHOCKING report released earlier this week issued a dire warning to millions of people in the UK who may eat food containing banned toxic pesticides.

https://www.express.co.uk/news/science/1569708/pesticide-warning-Britons-brazil-food-amazon-toxic-millions

 

----------------------

Sediment pollution in margins of the Lake Guaíba, Southern Brazil.

2017

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29209785

--------------

Urban Aquatic Pollution in Brazil

2018

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/9781119260493.ch27

--------------

Use SUMO (Simulation of Urban Mobility) Simulator for the Determination of Light Times in Order to Reduce Pollution: A Case Study in the City Center of Rio Grande, Brazil

https://www.igi-global.com/chapter/use-sumo-simulator-for-the-determination-of-light-times-in-order-to-reduce-pollution/173221

--------------

Leptospirosis in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil: An Ecosystem Approach in the Animal-Human Interface

https://journals.plos.org/plosntds/article?id=10.1371/journal.pntd.0004095

--------------

Epilithic Diatoms as Indicators of Water Quality in the Gravataí River, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

2006

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10750-005-9012-3

----------------------

The developing world is awash in pesticides. There may be a better way.

2016

 

But it’s Brazil that has become the developing world’s largest pesticide user, says Victor Pelaez, an economist at Brazil’s Federal University of Paraná who studies pesticides and their regulation in that country. "Brazil is [the] second largest consumer of pesticides after the United States," he says. The global pesticides market is estimated to be US$45 billion.





https://www.vox.com/2016/7/3/12085368/developing-world-pesticides

-----------------------


Poison in the water

https://www.publiceye.ch/en/topics/pesticides/highly-hazardous-profits-in-brazil/poison-in-the-water


“There is probably not a single citizen in this country without a certain level of pesticide exposure”, says Ada Cristina Pontes Aguiar, medical doctor and researcher at the Federal University of Ceará in Brazil. Our dive into Brazilian’s drinking water confirms this assessment.

By law, drinking water suppliers in Brazil are responsible for testing 27 pesticides every six months in the systems they manage and reporting the results to the federal government. All the test results are then compiled in a database called Sisagua. Through a freedom of information request, Public Eye accessed a government database of drinking water monitoring from 2014–2017.


Contaminated drinking water

Pesticide residues were found in 86% of drinking water samples tested. A total of 454 Brazilian municipalities, with a population of 33 million, detected pesticide residues in their drinking water above the legal limits at least once during the four-year period. Overall, the level of contamination of the drinking water in Brazil is far higher than what is found in the EU or Switzerland. While in the EU only 0.1% of drinking water samples exceed the limit of 0.1 micrograms per litre, in Brazil 12.5% of test results found residues of pesticides above this concentration.

Atrazine is one of the most frequently detected substances. This herbicide is classified as an endocrine disruptor and a reproductive toxicant. It was banned in Switzerland and the European Union over ten years ago because of water contamination. But Syngenta continues selling it in Brazil where it is found in 85% of drinking water samples tested.



A cocktail of pesticides

A major concern is that a cocktail of 27 toxic substances is regularly found in the drinking water of Brazilian municipalities. Seven of these substances are currently sold by Syngenta in Brazil. 1,396 municipalities, with a combined population of over 85 million, detected traces of all 27 pesticides in their drinking water during the four-year period. All these substances interact and can have additive – or even synergistic – effects. The unsettling conclusion is that millions of Brazilians are exposed to a cocktail of pesticides in their drinking water that has never been tested, and the effects of which remain largely unknown.

These results are even more worrying considering the relatively low level of testing. Our analysis shows that despite legal requirements, an average of only 31% of Brazilian municipalities submit drinking water test results each year to the federal government. Only 3% tested the 27 pesticides twice a year during the four-year period. It therefore appears likely that the monitoring programme misses peak concentrations that generally occur after the pesticide application. While there is generally more testing in the states with the highest pesticide use, this is not the case in Mato Grosso, the number one user of pesticides, where only 24% of municipalities submitted at least one test result during the four years.

-----------------------

Ecotoxicology assay for the evaluation of environmental water quality in a tropical urban estuary

http://www.scielo.br/pdf/aabc/v91n1/0001-3765-aabc-201820180232.pdf

-----------------------

Sea breeze front identification on the northeastern coast of Brazil and its implications for meteorological conditions in the Sergipe region

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00704-018-2732-x

------------------------


The black list of pesticides

https://www.publiceye.ch/en/topics/pesticides/highly-hazardous-pesticides/the-black-list-of-pesticides

 Highly Hazardous Pesticides (HHPs) are substances “that are acknowledged to present particularly high levels of acute or chronic hazards to health or the environment”

In 2006 already, FAO and WHO adopted criteria to identify highly hazardous pesticides. Yet more than ten years have passed and they have failed to even start working on a list of pesticides that should be considered “highly hazardous”. This is crucial step to make governments and the pesticide industry develop plans of action for progressively phasing out HHPs.

The Pesticide Action Network (PAN) decided to fill this gap. It did this by reviewing the official classification of about 1,000 pesticide active ingredients currently on the market, using the criteria developed by FAO and WHO while remediating some of their main shortcomings. Its first list of highly hazardous pesticides was published in 2009 and last updated in 2019. It includes 310 pesticide active ingredients, which is approximately 30% of pesticides currently in use worldwide.


----------------------


DDT and its metabolites in breast milk from the Madeira River basin in the Amazon, Brazil.

19 May 2008

https://europepmc.org/article/PMC/2561184

 Abstract

Until the 1990s the 1,1,1-trichloro-bis-2,2'-(4chlorophenyl) ethane (DDT) was sprayed in the walls of the house along the Madeira River basin, Brazilian Amazon, a region well known for its large number of malaria cases. In 1910, Oswaldo Cruz described the presence of malaria in 100% of the population living in some localities from the Madeira River basin. Data available in the literature point to the DDT contamination in fishes captured in Madeira River region. Fish is the major source of dietary protein to these people. DDT tends to accumulate in lipid rich tissues and is being eliminated by different events, including lactation. Considering the importance of feeding breast milk to the children, the associated risks of DDT exposure via breast milk intake to children must be assessed. This is the main objective of this work: to analyse the presence of the p,p'-DDT and its metabolites p,p'-DDE and p,p'-DDD in 69 human milk samples and to estimate the intake of DDT and its metabolite in terms of total DDT (total DDT=p,p'-DDE+p,p'-DDD+p,p'-DDT). All the samples showed contamination with DDT and its metabolites ranging from 25.4 to 9361.9 ng of total DDT/g of lipid (median=369.6 ng of total DDT/g of lipid) and 8.7% of the estimated daily intake (EDI), in terms of total DDT, which was higher than the acceptable daily intake proposed by the WHO.


----------------------

A historical perspective on malaria control in Brazil.

2015

https://europepmc.org/article/PMC/4667572

----------------------

A comprehensive analysis of malaria transmission in Brazil


2019


https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/20477724.2019.1581463

----------------------

Current vector control challenges in the fight against malaria in Brazil

2019

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0037-86822019000100201

-----------------------

Brazil Attorney General Seeks to Block Aerial Anti-Mosquito Spraying Amid Zika Fight

Sept. 21, 2016

Concerns include damage to ecosystem and risk of human poisoning

https://www.wsj.com/articles/brazil-attorney-general-seeks-to-block-aerial-anti-mosquito-spraying-amid-zika-fight-1474487491

----------------------

Zika’s spread in Brazil is a crisis of inequality as much as health

Feb 2016

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/feb/03/zika-virus-brazil-inequality-microcephaly-access-water-contraception

It’s no coincidence that most Zika-related microcephaly cases are found in the poor north-east of the country, where access to water and contraception is limited


----------------------



Brazil’s fundamental pesticide law under attack

20 February 2018

https://news.mongabay.com/2018/02/brazils-fundamental-pesticide-law-under-attack/


Pesticide use driven by government policy

Pesticides were first imported to Brazil in the 1960s, but it was in 1975, with creation of the National Development Plan (PND) that commercialization grew significantly. Under the PND, farmers were obliged to purchase pesticides to obtain rural credit.

Consumption gained momentum in the first decade of the 21st century, when the bancada ruralista, Brazil’s powerful agribusiness lobby, significantly increased the number of seats it held in Congress, which led to subsidies and tax breaks favorable to pesticide makers.

The explosive growth of pesticide consumption went hand in hand with the increase in agriculture exports. According to data from the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), in 1975 the production of cereals, legumes and oilseeds in the country amounted to just 39.4 million tons. In 2014 that grew to 194.5 million tons of grains grown on 56.7 million hectares (218.2 million square miles), and in 2017 to 240.6 million tons on 61.1 million hectares (235.2 million square miles).

Two major commodities, soybeans and corn – both which require high pesticide use ­– represented much of that growth. In 2000, the value of all grains produced in Brazil was US$ 6.5 billion; of this, soybeans and corn accounted for US$ 4.6 billion. In 2016, the total value of grains rose to US$ 54.8 billion, of which US$ 44.9 billion came from soy and corn.

“Brazilian agriculture has been consolidated through the expansion of crops turned to commodities or agrofuels that demand intensive use of pesticides,” concludes a study, Geography of the Use of Agrochemicals in Brazil and Connections with the European Union, by Larissa Mies Bombardi, at the Agrarian Geography Laboratory at the University of São Paulo.

“Brazil consumes about 20 percent of all pesticides sold commercially worldwide,” that study concludes. “There are [currently] 504 pesticides allowed for use in Brazil, and of these, 30 percent are banned in the European Union – some more than a decade ago.”

---------------------

Pesticide Poisoning in Brazil

December 2016

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/308013830_Pesticide_Poisoning_in_Brazil

Abstract

Pesticide poisoning has become a major public health problem in some developing countries, mainly due to the accidental or intentional ingestion and the unsafe use of pesticide products during occupational activities. By January 2016, 457 active ingredients, including insect pheromones and biopesticides (about 60), formulated in 1798 products were registered in Brazil; the country has been ranking among the top three pesticide markets worldwide in the last 10 years. However, Brazil still lacks a sound and unified pesticide poisoning data and the available data are known to be highly underestimated. According to the National Poisoning Information System (SINITOX), pesticide is the third highest cause of exogenous poisoning in Brazil, accounting for about 7–11% of the reported cases annually from 2000 to 2012. Self-poisoning and accidental poisoning were the main circumstances involved in the reported cases, and there was no correlation between poisoning incidence and pesticide use in the Brazilian regions. From 2000 to 2012, the Brazilian Mortality Information System (SIM) reported 10,666 fatalities after pesticide poisoning in the country, mainly after self-poisoning. The organophosphate insecticides are the main pesticides involved in the poisoning cases in rural Brazil. Poisoning in urban sets are mostly due to accidental or self-poisoning with the rodenticide chumbinho, an illegal product freely sold in Brazilian cities, prepared from registered pesticide products, mostly organophosphates and carbamates.

---------------------

Rainwater in parts of US contain high levels of PFAS chemical, says study

Dec 2019

Levels high enough to potentially impact human health and trigger regulatory action, which only targets two of 4,700 variants

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/dec/17/rainwater-pfas-us-potentially-toxic-levels-study

---------------------

Organochlorine pesticide residues in human milk in the Ribeirão Preto region, state of São Paulo, Brazil

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF00213281

Abstract

Thirty-seven samples of human milk (colostrum) from donors living in the Ribeirão Preto region were analyzed to determine the levels of organochlorine pesticide residues. Donors were classified into two groups, i.e., occupationally exposed and non-exposed to pesticides. Other factors such as age, previous lactations, race, smoking habit, occupation, family income and educational level were also considered. Analysis was performed by preliminary lipid extraction followed by fractional partition on a column and finally by gas chromatography with an electron capture detector. Lindane was found in 32% of the samples in amounts of less than 0.001 mg/kg; heptachlor was found in 65% of the samples at mean levels of 0.001 mg/kg, i.e., a level five-fold lower than that established by FAO/WHO (1970) for cow's milk. Aldrin and endrin were not detected in any of the samples. Dieldrin was detected in only one sample at a level of 0.038 mg/kg, which is considered high. DDT and DDE amounts are reported as total DDT and at least one of these compounds was present in every sample. Amounts detected in donors occupationally exposed to pesticides ranged from 0.008 to 0.455 mg/kg (mean, 0.149 mg/kg), i.e., three times the limit established by FAO/WHO (1970), while values for donors who had not been exposed ranged from 0.002 to 0.072 mg/kg (mean, 0.025 mg/kg), i.e., half the limit. Considering the level of acceptable daily intake proposed by FAO/WHO (1973), lactents ingested 1% of the acceptable intake of lindane (all donors), 30% of the acceptable intake of heptachlor (all donors), 60% of the acceptable intake of DDT (nonexposed donors), and 3.7 times the acceptable intake of DDT (exposed donors). Comparing the present results with those obtained 10 years ago, the total DDT level in human milk is decreasing in this part of the country. The mean amount of organochlorine residues in non-exposed women's milk was one of the lowest levels among those recorded in the literature. DDT levels of occupationally exposed women's milk were comparable with those reported for developed countries and lower than those detected in Latin American countries. When the results of this survey are considered in relation to the advantages of breast-feeding, the risk-benefit balance is still favorable to breast-feeding. However, given the lack of long-term epidemiological studies, undesirable or harmful long-lasting effects cannot be excluded.

---------------------

How Brazil stole the production of orange juice from Florida

2018

https://www.cnbc.com/2018/08/23/brazil-florida-orange-juice-tariff-trade-war.html

    More than 50 percent of all orange juice bottled by major companies like Tropicana is supplied by a Brazilian company
  
In 2017, this OJ export market was worth $1.4 billion

    Brazilian orange juice companies used this cash influx to come into the U.S. and buy out Florida’s production facilities


---------------------

The state of oil palm development in the Brazilian AmazonTrends, value chain dynamics, and business models

http://www.cifor.org/publications/pdf_files/WPapers/WP198CIFOR.pdf

---------------------

Brazil’s Waste Recyclers Take on Vegetable Oil

2011•11•07

https://ourworld.unu.edu/en/brazil-waste-recyclers-earning-from-reuse-of-vegetable-oil

On the outskirts of Rio de Janeiro lies the world’s largest trash dump, receiving more than 9,000 tonnes of garbage per day. Jardim Gramacho (Gramacho Gardens) is literally overflowing with garbage. Fractures in the dump site’s structure were noticed several years ago, but no decommission strategy has yet been successful because of illegal dumping and other issues.

Research has found that each day, Gramacho emits 800 cubic meters of liquid containing organic and inorganic compounds from domestic refuse, rubble, hospital and industry waste that drains into the Guanabara Bay. This leachate contains high levels of ammonium, nitrogen, chloride, sodium, and potassium and is considered highly toxic.

Despite the horrible environmental conditions, catadores (waste recyclers) have been collecting high-value recyclables found amongst the trash and selling it for profit for the past 30 years.

At the end of 2012, this dump and others across Brazil will close due to a law passed by the national parliament in 2010 that eradicates open dumps. But instead of celebrating the end of this environmental disaster, the city is faced with the search for a new home for 70 percent of Rio’s waste, plus all the refuse produced by neighbouring cities, as well as the 15,000 people that earn a living from the income generated by the dump.

Despite the horrible environmental conditions, catadores, or waste recyclers, have been collecting high-value recyclables found amongst the trash and selling it for profit for the past 30 years. When the dump closes, 3,000–4,000 people will be forced off of the landfill grounds and will no longer have the income to support their families that live in the nearby favelas, or slums.

Traditionally, waste recycling cooperatives in Brazil have had little influence upon legislation. However, this new law does give recognition to the work of the catadores and prescribes integrating them into the recycling industry, while also attempting to regulate their working conditions to improve their health and safety...

---------------------

Golden Mosaic of Common Beans in Brazil: Management with a Transgenic Approach

2016

https://www.apsnet.org/edcenter/apsnetfeatures/Pages/GoldenMosaic.aspx


---------------------


Monsanto Wins $7.7 Billion Lawsuit in Brazil – but Farmers’ Fight to Stop its ‘Amoral’ Royalty System Will Continue

November 4, 2019

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2019/11/monsanto-wins-7-7-billion-lawsuit-in-brazil-but-farmers-fight-to-stop-its-amoral-royalty-system-will-continue.html


Monsanto ‘Owns Everything’

The Brazilian lawsuit is a sign of growing uneasiness with the control Monsanto has over farmers, my research on biotechnology and seeds finds.

Founded as a chemical manufacturer in 1901, Monsanto has invested heavily in agricultural biotechnology to become the world’s largest seller of seeds. Its biotech seeds have proved attractive to farmers because they simplify farm management. Monsanto says its genetically modified seeds also increase crop yields, and thus farmer income – but evidence on this subject is not probative.

Monsanto’s genetically modified corn seeds, sold under the brand DeKalb, are widely used in the U.S 

 
In the United States and Canada, Monsanto requires buyers of its genetically modified seeds to sign extensive licensing contracts that prevent them from saving seeds. North American farmers who violate those agreements have been sued for patent infringement and compelled to pay tens of thousands of dollars in damages.

In Brazil, Monsanto charges 2% royalties on the sale of its patented soybeans, a conventional industry practice. More unusually, the company charges an additional royalty – 3% of farmers’ sales – when soybeans are grown from saved Roundup Ready seeds.

Soybeans are Brazil’s biggest export. The royalties in dispute in the class action, which is likely to be appealed to the Brazilian Supreme Court, are estimated at US$7.7 billion.

“I can’t stand it anymore – seeing those Monsanto people showing up at the grain elevator and behaving as if they own everything,” one grain cooperative manager told the Brazilian Congress during a special commission on agriculture I attended in December 2017.

‘Amoral’ Royalty Collection

The Brazilian appeals court’s Oct. 9 decision reverses a past ruling establishing the rights of small farmers in Brazil.

In their original petition, farmers’ unions in 2009 asserted that Monsanto’s royalty collection system is arbitrary, illegal and abusive. They argued that it extends Monsanto’s intellectual property rights to their own production and violates their right to freely save seeds for replanting, as guaranteed under Brazil’s Plant Variety Protection Act.

In April 2012, a civil court agreed with the farmers, affirming their rights to save seeds and sell their harvests as food or raw material without paying royalties.

Monsanto got this ruling overturned on appeal. The Brazilian farmers’ unions then appealed that decision, leading to the Oct. 9 ruling against them.

“Monsanto is amoral,” Luiz Fernando Benincá, a soybean producer and litigant in the class action suit told me in January 2017. “It will do anything for profits.”


---------------------

Why Brazil has a big appetite for risky pesticides

April 2, 2015

https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/brazil-pesticides/

In this farming superpower, agricultural chemicals - including paraquat – face lax regulation. And in the rural northeast, rampant use has led to sickness and violence.


LIMOEIRO DO NORTE, Brazil – The farmers of Brazil have become the world’s top exporters of sugar, orange juice, coffee, beef, poultry and soybeans. They’ve also earned a more dubious distinction: In 2012, Brazil passed the United States as the largest buyer of pesticides.

This rapid growth has made Brazil an enticing market for pesticides banned or phased out in richer nations because of health or environmental risks.

At least four major pesticide makers – U.S.-based FMC Corp., Denmark’s Cheminova A/S, Helm AG of Germany and Swiss agribusiness giant Syngenta AG – sell products here that are no longer allowed in their domestic markets, a Reuters review of registered pesticides found.

Among the compounds widely sold in Brazil: paraquat, which was branded as “highly poisonous” by U.S. regulators. Both Syngenta and Helm are licensed to sell it here.

Brazilian regulators warn that the government hasn’t been able to ensure the safe use of agrotóxicos, as herbicides, insecticides and fungicides are known in Portuguese. In 2013, a crop duster sprayed insecticide on a school in central Brazil. The incident, which put more than 30 schoolchildren and teachers in the hospital, is still being investigated.


WIDESPREAD VIOLATIONS

Screenings by regulators show much of the food grown and sold in Brazil violates national regulations. Last year, Anvisa completed its latest analysis of pesticide residue in foods across Brazil. Of 1,665 samples collected, ranging from rice to apples to peppers, 29 percent showed residues that either exceeded allowed levels or contained unapproved pesticides.

Since 2007, when Brazil’s health ministry began keeping current records, the number of reported cases of human intoxication by pesticides has more than doubled, from 2,178 that year to 4,537 in 2013. The annual number of deaths linked to pesticide poisoning climbed from 132 to 206. Public health specialists say the actual figures are higher because tracking is incomplete.

The pressures are clear here in Limoeiro do Norte, a town in the arid northeastern state of Ceará. The state used to be anything but a breadbasket. But since the 1990s, Brazil has built a system of irrigation canals in the area, and farming has flourished. So, too, has pesticide use.

In November, a federal court upheld a ruling that forces Fresh Del Monte Produce Inc, the global fruit giant, to indemnify the widow of a worker whose liver failed after repeated handling of pesticides. In Limoeiro do Norte, a state court is weighing charges against a landowner accused by police of ordering the murder of an anti-pesticide activist.

“This is a giant laboratory for the worst of industrial-scale agriculture,” says Raquel Rigotto, a physician and sociologist at the Federal University of Ceará in Fortaleza, the state capital. Rigotto says her research team has found traces of many pesticides in water taps in the area, and a higher rate of cancer deaths there than in towns nearby with little farming.

The world has much riding on Brazil’s food boom. The population is expected to rise nearly 30 percent over the next three decades, leaving 2 billion more mouths to feed. Brazil’s booming agricultural sector will be a critical source of nourishment. But with its equatorial sunlight, steady temperatures and year-round harvests, Brazil is also a fertile place for insects, fungi and weeds. To keep them at bay, farmers are applying more and more pesticides.

---------------------

ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS OF BAUXITE, ALUMINA AND ALUMINIUM PRODUCTION INBRAZIL

8 February 1995

https://unctad.org/en/Docs/pocomd49.en.pdf

---------------------

Screening Aedes aegypti (Diptera: Culicidae) Populations From Pernambuco, Brazil for Resistance to Temephos, Diflubenzuron, and Cypermethrin and Characterization of Potential Resistance Mechanisms

May 2019

https://academic.oup.com/jinsectscience/article/19/3/16/5512994


--------------------

 Brazil finds worrying levels of pesticides in water of 1,400 towns

 2019

News outlets publish online tool enabling readers to check their own water results

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/apr/26/brazil-finds-worrying-levels-of-pesticides-in-water-of-1400-towns

-------------------

"Cocktail" of 27 pesticides found in water of 1 out of 4 Brazilian cities

May 03, 2019

https://brazilian.report/society/2019/05/03/cocktail-pesticides-water-contamination/

-------------------

Water contaminated by pesticides causes fear in Brazil

2019

A recent study found high levels of pesticides in the drinking water of about 25% of Brazil’s cities.  These results have activists worried, with Brazilian agriculture heavily dependent on one chemical component.

https://america.cgtn.com/2019/05/12/water-contaminated-by-pesticides-causes-fear-in-brazil

-------------------

Brazilians Don’t Know if Pesticides Are in Their Drinking Water

March 22, 2018

https://www.hrw.org/news/2018/03/22/brazilians-dont-know-if-pesticides-are-their-drinking-water

------------------

Occurrence of Pesticides and PPCPs in Surface and Drinking Water in Southern Brazil: Data on 4-Year Monitoring

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?pid=S0103-50532019000100071&script=sci_arttext

------------------

Drinking water quality in schools of the Santarém region, Amazon, Brazil, and health implications for school children

2018

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1980-993X2018000600302

-------------------

Pesticides in drinking water – the Brazilian monitoring program

2015

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2015.00246/full

Results and Discussion

Distribution of pesticides and PPCPs in water samples

Pesticides

A larger number of pesticides were detected than PPCPs (Table 1).

Table 1 Summary of pesticides and PPCPs detected in surface and drinking water (n = 48)

-------------------

Pesticides as water pollutants

http://www.fao.org/3/w2598e/w2598e07.htm

-------------------

Brazil unwisely gives pesticides a free pass

09 Aug 2019

https://science.sciencemag.org/content/365/6453/552.2

-------------------

Brazil pesticide approvals soar as Jair Bolsonaro moves to weaken rules

12.06.2019

Unearthed investigation reveals 193 products have been approved since 2016 that contain chemicals banned in the EU

https://energydesk.greenpeace.org/2019/06/12/jair-bolsonaro-brazil-pesticides/

------------------

Poisoned by Pesticides: BRAZIL

September 1981

https://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/poisoned-pesticides-brazil

Throughout the seventies, there were reports of the massive use of herbicides in Brazil's jungle areas. 2, 4, 5-T and 2, 4-D, both with Picloram (Dow's Tordon 155 and 101, respectively) were used to clear forest and maintain pasture. Defoliants were sprayed from planes and applied by hand to kill particularly hardy trees or scrub brush...

-------------------

Air contamination by legacy and current-use pesticides in Brazilianmountains: An overview of national regulations by monitoringpollutant presence in pristine areas

2018

http://www.icmbio.gov.br/parnaitatiaia/images/stories/o-que-fazemos/Guida_et_al.2c_2018_-ENPO.pdf


-------------------

Pesticide exposure among students and their families in Nova Friburgo, Rio de Janeiro

2018

https://www.scielosp.org/article/csc/2018.v23n11/3903-3911/

-------------------

Pesticides in Groundwater

https://www.usgs.gov/special-topic/water-science-school/science/pesticides-groundwater?qt-science_center_objects=0#qt-science_center_objects

 

-------------------

{Many Trees in the Amazon rainforest get their water from groundwater reserves as
well as rain}.

-------------------

Influence The USE of Pesticides in The  Quality of Surface and Groundwater Located IN Irrigated Areas of  Jaguaribe, Ceara, Brazil

https://ijer.ut.ac.ir/m/article_895_afc8d2ff3fbe6dc2a0b6ace587faaf45.pdf

-------------------

Spatial distribution of pesticide use in Brazil: a strategy for Health Surveillance

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1413-81232017021003281&lng=en&nrm=iso&tlng=en

-------------------

Water contamination in Bahia: Is it safe to drink the tap water ?

August 15, 2019

https://www.etivdobrasil.org/blog/2019/6/6/water-contamination-in-bahia-is-it-safe-to-drink-the-tap-water--1

-------------------

Family Guy Bad Roaches

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pKb3ueekJW0

--------------------------

Raid Etiqueta Azul Academia de Baile

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ni5o7t3AFlg

-------------------------

RAID SE BUSCA

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=na-UZx5ynPg

--------------------------

Raid Etiqueta Azul Academia de Baile

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ni5o7t3AFlg

--------------------------

RAID

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aFP4vwF4Ftk

-------------------

18th International Akademie Fresenius AGRO Conference "Behaviour of Pesticides in Air, Soil and Water"

https://www.akademie-fresenius.com/events/detail/produkt/18th-international-fresenius-agro-conference-behaviour-of-pesticides-in-air-soil-and-water/

-------------------

Water Resource Pollution by Herbicide Residues

February 12th 2019

https://www.intechopen.com/online-first/water-resource-pollution-by-herbicide-residues

-------------------

Brazil court bans commercialisation and release of new pesticides based on glyphosate, abamectin and tiram in the whole country

23 Aug 2018

https://www.grain.org/en/article/6021-brazil-court-bans-commercialisation-and-release-of-new-pesticides-based-on-glyphosate-abamectin-and-tiram-in-the-whole-country

-------------------


Brazilian coffee is sprayed with deadly pesticides

https://old.danwatch.dk/en/undersogelseskapitel/brazilian-coffee-is-sprayed/

In Brazil, coffee may be sprayed with pesticides that are illegal in the EU because they are acutely toxic and cause disease. Many workers apply pesticides without sufficient protective equipment, and pesticide poisoning is widespread. Even the drinking water contains traces of these dangerous pesticides.

------------------

More people, more food, worse water? A global review of water pollution from agriculture

https://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/CA0146EN.pdf


-------------------

Pesticides in Brazilian freshwaters: a critical review

2016

https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2016/em/c6em00268d#!divAbstract

Abstract

The widespread use of pesticides in agriculture can lead to water contamination and cause adverse effects on non-target organisms. Brazil has been the world's top pesticide market consumer since 2008, with 381 approved pesticides for crop use. This study provides a comprehensive literature review on the occurrence of pesticide residues in Brazilian freshwaters. We searched for information in official agency records and peer-reviewed scientific literature. Risk quotients were calculated to assess the potential risk posed to aquatic life by the individual pesticides based on their levels of water contamination. Studies about the occurrence of pesticides in freshwaters in Brazil are scarce and concentrated in few sampling sites in 5 of the 27 states. Herbicides (21) accounted for the majority of the substances investigated, followed by fungicides (11), insecticides (10) and plant growth regulators (1). Insecticides are the class of major concern. Brazil would benefit from the implementation of a nationwide pesticide freshwater monitoring program to support preventive, remediation and enforcement actions.


-------------------

Effects of Agrochemicals on Freshwater Macroinvertebrates: Challenges and Perspectives from Southeastern Brazil

29 November 2018

https://aslopubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/lob.10284



-------------------

DETERMINATION OF PESTICIDES IN RIVER SURFACE WATERS OF CENTRAL CHILE USING SPE-GC-MS MULTI-RESIDUE METHOD

2018

https://scielo.conicyt.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0717-97072018000204023

-------------------

The Effect of Pesticides on Water Quality

April 29, 2015

https://blogs.umass.edu/natsci397a-eross/the-effect-of-pesticides-on-water-quality/

-------------------

Fundamentals of Brazilian Honey Analysis: An Overview

2019

https://www.intechopen.com/books/honey-analysis/fundamentals-of-brazilian-honey-analysis-an-overview

On the other hand, after this Chinese honey embargo, Brazil has increased exportation. As previously mentioned, honey in Brazil is produced by Africanized bees, which are very strong bees, requiring no treatments with antibiotics or medicines. Therefore, Brazil presents the best bees for honey production. In addition, Brazil has a great extension of territory, as well as rich flora and all resources to develop the bees and honey production, without using antibiotics and pesticides, offering consequently a honey without contaminant residues.

Moreover, Brazilian honey production is mostly made in native areas, which also do not requires pesticides. Nevertheless, in 2006 Brazilian honey was banned from EU markets due to a lack of governmental Plan for Residues in honey, situation that was normalized in March 2008.


-------------------

Uruguay swaps pesticides for wasps

2019

https://www.chinadialogue.net/article/show/single/en/11182-Uruguay-swaps-pesticides-for-wasps


-------------------

Pesticide Residues in Urban Water Bodies- Organic Farming as a Community Based Mitigation Strategy in Hyderabad Peri-Urban Area

https://dlc.dlib.indiana.edu/dlc/bitstream/handle/10535/7078/1030.pdf?sequence=1

-------------------

Pesticide Levels in Ground and Surface Waters of Primavera do Leste Region, Mato Grosso, Brazil

2008

https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/0885/5ed2afd75efca239c474797ff51bfbfdf993.pdf

-------------------

Water contamination with pesticides in oil palm plantations

https://wrm.org.uy/articles-from-the-wrm-bulletin/section2/water-contamination-with-pesticides-in-oil-palm-plantations/

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A Town Demands Protection from Pesticides

February 23, 2016

A powerful photograph changes a girl’s life and improves conditions in a rural farm town in Argentina. But problems persist.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2016/02/160223-photograph-aixa-argentina-avia-terai-pesticides-glyphosate/


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Did A Pesticide Cause Microcephaly In Brazil? Unlikely, Say Experts

2016

https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2016/02/18/467138913/did-a-pesticide-cause-microcephaly-in-brazil-unlikely-say-experts

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Pesticides in the balance

Sep. 2018

https://revistapesquisa.fapesp.br/en/2019/02/25/pesticides-in-the-balance/


Debate stirs over proposed regulations on pesticides—the mainstay of large-scale farming but a hazard to the environment and the health of rural communities

Brazil, one of the world’s agricultural commodity powerhouses, is also a voracious consumer of pesticides—chemical or biological substances used to protect crops against the introduction and spread of pests such as insects, fungi, bacteria, viruses, mites, nematodes (parasites that attack the roots of plants), and weeds. The pesticide market in Brazil is worth US$10 billion per year, or 20% of a global market estimated to be worth US$50 billion. In 2017 Brazilian farmers used 540,000 metric tons of active ingredients, about 50% more than in 2010, according to data from the Brazilian Institute of the Environment and Renewable Natural Resources (IBAMA), an agency linked to the Ministry of the Environment. An active ingredient is the active compound in a pesticide product.

The pesticide debate has intensified in recent months since a House committee approved Draft Bill 6299/02 last June. Introduced in 2002 by the current Minister of Agriculture, Blairo Maggi, the bill proposes new rules on the approval and use of new pesticides. To come into force, the bill will need to pass the Brazilian House and Senate and be signed into law by the president.

The large-scale use of pesticides—also referred to in Brazil as “agrotoxins” (agrotóxicos), agrochemicals, or phytosanitary products—stems from several factors. As a tropical country, Brazil lacks the pronounced winter season that temperate climates have to disrupt pest life cycles. Pesticide use has grown in tandem with agricultural production—the grain harvest leaped from 149 million tons in 2010 to 238 million in 2017—and the expansion of monoculture, a farming system that upsets ecosystem balance and affects biodiversity, creating conditions for the spread of pests and disease.

-----------------

The developing world is awash in pesticides. Does it have to be?

2016

Herbicides, insecticides and fungicides threaten the environment and human health in many parts of the world. But research is pointing to a better approach.

https://ensia.com/features/developing-world-pesticides/

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Fungus threatens Brazilian farms

2018

https://www.farmprogress.com/soybean/fungus-threatens-brazilian-farms

-----------------

Results of an international Research project

Tracking Pesticides in the Tropics

https://www.iaea.org/sites/default/files/publications/magazines/bulletin/bull40-3/40305692430.pdf

--------------------


In Brazil’s Most Polluted City, A Tough Choice Between Health And Money

01/23/2018

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/brazil-air-pollution-santa-gertrudes_n_5a620fbae4b01d91b2551664

“When it comes to the air, there’s nothing you can do. You cannot stop breathing.”

SANTA GERTRUDES, Brazil – The sunset over Santa Gertrudes, a small town 175 miles west of the Brazilian metropolis of São Paulo, is renowned for its beauty at dusk, when shimmering red, orange and pink hues streak across the horizon.

But the dazzling display has a filthy source: Santa Gertrudes has the worst air pollution of any Brazilian jurisdiction listed in the World Health Organization’s 2016 ambient air pollution database, with some particle pollution comparable to that of Shanghai.

Residents are forced to sweep their homes several times a day to clear the accumulated dust. At night, it often looks like there are no stars in the sky. And many people in the town say they’re sick from breathing the air.

“There’s no way to avoid the dust,” said Nelson Rodrigues, a 53-year-old machine technician, as he stood in line at the local hospital, where he was hoping to be treated for what he thinks are pollution-related ailments.

In the seven years he has lived in the city, Rodrigues’ health has deteriorated considerably, he said. “My head feels heavy. I feel shortness of breath and a scratchy throat.”

This small town of about 25,000 people owes its livelihood to the rich clay deposits in the area and the 29 factories that make Santa Gertrudes the largest producer of ceramic tile in the Americas.  Directly or indirectly, clay has sustained the town’s economy for generations, but it is also the source of its pollution.

Many see the air pollution that is a byproduct of the clay extraction, transport and ceramics production as an acceptable hazard, the price to be paid for a stable source of income for so many in the area.

Air pollution caused 6.1 million deaths in 2016, according to the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. Brazil’s Ministry of Health says 49,000 Brazilians die from air quality-related illnesses every year, breathing in tiny particles that can lead to chronic lung disease and acute respiratory infections, lung cancer, heart disease and strokes.


--------------------------

Air Quality in Urban Areas in Brazilian Midwest

July 26th 2012

https://www.intechopen.com/books/air-quality-new-perspective/air-quality-in-urban-areas-in-brazilian-midwest

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South America Population (LIVE)

https://www.worldometers.info/world-population/south-america-population/

December 2019 - 428,850,275 million degenerates

Countries in South America
Country    Population (2019)
Brazil    211,049,527
Colombia    50,339,443
Argentina    44,780,677
Peru    32,510,453
Venezuela    28,515,829
Chile    18,952,038
Ecuador    17,373,662
Bolivia    11,513,100
Paraguay    7,044,636
Uruguay    3,461,734
Guyana    782,766
Suriname    581,372
French Guiana    290,832
Falkland Islands    3,377


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List of South American countries by population

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_South_American_countries_by_population

  Brazil (49.4%)
  Colombia (11.8%)
  Argentina (10.5%)
  Peru (7.6%)
  Venezuela (6.6%)
  Chile (4.4%)
  Ecuador (4.1%)
  Bolivia (2.7%)
  Other (2.9%)


---------------------


Stealing Rain from the Rainforest

2005

https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/features/AmazonDrought/stealing_rain.php

--------------------


Deforestation causing São Paulo drought

2015

https://geographical.co.uk/places/cities/item/761-deforestation-behind-sao-paulo-drought

Brazil possesses 12 per cent of the world’s freshwater, and yet São Paulo – the biggest and richest city in South America – is suffering from severe drought with deforestation getting the blame

---------------------


Water Scarcity in Brazil:

A Case Study

Abstract: Between 2012 and 2015, Brazil experienced one of the worst droughts in its history. A combination of natural and human-made causes—including climate change, environmental degradation, poor urban planning, a lack of maintenance of existing infrastructure, corruption, and the mismanagement of water resources—contributed to a growing water crisis. This article will focus on the effects of both the drought and the subsequent water crisis on the vast metropolitan area of the city of São Paulo, illustrating how both natural and human factors combined to create a crisis in Brazil’s largest city.

https://www.usmcu.edu/Outreach/Publishing/Marine-Corps-University-Press/Expeditions-with-MCUP-digital-journal/Water-Scarcity-in-Brazil/


---------------------

A Snapshot of the World’s Water Quality: Towards a global assessment

https://uneplive.unep.org/media/docs/assessments/unep_wwqa_report_web.pdf

------------------------

Brazil, so much water and yet so little

2017

https://www.wearewater.org/en/brazil-so-much-water-and-yet-so-little_286801

--------------------


Water Pollution

https://waterinbrazil.weebly.com/water-pollution.html

Brazil has abundant resources accounting for approximately 12% of the world's available fresh water. Average water availability across the country is high, however the north eastern region has a semi arid climate which includes a large part of the population. Brazil is overall a country rich with many resources; however these resources such as water are misused and wasted.

The three main causes of water pollution in Brazil are the leaking landfills, industrial waste and sewage.

At the beginning of the 20th century, Brazilian cities had adopted a separate system for the sanitary sewers and the storm water runoff. These two systems were gradually interconnected and today low cost solutions are searched to fix this mix up. This is a major threat to the water quality as the water now collects what is coming from the sewage and is brought into the water polluting the water, making it undrinkable and endangering wildlife. It was said that thirty years ago, wild life was blossoming in Rio but today no fish can be found and there is more chance finding a corpse in a river than a living creature. It was said that nearly 70% of Rio's sewage is untreated and dumped into popular beach areas like Copacabana and Guanabara Bay.

One other cause of pollution is ethanol coming from the plantations of sugar cane crop. This production needs a significant amount of water in the agricultural and industrial processing phases and they mostly rely on natural irrigation for water. Even though water availability is not a problem in Brazil, the high demand in the production of sugar made the plantation expand in regions where natural irrigation is simply not enough and must be complemented by artificial water spray. The water pollution is caused by the chemicals used in the production of crops who have been industrialized, the fertilizers, agrochemicals... These chemicals lead to water contamination and the water cannot be used for other purposes.

The disposal of waste takes place in inappropriate landfills. In Europe, landfills are viewed as the last option for waste disposal as they prefer waste-to-energy systems, however, in Brazil, landfills are favored and viewed as efficient ways to dispose of waste. The new solutions have not yet been adopted in Brazil as an incinerator for example is expensive not only to buy but also to operate and maintain in a good condition. Change can only happen with the appropriate financing of the project. Landfills cannot last forever and they eventually fail. They leak into the ground and surface water, ultimately polluting it.

With the Soccer World Cup and the Olympics coming up, cleaning the waters has been become much more of a priority than it already has. However the progress is very slow as low-budget solutions are limited. The government is doing all they can to clean up these waters for tourist and health reasons.


--------------------------------


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Section 8: Fungus

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---------------------------------

FDA tests threaten Brazil orange juice imports

2012

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-fda-orangejuice/fda-tests-threaten-brazil-orange-juice-imports-idUSTRE80A1K720120111

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Fears that the U.S. might ban imports of orange juice from Brazil drove orange juice futures to an all-time high on Tuesday as health regulators began testing all incoming shipments for traces of an illegal fungicide called carbendazim.

According to the Food and Drug Administration, a U.S. juice producer had detected low levels of carbendazim in orange juice concentrate imported from Brazil, the top grower accounting for more than 10 percent of the U.S. supply.

The pesticide is banned in U.S. citrus but it is used on orange trees in Brazil to fight mold. The FDA said low levels of carbendazim were not dangerous and the agency had no plans for a recall, but it would stop any shipments of orange juice at the border that tested positive for the fungicide.

Orange juice futures jumped almost 11 percent to an all-time high on the news, which was announced by the FDA in a letter to the Juice Products Association on Monday. The orange juice market is particularly prone to volatility because of its tiny size compared to oil and other major commodities.

It was not immediately clear whether there would be a related increase in orange juice prices for consumers, as that would depend on how long futures stay high and whether this results in a shortage of orange juice shipments into the United States.

Brands such as Tropicana, from PepsiCo Inc, and Minute Maid, from Coca-Cola Co, may use a mix of juices sourced from Brazil and the United States.

-------------------------

How Brazil stole the production of orange juice from Florida

Aug 23 2018

https://www.cnbc.com/2018/08/23/brazil-florida-orange-juice-tariff-trade-war.html

-------------------------

The Secret Ingredient In Your Orange Juice

https://www.foodrenegade.com/secret-ingredient-your-orange-juice/

-------------------

What Orange Juice Brands Contains 100% Florida (or U.S.) Juice?

https://www.eatlikenoone.com/what-orange-juice-brands-contains-100-florida-or-u-s-juice.htm

-------------------------

FDA Says Brazil's Orange Juice Is Safe, But Still Illegal

February 22, 2012

https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2012/02/22/147254438/fda-says-brazils-orange-juice-is-safe-but-still-illegal

-------------------------

Pesticide maximum residue level legislation around the world

Find links to maximum residue level (MRL) legislation in many markets, including New Zealand, and to MRLs established by the Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC).

https://www.mpi.govt.nz/growing-and-harvesting/plant-products/pesticide-maximum-residue-levels-mrls-for-plant-based-foods/pesticide-maximum-residue-level-legislation-around-the-world/

-------------------------

A system to map the risk of infection by Puccinia kuehnii in Brazil

2018

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1807-86212019000101001

ABSTRACT.

Orange rust caused by the fungus Puccinia kuehnii greatly affects sugarcane and causes millions of tons of losses in production. This condition was first reported in Brazil at the end of 2009. The disease is currently present in most of the countries that produce this crop. The aim of this research was to develop risk maps of P. kuehnii infection using temperature and relative humidity data, provided by 389 automatic weather stations throughout the country. A spatial distribution analysis was carried out to assess the number of daily hours of favorable conditions for spore germination in each region. In the central-south region, where the main sugarcane producing states are concentrated, two distinct periods were observed during the three years studied. Higher favorability occurred from October to April, and lower favorability occurred from May to September. The opposite relation was observed on the coast of the north-eastern region, where conditions were more favorable to the disease from May to September. The validation data were confirmed by the results of Pearson’s correlation between sugarcane orange rust infection under field conditions and the proposed maps. In conclusion, risk maps obtained using data from automatic weather stations could contribute to the monitoring of the risk of infection by sugarcane orange rust.

-------------------------------

 Citrus greening is killing the world’s orange trees. Scientists are racing to help

2019

To save a billion-dollar industry from the infectious disease, also known as huanglongbing, researchers are turning to gene editing, RNA interference, and other advanced techniques

https://cen.acs.org/biological-chemistry/biochemistry/Citrus-greening-killing-worlds-orange/97/i23

--------------------------------

Citrus Black Spot Symptoms in Brazil

https://crec.ifas.ufl.edu/media/crecifasufledu/extension/extension-publications/2007/February-2007-citrus-black-spot.pdf

--------------------------------

Paracoccidioidomycosis: Current Perspectives from Brazil

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5695158/

--------------------------------

Citrus Farmers Facing Deadly Bacteria Turn to Antibiotics, Alarming Health Officials

2019

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/17/health/antibiotics-oranges-florida.html

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Killer Fungus That Just Won't Die Threatens Brazilian Farms

2017

https://www.greenbook.net/article/2017/12/21/killer-fungus-just-wont-die-threatens-brazilian-farms

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Fungal Diseases of Fruit and Foliage of Citrus Trees

https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/1-4020-2606-4_3

------------------------

Brazil & US identify molecule to help fight Citrus Greening Disease

https://www.freshplaza.com/article/2186153/brazil-us-identify-molecule-to-help-fight-citrus-greening-disease/

------------------------

FDA tests threaten Brazil orange juice imports

January 11, 2012

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-fda-orangejuice/fda-tests-threaten-brazil-orange-juice-imports-idUSTRE80A1K720120111

-------------------------

“You Don’t Want to Breathe Poison Anymore”

2018

https://www.hrw.org/report/2018/07/20/you-dont-want-breathe-poison-anymore/failing-response-pesticide-drift-brazils

The Failing Response to Pesticide Drift in Brazil’s Rural Communities

In May 2013 an airplane sprayed pesticides over a rural school, São José do Pontal, located among the vast corn and soy plantations extending around Rio Verde, a city in Goiás state in Brazil. Around 90 people—mostly children studying at the school—were immediately hospitalized. The incident shocked the nation, and, in the immediate aftermath, Brazil was concerned about the issue of pesticide poisonings in rural areas.

Although this attention has long since dissipated, little has changed: rural people throughout the country continue to be poisoned by pesticides. Ordinary people going about their daily routines face toxic exposures from pesticide applications that frequently occur in immediate proximity to their homes, schools, and workplaces. They are exposed when pesticide spray drifts off target crops during application, or when pesticides vaporize and drift to adjacent areas in the days after spraying.

-----------------------

 Orange drinks with 300 times more pesticide than tap water

2009

Fizzy drinks sold by Coca-Cola in Britain have been found to contain pesticides at up to 300 times the level allowed in tap or bottled water.

A worldwide study found pesticide levels in orange and lemon drinks sold under the Fanta brand, which is popular with children, were at their highest in the UK.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1105179/Orange-drinks-300-times-pesticide-tap-water.html


------------------------


Mycotoxins and their consequences in aquaculture: A review

2015

https://www.olmix.com/sites/default/files/documents/myconews/14-%20Mycotoxins%20and%20their%20consequences%20in%20aquaculture.%20A%20review.pdf

------------------------

Reaction of sugarcane varieties to orange rust (Puccinia kuehnii) and methods for rapid identification of resistant genotypes

2016

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40858-016-0076-6

-----------------------

Fungal Foliar Disease Concerns for 2019

2019

http://citrusindustry.net/2019/02/15/fungal-foliar-disease-concerns-for-2019/

-----------------------

Coffee rust disease posed to destroy Latin American market (and your daily coffee fix)

2018

https://www.panoramas.pitt.edu/health-and-society/coffee-rust-disease-posed-destroy-latin-american-market-and-your-daily-coffee-fix

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Current status and management of coffee leaf rust in Brazil

2016

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/291949559_Current_status_and_management_of_coffee_leaf_rust_in_Brazil

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Coffee Rust Threatens Latin American Crop; 150 Years Ago, It Wiped Out An Empire

2018

https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2018/10/16/649155664/coffee-rust-threatens-latin-american-crop-150-years-ago-it-wiped-out-an-empire

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Your cup of coffee is under threat from fungus and the climate

2018

http://www.digitaljournal.com/tech-and-science/science/your-cup-of-coffee-is-under-threat-from-fungus-and-the-climate/article/534859

-------------------------

Fungicides to Replace Benlate for some Diseases of Ornamentals

https://mrec.ifas.ufl.edu/Foliage/Resrpts/rh_93_1.htm

-------------------------


Citizens of Brazil’s Valley of Death Breathing Easier After Two Years of Cleanup


Aug. 30, 1987


Associated Press


https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-08-30-mn-4824-story.html



CUBATAO, Brazil —


People are breathing cleaner air in this industrial city, long considered one of the world’s most polluted and known in Brazil as the Valley of Death.


The United Nations-affiliated World Health Organization and local ecological groups say that a $500-million government cleanup program has produced substantial improvements in pollution levels in Cubatao, 37 miles southeast of the financial-industrial center of Sao Paulo and next door to the coffee port of Santos.


When the state’s Environmental Control Agency began the anti-pollution campaign two years ago, the smoke stacks at Cubatao’s 23 industries spewed out almost 500 tons of pollutants a day. Today the level has dropped to about 165 tons, Benedito da Conceicao, the agency’s local manager, said in an interview.


In the meantime, many of Cubatao’s 100,000 inhabitants were afflicted by pulmonary edemas, bronchial infections, skin cancer, leukemia and other diseases caused by the toxic emissions from the city’s oil refinery and steel mill and from fertilizer, petrochemical and cement plants.


------------------------

Beyond the Quality of the Water in Your Cup: Coffee and Water Resources at Origin

July 8, 2013

https://scanews.coffee/2013/07/08/beyond-the-quality-of-the-water-in-your-cup-coffee-and-water-resources-at-origin/

----------------------

High extinction risk for wild coffee species and implications for coffee sector sustainability

Jan 2019

https://advances.sciencemag.org/content/5/1/eaav3473

-------------------------

Wheat rust: The fungal disease that threatens to destroy the world crop

2014

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/wheat-rust-the-fungal-disease-that-threatens-to-destroy-the-world-crop-9271485.html

-------------------------

Mushroom lights up the night in Brazil: Researcher finds bioluminescent fungus not seen since 1840

2011

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/07/110706154213.htm

-------------------------

Cats spreading fungal disease to people in Brazil

2019

https://www.avma.org/javma-news/2019-03-15/cats-spreading-fungal-disease-people-brazil

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Noncandidal Fungal Infections of the Mouth

2018

https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1077685-overview

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Brazil's Pollution Regulatory Structure and Background

1996

http://siteresources.worldbank.org/NIPRINT/Resources/BrazilsPollutionRegulatoryStructureandBackground.pdf

----------------------------

Water Resource Pollution by Herbicide Residues

https://www.intechopen.com/online-first/water-resource-pollution-by-herbicide-residues

----------------------------

Brazilian lawmakers seek to deregulate pesticide use and ban sale of organic produce in major supermarkets

2018

https://www.latimes.com/world/la-fg-brazil-farming-pesticides-20180812-htmlstory.html


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Section 9: Bacteria & Viruses

---------------------
----------------------
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-----------------------------


Occurrence of Harmful Cyanobacteria in Drinking Water from a Severely Drought-Impacted Semi-arid Region

2018

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5835534/


----------------------

Drought in the Semiarid Region of Brazil: Exposure, Vulnerabilities and Health Impacts from the Perspectives of Local Actors

10-29-2018

http://currents.plos.org/disasters/index.html%3Fp=40402.html

---------------------

Quantification of pathogenic Leptospira in the soils of a Brazilian urban slum

2018 Apr

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5906024/

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Isolation of new Brazilian giant viruses from environmental samples using a panel of protozoa

2015

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4594340/

Abstract

The Megavirales are a newly described order capable of infecting different types of eukaryotic hosts. For the most part, the natural host is unknown. Several methods have been used to detect these viruses, with large discrepancies between molecular methods and co-cultures. To isolate giant viruses, we propose the use of different species of amoeba as a cellular support. The aim of this work was to isolate new Brazilian giant viruses by comparing the protozoa Acanthamoeba castellanii, A. polyphaga, A. griffini, and Vermamoeba vermiformis (VV) as a platform for cellular isolation using environmental samples. One hundred samples were collected from 3 different areas in September 2014 in the Pampulha lagoon of Belo Horizonte city, Minas Gerais, Brazil. PCR was used to identify the isolated viruses, along with hemacolor staining, labelling fluorescence and electron microscopy. A total of 69 viruses were isolated. The highest ratio of isolation was found in A. polyphaga (46.38%) and the lowest in VV (0%). Mimiviruses were the most frequently isolated. One Marseillevirus and one Pandoravirus were also isolated. With Brazilian environmental samples, we demonstrated the high rate of lineage A mimiviruses. This work demonstrates how these viruses survive and circulate in nature as well the differences between protozoa as a platform for cellular isolation.


---------------------

Diversities and potential biogeochemical impacts of mangrove soil viruses

2019

https://microbiomejournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s40168-019-0675-9


---------------------

Geochemical Signature of Amazon Tropical Rainforest Soils

2018

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-06832018000100403

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Land Use and Seasonal Effects on the Soil Microbiome of a Brazilian Dry Forest

05 April 2019

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2019.00648/full

---------------------

Land use policies and deforestation in Brazilian tropical dry forests between 2000 and 2015

https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/aaadea

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 Archaea in Natural and Impacted Brazilian Environments

2016

Abstract

In recent years, archaeal diversity surveys have received increasing attention. Brazil is a country known for its natural diversity and variety of biomes, which makes it an interesting sampling site for such studies. However, archaeal communities in natural and impacted Brazilian environments have only recently been investigated. In this review, based on a search on the PubMed database on the last week of April 2016, we present and discuss the results obtained in the 51 studies retrieved, focusing on archaeal communities in water, sediments, and soils of different Brazilian environments. We concluded that, in spite of its vast territory and biomes, the number of publications focusing on archaeal detection and/or characterization in Brazil is still incipient, indicating that these environments still represent a great potential to be explored.

https://www.hindawi.com/journals/archaea/2016/1259608/

--------------------

Hidden diversity of soil giant viruses

11-19-2018

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-018-07335-2

---------------------

Emerging Infectious Diseases (Brazil)

https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/ArticleMap/BRA

Title

Geographic Expansion of Sporotrichosis, Brazil
Non-Leishmania Parasite in Fatal Visceral Leishmaniasis–like Disease, Brazil
Influence of Rainfall on Leptospira Infection and Disease in a Tropical Urban Setting, Brazil
Two Cases of Newly Characterized Neisseria Species
Human Parasitism by Amblyomma parkeri Ticks Infected with Candidatus Rickettsia paranaensis, Brazil
Fatal Brazilian Spotted Fever Associated with Dogs and Amblyomma aureolatum Ticks, Brazil, 2013
Nodular Human Lagochilascariasis Lesion in Hunter, Brazil
Non-Leishmania Parasite in Fatal Visceral Leishmaniasis–Like Disease, Brazil
Cross-Protection of Dengue Virus Infection against Congenital Zika Syndrome, Northeastern Brazil
17DD Yellow Fever Revaccination and Heightened Long-Term Immunity in Populations of Disease-Endemic Areas, Brazil

Showing 1 to 10 of 305 entries

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Brazilian Forests Fall Silent as Yellow Fever Decimates Threatened Monkeys

2018

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/brazilian-forests-fall-silent-as-yellow-fever-decimates-threatened-monkeys/

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Tools for Communicating Agricultural Drought over the Brazilian Semiarid Using the Soil Moisture Index

2 August 2018

https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/10/10/1421


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Taxonomic and functional profiles of soil samples from Atlantic forest and Caatinga biomes in northeastern Brazil

04 April 2014

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/mbo3.169

 Abstract

Although microorganisms play crucial roles in ecosystems, metagenomic analyses of soil samples are quite scarce, especially in the Southern Hemisphere. In this work, the microbial diversity of soil samples from an Atlantic Forest and Caatinga was analyzed using a metagenomic approach. Proteobacteria and Actinobacteria were the dominant phyla in both samples. Among which, a significant proportion of stress‐resistant bacteria associated to organic matter degradation was found. Sequences related to metabolism of amino acids, nitrogen, and DNA and stress resistance were more frequent in Caatinga soil, while the forest sample showed the highest occurrence of hits annotated in phosphorous metabolism, defense mechanisms, and aromatic compound degradation subsystems. The principal component analysis (PCA) showed that our samples are close to the desert metagenomes in relation to taxonomy, but are more similar to rhizosphere microbiota in relation to the functional profiles. The data indicate that soil characteristics affect the taxonomic and functional distribution; these characteristics include low nutrient content, high drainage (both are sandy soils), vegetation, and exposure to stress. In both samples, a rapid turnover of organic matter with low greenhouse gas emission was suggested by the functional profiles obtained, reinforcing the importance of preserving natural areas.


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Samba virus: a novel mimivirus from a giant rain forest, the Brazilian Amazon

14 May 2014

https://virologyj.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1743-422X-11-95

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Brazilian Forests Fall Silent as Yellow Fever Decimates Threatened Monkeys

Researchers are scrambling to understand the virulent outbreak, and backing policies to save several already beleaguered species


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The Amazon hasn't stopped burning. There were 19,925 fire outbreaks last month, and 'more fires' are in the future

Oct 2019

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/10/18/amazon-rainforest-still-burning-more-fires-future/4011238002/


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Viruses and bacteria in floodplain lakes along a major Amazon tributary respond to distance to the Amazon River

2015

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4349158/

Abstract

In response to the massive volume of water along the Amazon River, the Amazon tributaries have their water backed up by 100s of kilometers upstream their mouth. This backwater effect is part of the complex hydrodynamics of Amazonian surface waters, which in turn drives the variation in concentrations of organic matter and nutrients, and also regulates planktonic communities such as viruses and bacteria. Viruses and bacteria are commonly tightly coupled to each other, and their ecological role in aquatic food webs has been increasingly recognized. Here, we surveyed viral and bacterial abundances (BAs) in 26 floodplain lakes along the Trombetas River, the largest clear-water tributary of the Amazon River’s north margin. We correlated viral and BAs with temperature, pH, dissolved inorganic carbon, dissolved organic carbon (DOC), phosphorus, nitrogen, turbidity, water transparency, partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO2), phytoplankton abundance, and distance from the lake mouth until the confluence of the Trombetas with the Amazon River. We hypothesized that both bacterial and viral abundances (VAs) would change along a latitudinal gradient, as the backwater effect becomes more intense with increased proximity to the Amazon River; different flood duration and intensity among lakes and waters with contrasting sources would cause spatial variation. Our measurements were performed during the low water period, when floodplain lakes are in their most lake-like conditions. Viral and BAs, DOC, pCO2, and water transparency increased as distance to the Amazon River increased. Most viruses were bacteriophages, as viruses were strongly linked to bacteria, but not to phytoplankton. We suggest that BAs increase in response to DOC quantity and possibly quality, consequently leading to increased VAs. Our results highlight that hydrodynamics plays a key role in the regulation of planktonic viral and bacterial communities in Amazonian floodplain lakes.


----------------------


Invasion Profiles of Brazilian Field Isolates of Plasmodium falciparum: Phenotypic and Genotypic Analyses

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC517604/

------------------------

IN ACRID BRAZILIAN FACTORY ZONE, A FEAR OF DISASTER

1985

https://www.nytimes.com/1985/05/18/world/in-acrid-brazilian-factory-zone-a-fear-of-disaster.html


-------------------------


Broad tapeworms (Diphyllobothriidae), parasites of wildlife and humans: Recent progress and future challenges


https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213224418301706


------------------------


 Girl's feet infested with parasitic sand fleas after running through pigsty barefoot




 

A 10-year-old girl who had developed itchy, painful brown-colored papules on the bottom of her feet was actually suffering from a parasitic sand flea infestation. The girl, who had traveled to Brazil with her family two-weeks prior to visiting a health clinic, reported running through a pigsty with no shoes on.

https://www.foxnews.com/health/girls-feet-infested-with-parasitic-sand-fleas-after-running-through-pigsty-barefoot

------------------------



The Brazilian Banes: A World Cup Disease Guide

May 20, 2014

A global network of clinicians assess the most common diseases among travelers to Brazil, and the winner is surprising

The leading skin worm was cutaneous larva migrans (CLM), a hookworm typically caught while hanging around beaches. The worm larvae live in sand and can penetrate the intact skin of a bare foot or an exposed bum. The major source of CLM is dog and cat poop littered on the seashore. One survey of a São Paulo district discovered the parasite in 90 percent of canines and felines whereas a separate inspection of Recife’s Alto Beach, a popular tourist destination, found the worm’s larvae in one of every three sand samples. Rather than discourage beach-goers, however, Wilson and her colleagues hope that the findings encourage people to wear proper footwear and avoid sitting on bare sand.

The report is useful for doctors back home, too, says Susan McLellan, a clinical professor of public health at Tulane University who was not involved with the study. “Family-practice doctors miss CLM all the time or mistake it for another kind of worm,” McLellan says. “The article provides a nice review of the infections that might arise during these mass gatherings.” The survey comprised health data from the GeoSentinel network, a collective of health clinics spanning 40 countries and six continents whose purpose is to measure maladies as they cross international borders.

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-brazilian-banes-a-world-cup-disease-guide1/


-------------------

Brazil General Health Risks: Soil-Transmitted Helminths

https://www.iamat.org/country/brazil/risk/intestinal-parasites-soil-transmitted-helminths

Description

Parasitic worms are organisms that can live and replicate in the gastrointestinal system. These soil-transmitted helminths (hookworms, roundworms, whipworms) are transmitted through the fecal-oral route as a result of poor sanitary practices. The most common infections that can affect travellers are Ascariasis, Hookworm, and Trichuriasis which are Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs)*.

* Neglected Tropical Diseases are chronic infections that are typically endemic in low income countries. They prevent affected adults and children from going to school, working, or fully participating in community life, contributing to stigma and the cycle of poverty.
Risk

Travellers can get ill when worm eggs are ingested by:

    Eating raw, unwashed, or improperly handled fruits and vegetables.
    Drinking contaminated water or beverages.
    Touching the mouth with dirty hands or through improper hand washing.
    Practising poor body hygiene.


-------------------

Checklist of helminth parasites of threatened vertebrate species from Brazil

https://www.biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.2123.1.1

Abstract

Using available records, unpublished information retrieved from the Helminthological Collection of the Oswaldo Cruz Institute (CHIOC) and published reports, a checklist of the recorded helminth parasites of endangered vertebrates from Brazil was generated. A total of 772 records and 186 helminth species (6 Acanthocephala, 83 Nematoda, 23 Cestoda, 64 Trematoda, 10 Monogenea) in 76 host species (7 Actinopterygii, 8 Chondrichthyes, 1 Amphibia, 10 Reptilia, 22 Aves, 28 Mammalia) from Brazil were listed in the present work, including 39 undetermined helminth species and 10 new host records. This is the first compilation of the helminth parasites of threatened vertebrates in Brazil and in the Neotropics.

-------------------

Dogs, cats, parasites, and humans in Brazil: opening the black box

2014

https://parasitesandvectors.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1756-3305-7-22

Abstract

Dogs and cats in Brazil serve as primary hosts for a considerable number of parasites, which may affect their health and wellbeing. These may include endoparasites (e.g., protozoa, cestodes, trematodes, and nematodes) and ectoparasites (i.e., fleas, lice, mites, and ticks). While some dog and cat parasites are highly host-specific (e.g., Aelurostrongylus abstrusus and Felicola subrostratus for cats, and Angiostrongylus vasorum and Trichodectes canis for dogs), others may easily switch to other hosts, including humans. In fact, several dog and cat parasites (e.g., Toxoplasma gondii, Dipylidium caninum, Ancylostoma caninum, Strongyloides stercoralis, and Toxocara canis) are important not only from a veterinary perspective but also from a medical standpoint. In addition, some of them (e.g., Lynxacarus radovskyi on cats and Rangelia vitalii in dogs) are little known to most veterinary practitioners working in Brazil. This article is a compendium on dog and cat parasites in Brazil and a call for a One Health approach towards a better management of some of these parasites, which may potentially affect humans. Practical aspects related to the diagnosis, treatment, and control of parasitic diseases of dogs and cats in Brazil are discussed.

-------------------


Parasites and allergy: Observations from Brazil.

2019

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30188574

-------------------

Six human parasites you definitely don’t want to host

August 23, 2013

https://theconversation.com/six-human-parasites-you-definitely-dont-want-to-host-17332


---------------------

This parasitic worm can be deadly – and it’s coming to Europe

July 2018

https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-families/health-news/parasite-flatworm-disease-science-research-a8426556.html

----------------------

In Brazil, a New Effort to Wipe Out Hookworm

2005

https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4980102

----------------------


Brazil Major infectious diseases

https://www.indexmundi.com/brazil/major_infectious_diseases.html

----------------------

Protozoan and metazoan parasites of Nile tilapia Oreochromis niloticus cultured in Brazil

Apr. 2012

http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0122-02682012000100002

ABSTRACT

Objective. This study describes the parasitic fauna and relative condition factor (Kn) in Nile tilapia Oreochromis niloticus L. (Cichlidae) from fish farms in the State of Amapá. Material and methods. 123 fish from four fish farms in the state of Amapá, Brazil were necropsied for parasitological and Kn analysis. Results. 64.2% of the examined fish, had the gills infected with Cichlidogyrus tilapiaePaperna, 1960 (Monogenoidea: Dactylogyridae); Ichthyophthirius multifiliis Fouquet, 1876 (Protozoa: Ciliophora), Trichodina Ehrenberg, 1830 and Para Trichodina africana Kazubski & El-Tantawy, 1986 (Protozoa: Trichodinidae). The highest prevalence found corresponded to Monogenoidea C. tilapiae while the lowest corresponded to Trichodinidae. However, I. multifiliis was the parasite that presented the greatest intensity and abundance. The differences found in the infection rates of the different fish farms due to causes further discussed. The parasitism did not influence the relative condition factor (Kn) of fish. This was the first record of P. Africana in Brazil and occurred in the Eastern Amazon. Conclusions. In Brazil, Lamproglena sp. is an emerging parasite in the Southern and Southeastern regions, but this crustacean was not found in the Nile tilapia in the State of Amapá. The parasitic infections in Nile tilapia farmed in Brazil are caused by protozoan, monogenoidea, crustacea and digenea species, and the regional differences on their prevalence and intensity rates are discussed in this study.

----------------------

Patterns of the parasite communities in a fish assemblage of a river in the Brazilian Amazon region

2018

https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/ap.2018.63.issue-2/ap-2018-0035/ap-2018-0035.xml

----------------------

Geospatial distribution of intestinal parasitic infections in Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) and its association with social determinants

2017

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5358884/

-----------------------

Intestinal parasite infections in a rural community of Rio de Janeiro (Brazil): Prevalence and genetic diversity of Blastocystis subtypes

March 9, 2018

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0193860


Abstract
Background

Intestinal parasitic infections are considered a serious public health problem and widely distributed worldwide, mainly in urban and rural environments of tropical and subtropical countries. Globally, soil-transmitted helminths and protozoa are the most common intestinal parasites. Blastocystis sp. is a highly prevalent suspected pathogenic protozoan, and considered an unusual protist due to its significant genetic diversity and host plasticity.
Methodology/main findings

A total of 294 stool samples were collected from inhabitants of three rural valleys in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The stool samples were evaluated by parasitological methods, fecal culture, nested PCR and PCR/Sequencing. Overall prevalence by parasitological analyses was 64.3% (189 out of 294 cases). Blastocystis sp. (55.8%) was the most prevalent, followed by Endolimax nana (18.7%), Entamoeba histolytica complex (7.1%), hookworm infection (7.1%), Entomoeba coli (5.8%), Giardia intestinalis (4.1%), Iodamoeba butchilii (1.0%), Trichuris trichiura (1.0%), Pentatrichomonas hominis (0.7%), Enterobius vermicularis (0.7%), Ascaris lumbricoides (0.7%) and Strongyloides stercoralis (0.7%). Prevalence of IPIs was significantly different by gender. Phylogenetic analysis of Blastocystis sp. and BLAST search revealed five different subtypes: ST3 (34.0%), ST1 (27.0%), ST2 (27.0%), ST4 (3.5%), ST8 (7.0%) and a non-identified subtype.


----------------------


Giardiasis as a neglected disease in Brazil: Systematic review of 20 years of publications

2017

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5678545/

----------------------


Emerging parasitic disease mimics the symptoms of visceral leishmaniasis in people

October 1, 2019

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/10/191001132656.htm


Source:
    NIH/National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Summary:
    A new study suggests that transmission of a protozoan parasite from insects may also cause leishmaniasis-like symptoms in people. The parasite, however, does not respond to treatment with standard leishmaniasis drugs.

A new study published this week online in Emerging Infectious Diseases suggests that transmission of a protozoan parasite from insects may also cause leishmaniasis-like symptoms in people. The parasite, however, does not respond to treatment with standard leishmaniasis drugs. The research was conducted by scientists at the Federal Universities of Sergipe and São Carlos, the University of São Paulo, and the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, all in Brazil, along with investigators at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.

----------------------

Parasites in stool samples in the environment of Ilha da Marambaia, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: an approach in public health

Apr 2012

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0036-46652012000200002

----------------------

Hidden Epidemic: 
Tapeworms Living Inside People's Brains

2012

Parasitic worms leave millions of victims paralyzed, epileptic, or worse. So why isn’t anyone mobilizing to eradicate them?

https://www.discovermagazine.com/health/hidden-epidemic-tapeworms-living-inside-peoples-brains

----------------------


Scientists Shocked By Worms Breeding Inside People's Eyes

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cc8EacTYyZw


-------------------


Woman Running On Trail Ends Up Getting A Bad Case Of Eye Worms

11/07/2019

The cattle eye worm infection is only the second known case in humans, raising concerns about an upswing.


When it comes to the grossest place to get infected with parasitic worms, the eyes have it.

A Nebraska woman found that out after running into a swarm of flies on a trail near Carmel Valley, California, in February 2018.

------------------


Man Dies After Parasitic Worms Invade Lungs

Steroid treatment for inflammatory disorder may have spurred 'hyperinfection,' report says


WEDNESDAY, March 20 (HealthDay News) -- A Vietnamese immigrant in California died of a massive infection with parasitic worms that spread throughout his body, including his lungs. They had remained dormant until his immune system was suppressed by steroid drugs used to treat an inflammatory disorder, according to the report.

https://www.webmd.com/lung/news/20130320/man-dies-after-parasitic-worms-invade-lungs#1

------------------

A Deadly Brain-Invading Worm Is Disturbingly Widespread in Florida

6/29/17

https://gizmodo.com/a-deadly-brain-invading-worm-is-disturbingly-widespread-1796514141

------------------

Parasite in paradise: Rat lungworm disease confirmed in three Hawaii visitors

May 27, 2019

https://www.cnn.com/2019/05/27/health/rat-lungworm-hawaii-cdc-trnd/index.html

------------------

Travellers warned after barefoot paradise beach walk earns couple parasitic foot infection

Travellers are being warned of the risks of walking barefoot on a beach “somewhere tropical” after a Canadian couple contracted a hookworm infection on holiday in the Dominican Republic.

1-29-2018

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/news/hookworm-risks-barefoot-beach-holidays/


-------------------

Parasitic worms may prevent Crohn’s disease by altering bacterial balance

Apr. 14, 2016

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2016/04/parasitic-worms-may-prevent-crohn-s-disease-altering-bacterial-balance

------------------

How common 'cat parasite' gets into human brain and influences human behavior

12-6-2012

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/12/121206203240.htm

------------------

Toxoplasmosis

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toxoplasmosis

------------------

Cat poop parasite controls minds early -- and permanently, study finds

2013

https://www.nbcnews.com/healthmain/cat-poop-parasite-controls-minds-early-permanently-study-finds-4B11194722

-------------------

Parasites brainwash grasshoppers into death dive

2005

https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn7927-parasites-brainwash-grasshoppers-into-death-dive/

-------------------

Parasitic Brain Infections

https://www.merckmanuals.com/home/brain,-spinal-cord,-and-nerve-disorders/brain-infections/parasitic-brain-infections


-------------------

Ten sinister parasites that control their hosts' minds

2015

http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20150316-ten-parasites-that-control-minds

Some of the creepiest species on Earth are experts in getting their own way. Meet 10 parasites with the power to control their hosts' behaviour

Zombie ant fungus (Ophiocordyceps unilateralis)
Kamikaze horsehair worm (Paragordius tricuspidatus)
Castrator barnacles (Sacculina sp.)
Green-banded broodsac (Leucochloridium paradoxum)
Ladybird parasite (Dinocampus coccinellae)
Emerald cockroach wasp (Ampulex compressa)
Toxoplasmosis (Toxoplasma gondii)
Rabies viruses
Influenza virus
Schistocephalus solidus

-------------------

Parasitic worms burrow through your skin: Schistosomiasis driven by Brazil\'s eco-tourism

2-24-2016

https://www.ibtimes.co.uk/parasitic-worms-burrow-through-your-skin-schistosomiasis-driven-by-brazils-eco-tourism-1545704

-------------------


 Fish Kills

When a number of dead fish are found in one place, the incident is referred to as a fish kill, and there is significant reason to suspect pollution. The three main causes of fish kills are poisoning, disease, and suffocation.

Sanitation worker using a rake to remove dead fish from the Rodrigo de Freitas lake in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

http://www.pollutionissues.com/Ec-Fi/Fish-Kills.html


Poisoning

Fish may be poisoned by a wide range of polluting substances, including pesticides, acids, ammonia, phenols, cresols, compounds of metals, detergents, or cyanides. Many of these substances are used in industrial processes or in agriculture and are released through drains or are accidentally spilled into waterways. Acid rain, derived from industrial pollutants in the atmosphere, causes rivers to become toxic for various kinds of fish. Some types of toxic algal blooms kill fish. During the 1990s the dinoflagellate Pfeisteria piscicida caused fish kills, ranging from a few hundred to a million fish at one time, in estuaries of the southeastern United States.

Disease

In natural environments, disease alone does not usually result in mass mortality, but under the artificial conditions of a hatchery or an aquaculture operation, disease can spread rapidly and cause a fish kill. The disease may be caused by viral infections, bacteria, fungi, or internal or external parasites.

In these same natural environments, it is more common for fish to be weakened by disease and then killed en masse by some stressful environmental situation, such as low-oxygen concentration, temperature extremes, or pollution. When fish move from cold water into much warmer water such as a heated effluent from a generating station, bubbles may form in their tissues and they die from gas bubble disease.

Suffocation

Suffocation occurs when the oxygen concentration in the water falls below the level at which fish can survive. A common cause is eutrophication, which is the artificial stimulation of plant growth by pollution with fertilizers, sewage, or atmospheric fallout. When the excess plant growth decays, it lowers the oxygen concentration. The discharge of dead organic matter into a watercourse from a sewer or from an industrial operation has the same effect. The accidental spilling of a herbicide into a lake or stream may kill large quantities of aquatic vegetation, causing low-oxygen conditions.

Nuisance algal blooms may also cause suffocation. In 1994 in St. Helena Bay, South Africa, a large bloom of toxic and nontoxic algae formed in an estuary and extended into the open sea more than thirty kilometers out from the shore. The bloom sank and decomposed, forming an area with almost no oxygen and with lethal levels of hydrogen sulfide. Approximately fifteen hundred tons of dead fish and sixty tons of dead rock lobsters were washed ashore.

Many fish kills could be prevented by reducing the amount of pollution, especially nitrogen and phosphorus, entering waterways. Applications of fertilizers should be matched to the needs of the crop, sewage effluent should receive advanced treatment, and atmospheric emissions from industry and transport should be carefully controlled at source.


------------------------------

Morphological and molecular characterization of the toxic dinoflagellate Ostreopsis cf. ovata (Gonyaulacales: Dinophyceae) from Brazil (South Atlantic Ocean)

2017

https://www.scielo.sa.cr/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-77442017000301022

-----------------------------


Will history forgive Brazil?

8-28-2019

There is no nuance when it comes to choosing history’s villains; nobody will care if Brazilians really hated the Workers Party government when their major cities are under water

https://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/politics/brazil-bolsonaro-rainforest-history-climate-change-julia-blunck

-------------------------------------

--------------------------------
----------------------------
-------------------------

Section 10: Agriculture

------------------------
---------------------------
-------------------------------

-------------------------------------

Assessment of Copper and Zinc in Soils of a Vineyard Region in the State of São Paulo, Brazil

7 March 2013

https://www.hindawi.com/journals/aess/2013/790795/

Abstract

This soil acidification may increase the bioavailability of copper (Cu) and zinc (Zn) in soils. The objective of this study was to verify the concentrations of Cu and Zn in soils of a vineyard region, including sample acidification, to simulate acid rain. The study was developed in an area of vineyard cultivation, with an adjacent land having other crops grown, in the state of São Paulo, Brazil. Soil samples were collected and GPS located under different uses and coverings. The extracted solutions used to determine the available Cu and Zn forms were diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA), pH 7.3, and calcium chloride 0.01 M. The total forms were obtained by HNO3 digestion. The amounts of Cu and Zn extracted using DTPA were considered high in most of the samples and were greater in the areas cultivated with vineyards that had received fungicide applications for several decades. The total forms were higher in vineyard soils. The amounts of Cu and Zn extracted using CaCl2 did not have good correlation with vineyards or with other metals' forms. The results confirmed that the soil was enriched with Cu and Zn due to the management of the vineyards with chemicals for several decades.

 

------------------



BRAZIL: Sugar Cane Fertilises Its Own Soil

http://www.ipsnews.net/2011/04/brazil-sugar-cane-fertilises-its-own-soil/

RIBEIRÃO PRETO, Brazil, Apr 12 2011 (IPS) - The mechanisation of sugar cane harvesting, originally aimed at curbing the pollution caused by the burning of cane fields, has resulted in an added bonus: it has helped to improve soil quality, according to growers and technical experts in the southern state of São Paulo, where most of Brazil’s sugar and ethanol is produced.

Traditionally, sugar cane fields were set on fire before harvesting to burn off the dried leaves from the plants, making it quicker and easier for cane cutters to manually harvest the crop. Now that leafy “trash” stays in the soil, fertilising it, trapping moisture, and preventing erosion.

This leaf residue supplies every hectare of land with around 45 kilograms of potassium, agronomist Gustavo Nogueira, the technical director of the Sugar Cane Growers Association of Western São Paulo State (Canaoeste), told Tierramérica.

While around 70 percent of sugar cane harvesting in São Paulo is now mechanised, that figure will grow to 100 percent in the coming years. Sugar cane growers have been ordered to end the practice of burning cane fields in flat areas by 2014. In hilly areas with a slope of more than 12 degrees, where current harvesters cannot operate, they have been given until 2017.

In places where mechanised harvesting was adopted early on, there are sugar cane fields that are productive for seven or eight years, compared to the usual five years, said Manoel Ortolan, the president of Canaoeste. Although the organisation was founded by growers in western São Paulo, its headquarters and most of its current members are based in the northeastern part of the state.

“The leaf litter restores the soil’s microflora and can raise the longevity of the sugar cane to 12 or 15 years, making it almost a perennial plant, a fantastic result,” Ortolan told Tierramérica in his office in Sertãozinho, a city where sugar cane growers take up over three blocks with company offices, cooperative headquarters, supermarkets and a service station.



-------------------


Scientists: Expanding Brazilian sugarcane could dent global CO2 emissions

Oct 23, 2017

https://news.illinois.edu/view/6367/570179


----------------------

Back to Acid Soil Fields: The Citrate Transporter SbMATE Is a Major Asset for Sustainable Grain Yield for Sorghum Cultivated on Acid Soils

2-1-2016

https://www.g3journal.org/content/6/2/475

----------------------

Soil Physical Quality After 21 Years of Cultivation in a Brazilian

Seasonal assessment and apportionment of surface water pollution using multivariate statistical methods: Sinos River, southern Brazil.


https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29884932

----------------------

Sugar Cane Industry as a Source of Water Pollution – Case Study on the Situation in Ipojuca River, Pernambuco, Brazil

March 2007

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/225382366_Sugar_Cane_Industry_as_a_Source_of_Water_Pollution_-_Case_Study_on_the_Situation_in_Ipojuca_River_Pernambuco_Brazil

----------------------

 Slope Processes, Mass Movements and Soil Erosion: A Review

ABSTRACT This  paper  reviews  slope  processes  associated  with  mass  movements  and  soil  erosion  and  contributory  factors,  including  physical  and  human  agents.  Acting  together,  these  cause  diverse  geomorphological  features.  Slope  processes  are  illustrated  by  reference  to  case  studies  from  Brazil  and  the  UK.  The  causes  and  impacts  of  erosion  are  discussed,  along  with  appropriate  remedial  bioengineering  methods  and  the  potential  of  measures  to  prevent these types of environmental degradation.

https://wlv.openrepository.com/bitstream/handle/2436/620420/AG%20et%20al%20Slope%20Processes%202016%20Pedosphere%20%281%29.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

----------------------

Carbon and Water in Upper Montane Soils and Their Influences on Vegetation in Southern Brazil

2013

https://www.hindawi.com/journals/isrn/2013/348905/

----------------------

Assessing soil structural quality under Brazilian sugarcane expansion areas using Visual Evaluation of Soil Structure (VESS) expansion areas using Visual Evaluation of Soil Structure (VESS)

2017

https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2656&context=usdaarsfacpub

----------------------

Topsoil translocation for Brazilian savannarestoration: propagation of herbs, shrubs, and trees

2015

https://ainfo.cnptia.embrapa.br/digital/bitstream/item/135025/1/Ferreira-et-al-2015-Restoration-Ecology.pdf

----------------------


Chocolate forests: Can cocoa help restore the Amazon?

2018

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-cocoa-environment/chocolate-forests-can-cocoa-help-restore-the-amazon-idUSKBN1HJ0H8

----------------------

 

Cocoa industry still failing to end deforestation, new report claims

2-14-2022

https://www.confectionerynews.com/Article/2022/02/14/Cocoa-industry-still-failing-to-end-deforestation-new-report-claims

----------------------

Deforestation in Colombia up 16% due to mining, lumbering, coca and drought

November 23, 2015

https://colombiareports.com/deforestation-in-colombia-up-16/

 

----------------------

 
Deforestation Increased In Colombia During Peacetime

Feb 27, 2022

https://www.forbes.com/sites/priyashukla/2022/02/27/deforestation-increased-in-colombia-during-peacetime/?sh=5ffe45f265e7

 

----------------------


Soy boom devours Brazil’s tropical savanna

A REUTERS SPECIAL REPORT

Aug. 28, 2018

BUMPER CROP: Brazil’s farmers have plowed under more than half of the Cerrado, South America’s largest savanna. The nation is the world’s largest exporter of beef and soybeans. The cost is greenhouse gas emissions, vanishing wildlife and weakened watersheds. REUTERS/Pablo Garcia

https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/brazil-deforestation/

------------------

Zero-deforestation commitments and Brazilian soy

https://yearbook2018.trase.earth/chapter6/

------------------

Soybean cultivation as a threat to the environment in Brazil

http://staff.washington.edu/jhannah/geog270aut07/readings/GreenGeneRevolutions/Fearnside%20-%20SoybeanCultivationThreatEnvironment.pdf

------------------

Soil Carbon Dynamics in Soybean Cropland and Forests in Mato Grosso, Brazil

12-18-2017

https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/2017JG004269

------------------

In triplicate, genes make maize tolerant to toxic soil

 March 18, 2013

https://news.cornell.edu/stories/2013/03/triplicate-genes-make-maize-tolerant-toxic-soil

Rendering some of the world’s toxic soils moot, U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research and Cornell researchers are learning to grow stress-tolerant crops on formerly non-farmable land.

In this effort, when plant scientists searched the maize genome for clues as to why some plants can tolerate toxic aluminum in soil, they found three copies of the same gene known to affect aluminum tolerance, according to new USDA/Cornell-led research.

Aluminum toxicity comes close to rivaling drought as a food-security threat in critical tropical food-producing regions.

Acidic soils dissolve aluminum from clays in the soil, making it toxic to plant roots in half the world’s arable lands. The MATE1 gene, which was found in triplicate in aluminum-tolerant maize, turns on in the presence of aluminum ions and expresses a protein that transports citric acid from root tips into the soil, which binds to and locks up aluminum, thereby preventing it from harming roots.

“We found three functional copies that were identical,” said senior author Leon Kochian, director of the U.S. Department of Agriculture – Agriculture Research Service (USDA-ARS) Plant, Soil and Nutrition Laboratory at Cornell. “This is one of the first examples of copy number variation contributing to an agronomically important trait.”

He added that the extra gene copies had a cumulative effect of coding for more protein that transports aluminum-binding citric acid into the soil.

The study, “Aluminum tolerance in maize is associated with higher MATE1 gene copy number,” appeared online March 11 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The finding points to the importance of looking for multiple copies of a gene for higher expression of certain traits. “This could be a key factor for other traits of agricultural importance,” said Kochian.

 The research came out of a long collaboration on aluminum tolerance with Embrapa Maize and Sorghum in Brazil, which provided the aluminum-tolerant maize germplasm where the 3-copy allele was discovered. Lead author Lyza Maron, a senior research associate at the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research at Cornell, also collaborated with researchers at the University of Florida, Gainesville, the University of Missouri, Arizona Genomics Institute and Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory to verify the finding. By sequencing the genomic regions that harbor the MATE1 gene in aluminum-tolerant and aluminum-sensitive plants, she found a similar MATE1 allele (version of a gene) in both types of plants. But when she examined copy number variation, she found the aluminum-tolerant plant had three copies, while the intolerant plant had only one copy of the MATE1 allele.

“[Copy number variation] is well documented in the human genome,” Kochian said, “and maize does a lot of this, so there are probably many examples” of gene copy numbers affecting traits, he concluded.


------------------

EFFECTS OF SILICON ON ALLEVIATING ARSENIC TOXICITY IN MAIZE PLANTS

01/Jan/2015

https://www.rbcsjournal.org/article/effects-of-silicon-on-alleviating-arsenic-toxicity-in-maize-plants/

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Section 11: Climate Change & Ancient Climate Change

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Climate change policy: Brazil, China, India and Russia

2-25-2009

https://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/Parliamentary_Departments/Parliamentary_Library/pubs/BN/0809/ClimateChange



-----------------------

Amazon Deforestation and Climate Change

https://www.nationalgeographic.org/media/amazon-deforestation-and-climate-change/


-----------------------

 Countrywide Cold Wave to Strike Brazil During First Week of July

July 1, 2019

It will most likely be the most intense cooling in 2019 and perhaps the only one of this magnitude this year.

https://riotimesonline.com/brazil-news/brazil/brazil-freezes-during-the-first-week-of-july-2019/

---------------

 Striking Photos Capture the Unnatural Transformation of the Amazon Rainforest

https://earther.gizmodo.com/striking-photos-capture-the-unnatural-transformation-of-1834173419

----------------

15 before-and-after images that show how we're transforming the planet

Jan 2, 2017

https://www.vox.com/2015/4/7/8352381/anthropocene-NASA-images

---------------- 

 

Mapped: 30 Years of Deforestation and Forest Growth, by Country

December 29, 2021

https://www.visualcapitalist.com/mapped-30-years-of-deforestation-and-forest-growth-by-country/

 

---------------- 

 

Water Statistics in Brazil: an Overview

2005

https://unstats.un.org/unsd/environment/envpdf/pap_wasess4a4brazil.pdf

----------------

Water supply and sanitation in Brazil

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_supply_and_sanitation_in_Brazil

----------------

Brazil's water and sanitation crisis

https://water.org/our-impact/where-we-work/brazil/

----------------

Brazil’s sewage woes reflect the growing global water quality crisis

August 7, 2016

https://theconversation.com/brazils-sewage-woes-reflect-the-growing-global-water-quality-crisis-63172

----------------

Brazil, so much water and yet so little

October 19, 2017

https://www.wearewater.org/en/brazil-so-much-water-and-yet-so-little_286801

 

----------------

 

Water quality from high mountain peatlands: spring of Campo Belo river, Itatiaia–Brazil

March 2022

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/358730994_Water_quality_from_high_mountain_peatlands_spring_of_Campo_Belo_river_Itatiaia-Brazil

 

----------------

BRAZIL FROST: First Pictures Of Damage Published From Cerrado And Parana Coffee Regions

May 22, 2018

http://spilling-the-beans.net/breaking-cold-front-confirmed-to-hit-brazils-parana-sao-paulo-and-southern-minas-coffee-regions-with-frost-may-21-22/

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SOFTS-Arabica coffee hits 7-month high on Brazil frost threat

July 6, 2019

https://www.brecorder.com/2019/07/06/507932/softs-arabica-coffee-hits-7-month-high-on-brazil-frost-threat/


----------------

Brazil Update: Frost… and Fake News? {Debated/Controversial}

July 11 2019

https://coffeehunter.com/the-journal/brazil-update-frost-and-fake-news/

Keep in mind, here: a frost in Brazil is not a singular event. Brazil is a vast country. Coffee grows in 8 states located thousands of kilometres apart. Killer frosts bring sub-zero temperatures to swathes of the coffee growing areas, plunging farms into sub-zero conditions often for days at a time. Such killer frosts are extremely rare events.

Coffee production in Brazil used to be more southern-state oriented. Parana, further south, was at a higher frost risk. Over time, production moved north into the Cerrado region of Minas Gerais, almost outside of any existing, potential frost risk – barring climate change, of course. This means that less Brazil coffee production is now exposed to the risk of frost than, say, two decades ago.

It is Friday 5th July (recall that Thursday 4th July is a national holiday in the USA, and the commodity market was closed, by the way). Zero degrees are forecast to extend further north into coffee producing areas than any other cold fronts in recent times. Friday 5th July, ahead of the frost weekend, the commodity market goes down. This, to me, was rather unusual. Who knew what would happen over the weekend? Usually ahead of a frost weekend, a nervous commodity market would rise.

This market reaction could be seen as a precursor. But more later….

Over the weekend of 6/7 July – particularly on Sunday – I received dozens of dramatic photos, videos of people walking across frosty / crusty earth. Car windows frosted up. Commonplace enough in England but a rare event in the coffee areas of Brazil. As Sunday wore on…. more dramatic photos, wild speculation about what had happened, feverish talk.

I became very sceptical about these dramatic stories when I started receiving dozens of identical frost photos from three separate sources, one of whom was not in Brazil at all. The long arm of social media at work, posting photos that would tell the story preferred by the poster without regard to accuracy or relevance. Stories and photos chosen to make a point.

I suppose that for many in the coffee business today, there is no connection as to why this matters. The killer frosts and wild market moves (when Brazil lost millions of bags of production) are in the distant past. The days of the commodity market going up 20% in a single day are over. But these legendary events live in the minds, the very fabric, of coffee producer folklore – and not just in Brazil. Literal fortunes were made (and lost) overnight. Those events will never be forgotten by many coffee producing families, and given today’s terrible low prices, a hint of desperation can be detected. Too much coffee is being produced: what better than a huge Brazil frost to better balance the supply / demand matrix?

I feared for our coffee farm in Pocos de Caldas, an area threatened by some of the lowest temperatures forecast this past Sunday. I was not hoping for a fortune. I was simply hoping our 2020 crop (100 bags) was not wiped out.

Pre-frost weekend estimates put possible Brazil crop losses for 2020 at 1.5m to 2m bags. To put this in perspective, that’s pretty much the entire Costa Rica crop. Imagine you read that the Costa Rica crop for 2020 was entirely wiped out. Gone. People would react with something approaching hysteria. Meanwhile such losses to the Brazil crop did not warrant much comment, and the commodity market seemed to not be fussed. It went DOWN on the day before the weekend.

By Monday 8th July morning, more definition came to crop loss estimates. Field surveys, discussions with producers, analysis of how low temperatures actually went and for how long and where. The big trade houses started weighing in with their estimates of potential crop losses for 2020. 2m bags, 1.5m bags, 800,000 bags, 650,000 bags, 250,000 bags. Importantly, the crop loss estimates were falling significantly SHORT of the numbers anticipated in the lead up to the frost

The commodity market opened down on Monday 8th July, and fell over 4% on that day. It must seem strange to some people that news of perhaps 1m bags of crop losses leads to a fall in the market. It does so because commodity markets are anticipatory markets – and larger crop losses were already factored into the price.

Further time will allow more careful and detailed estimates of crop losses for Brazil 2020, and the winter is not over in Brazil. In fact these days, drought and lack of rainfall in the Sept/Oct/Nov period are much larger risks, and some such climate catastrophe could yet come to pass.

So the drama was over almost before it began – the commodity market was ‘back’ to $1.06/lb.

An old adage in the commodity coffee business goes, “Buy the rumour, sell the fact.” This is an excellent case in point.

----------------

Futures coffee prices surge on heavy rain and frost concerns in Brazil

May 22, 2019

https://www.comunicaffe.com/futures-coffee-prices-surge-on-heavy-rain-and-frost-concerns-in-brazil/

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Brazilians conduct research into riches of Antarctica

7/11/2019

http://agenciabrasil.ebc.com.br/en/geral/noticia/2019-11/brazilians-conduct-research-riches-antarctica

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ANTARCTIC SCIENCE FOR BRAZIL An action plan for the 2013 –  2022 period

http://www.ufrgs.br/inctcriosfera/arquivos/BrazilianActionPlanEnglish.pdf

-----------------

Brazil’s Antarctic Future

19 July 2019

https://www.ispionline.it/en/pubblicazione/brazils-antarctic-future-23528

Some have seen Brazil’s recent increased interest in the South Atlantic as also involving a growing interest in Antarctica. Certainly, the construction of a brand-new Antarctic research station with an investment of nearly 100 millions USD, the announcement of the acquisition of a new polar auxiliary vessel costing about 30 million USD and the allocation of a new triennial budget of about 20 million had strengthened the view that Brazil is rising its stake in the southern continent. As China, another emerging power and fellow-member of the so-called BRICS, Brazil would be intending to transform its increased economic relevance to a refurbished strategic position and political prominence.

-----------------

Antarctic environmental change and biological responses

27 Nov 2019

https://advances.sciencemag.org/content/5/11/eaaz0888

-----------------

As Climate Change Worsens, A Cascade of Tipping Points Looms

12-5-2019




https://e360.yale.edu/features/as-climate-changes-worsens-a-cascade-of-tipping-points-looms

-----------------

The Oceans We Know Won’t Survive Climate Change

9-25-2019

Sea-level rise will become unmanageable, and life will flee the world’s tropical oceans, if carbon pollution keeps rising, a new report from the UN climate panel says.

https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2019/09/ipcc-sea-level-rise-report/598765/

-----------------

The influence of global climate change on the environmental fate of anthropogenic pollution released from the permafrost: Part I. Case study of Antarctica

Highlights



    Permafrost distribution in Antarctica and reemission of pollutants


    Environmental fate of anthropogenic pollution remobilised from the cryosphere


    Pollution from permafrost present in the Antarctic affects the living organisms.

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S004896971833612X

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Climate change kills Antarctica's ancient moss beds

9-25-2018

https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-45629395

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Cataloging Fungal Life in Antarctic Seas

2017

Brazilian researchers report a relatively large diversity of fungi in marine ecosystems surrounding Antarctica, but warn that climate change could bring unpleasant surprises.

https://www.the-scientist.com/notebook/cataloging-fungal-life-in-antarctic-seas-30172

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GRACE-FO: Cracking a cold case

May 2, 2018

https://climate.nasa.gov/news/2725/grace-fo-cracking-a-cold-case/

Reports of the rapidly melting West Antarctic ice sheet often refer to how much the melting could add to global sea levels -- as if meltwater raises the ocean evenly, like a sink filling up. The reality is far different. Water from West Antarctica will end up raising sea levels more in Los Angeles and Miami than in Rio de Janeiro, for example, even though Brazil is thousands of miles closer to Antarctica than the United States.

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 Distant Source of Amazon Is Evaporating Away

Oct 4, 2019

A glacier believed to be the most distant source of the world's largest river is expected to disappear in just years, the scientific community is warning.


https://www.usnews.com/news/best-countries/articles/2019-10-04/amazon-rivers-most-distant-water-source-may-soon-disappear-scientists-warn

-------------------

Underground river 'Rio Hamza' discovered 4km beneath the Amazon

2011

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2011/aug/26/underground-river-amazon

Scientists estimate the subterranean river may be 6,000km long and hundreds of times wider than the Amazon


----------------


Conserving relics from ancient underground worlds: assessing the influence of cave and landscape features on obligate iron cave dwellers from the Eastern Amazon

3-20-2018

https://peerj.com/articles/4531/


----------------

Climate change’s impact on groundwater could leave ‘environmental timebomb’

Over the next 100 years, the full impact that climate change is having on groundwater resources will become apparent in half of the world’s aquifers, a study concludes.





Global distribution of “groundwater response times” (GRT). Yellow shows areas where groundwater is likely to respond to stresses in less than 10 years, light green shows where the response time is 10-100 years, while dark green and blue indicate response times of 100 to more than 10,000 years. Source: Cuthbert et al. (2019)


https://www.carbonbrief.org/climate-change-impact-groundwater-environmental-timebomb

------------------

Climate change, allergy and asthma, and the role of tropical forests

2017

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5340022/

------------------

Impacts of climate change in the Amazon

https://wwf.panda.org/knowledge_hub/where_we_work/amazon/amazon_threats/climate_change_amazon/amazon_climate_change_impacts/

----------------


 Research shows how the Little Ice Age affected South American climate

2018

https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2018-07/fda-rsh072418.php

For the first time, scientists reconstruct the rainfall distribution in Brazil during the climate changes that marked the Middle Ages using isotopic records from caves.


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Brazilian obligatory subterranean fauna and threats to the hypogean environment

2018

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5904564/

Abstract

The subterranean environment harbors species that are not capable of establishing populations in the epigean environment, i.e., the obligatory subterranean species. These organisms live in a unique selective regime in permanent darkness and usually low food availability, high air humidity in terrestrial habitats, and low temperature range allied to other unique conditions related to lithologies and past climatic influences. The pressure to increase Brazil’s economic growth relies on agricultural/pastoral industries and exporting of raw materials such as iron, limestone, ethanol, soybean, cotton, and meat, as well as huge reservoir constructions to generate electricity. Mining (even on a small scale), agricultural expansion, and hydroelectric projects are extremely harmful to subterranean biodiversity, via the modification and even destruction of hypogean habitats. The Brazilian subterranean species were analyzed with respect to their distributions, presence on the IUCN Red List, and current and potential threats to hypogean habitats. A map and three lists are presented, one with the described obligatory subterranean species, one with undescribed taxa, and one with the current and potential threats to the hypogean environment. To date, 150 obligatory subterranean species have been recorded in Brazil, plus at least 156 undescribed troglomorphic taxa, totaling 306 Brazilian troglobites/obligatory cave fauna. We also analyzed the current and potential cave threats and the conservation actions that are underway to attempt to compensate for loss of these habitats. In according to the Brazilian legislation (Decree 6640) only caves of maximum relevance are fully protected. One strategy to protect the subterranean fauna of Brazil is the inclusion of these species in the IUCN Red List (one of attributes that determines maximum relevance for caves); however, one of the IUCN assumptions is that the taxa must be formally described. It is clear that the description and proposed protection of Brazilian subterranean biodiversity depends on more systematics studies.

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 Spots of high diversity of troglobites in Brazil:the challenge of measuring subterranean diversity

2016

http://www.lesbio.ufscar.br/assets/trajano_gallao_bichuette_2016_spots_of_high_diversity.pdf

------------------


 Rio's famous beaches take battering as scientists issue climate change warning

2016

Local traders lament collapse in business from storm surge amid growing concern that city’s sea defences are ill-equipped to cope

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/nov/01/rio-de-janerio-beaches-climate-change-storms

------------------

Antarctica Hit a Record High Temperature

https://time.com/4687154/antarctica-temperature-climate-change/

------------------

Have historical climate changes affected Gentoo penguin (Pygoscelis papua) populations in Antarctica?

2014

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24759777


------------------

Earth's Tilt May Exacerbate a Melting Antarctic

1-16-2019

https://www.livescience.com/64507-antarctica-ice-melt-earth-tilt.html



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South American monsoon response to iceberg discharge in the North Atlantic

4-10-2018

https://www.pnas.org/content/115/15/3788

Significance

Here, we present a precisely dated speleothem record of South American monsoon precipitation covering the period encompassed by the last six Heinrich Stadials. Our monsoon record allows us to determine the timing of regional hydroclimatic expression of Heinrich Stadials over tropical lowland South America. By comparing our record with sea-surface temperature reconstructions from the subtropical North Atlantic, our results provide evidence connecting South American monsoon precipitation and methane release with the events of iceberg discharge depicted by the deposits of ice-rafted detritus. These results are relevant to climate modelers and paleoclimatologists interested in abrupt climate change, tropical–extratropical climate teleconnections, and paleo-reconstructions of the monsoon and the tropical hydrologic cycle.

Abstract

Heinrich Stadials significantly affected tropical precipitation through changes in the interhemispheric temperature gradient as a result of abrupt cooling in the North Atlantic. Here, we focus on changes in South American monsoon precipitation during Heinrich Stadials using a suite of speleothem records covering the last 85 ky B.P. from eastern South America. We document the response of South American monsoon precipitation to episodes of extensive iceberg discharge, which is distinct from the response to the cooling episodes that precede the main phase of ice-rafted detritus deposition. Our results demonstrate that iceberg discharge in the western subtropical North Atlantic led to an abrupt increase in monsoon precipitation over eastern South America. Our findings of an enhanced Southern Hemisphere monsoon, coeval with the iceberg discharge into the North Atlantic, are consistent with the observed abrupt increase in atmospheric methane concentrations during Heinrich Stadials.

---------------


12 Times Science Proved the World Is Amazing in 2019

https://www.livescience.com/amazing-uplifting-science-2019.html

Antarctic lake of bubbling lava

Just about everything found in Antarctica is pretty amazing. This year's discovery of a huge lake of sizzling hot lava there was no exception. On a remote sub-Antarctic island in the South Atlantic Ocean, scientists discovered what is now only the eighth lake of molten rock ever identified. They found this bubbling cauldron of sorts inside the crater of the volcano Mount Michael on Saunders Island. The molten rock, which rises between 300 and 700 feet (90 and 215 meters), reaches a whopping 1,812 to 2,334 degrees Fahrenheit (989 to 1,279 degrees Celsius), the researchers found.


---------------


Soil eroded by glaciers may have kick-started plate tectonics

June 5, 2019

Scientists have long wondered how Earth’s global surface recycling system got its start

https://www.sciencenews.org/article/soil-eroded-glaciers-may-have-kick-started-plate-tectonics

----------------


Distant Source of Amazon Is Evaporating Away

Oct 2019

A glacier believed to be the most distant source of the world's largest river is expected to disappear in just years, the scientific community is warning.

The Apurimac River, which draws from the glacial melt of the Mismi mountain peak in southern Peru, is seen flowing through a valley in the Andes on its way toward flowing into the Amazon River.

https://www.usnews.com/news/best-countries/articles/2019-10-04/amazon-rivers-most-distant-water-source-may-soon-disappear-scientists-warn


----------------


 When a Volcano in El Salvador Cooled Down the Entire World

8-19-2019

It may have even helped bring on the bubonic plague.

https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/el-salvador-volcanic-eruption

----------------


 Why is Puerto Rico Being Struck by Earthquakes?

17-2020

Multiple large earthquakes have hit Puerto Rico over the past week, all thanks to the geologically-active Caribbean Plate.

https://www.discovermagazine.com/planet-earth/why-is-puerto-rico-being-struck-by-earthquakes

---------

 Something Inside The Earth Is Destroying Supercontinents

Jan 1, 2020

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJ4S-52qRq8

----------

 Winds Sweep African Soil To Feed Lands Far Away

1992

https://www.nytimes.com/1992/10/29/world/winds-sweep-african-soil-to-feed-lands-far-away.html

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Saharan dust in Brazil and Suriname during the Large-Scale Biosphere-Atmosphere Experiment in Amazonia (LBA)- Cooperative LBA Regional Experiment (CLAIRE) in March 1998

https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2000JD900827

Abstract. Advection of Saharan dust was observed via chemical and optical measurements during March 1998 in Brazil and Suriname during the Large-Scale Biosphere-Atmosphere Experiment in Amazonia (LBA)-Cooperative LBA Airborne Regional Experiment (CLAIRE)-98 experiment. In Brazil the dust outbreak produced an increase of a factor of 3 in the daily mean mass concentration (up to 26 + 7 [tg m -3) of particles smaller than 10 [tm equivalent aerodynamic diameter (EAD), and in the daily mean aerosol particle scattering coefficient •  (up to 26 + 8 Mm -1 STP, ambient humidity). Background levels of aerosol scattering (ambient) were •  -  10 Mm -•. The effect of dust advection was evident for all major crustal elements (A1, Si, Ca, Ti, Mn, and Fe), as well as the sea-salt elements (Na, C1, and S), as the dust layer was transported at low altitude (below 800 h?a). Coarse ? and organic carbon (OC) concentrations were not influenced by the occurrence of dust, and were mainly emitted by the rain forest. The dry scattering mass efficiency of dust (particles smaller than 10 btm EAD) was estimated to be between 0.65 (+ 0.06) and 0.89 (+ 0.08) m 2 g-l. Airborne profiles of aerosol scattering showed two distinct types of vertical structure in the dust layer over Suriname, either vertically uniform (15, 26 March), or plume-like (25 March). Dust layers extended generally up to 700 hPa, while scattering layers occasionally encountered at higher altitudes resulted from smoke emitted by biomass burning in Venezuela and Colombia. Observations in South America were supported by measurements in Israel and Tenerife (Canary Islands), where the dust outbreaks were also detected


--------------------------

Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution

Office of Environmental Quality and Transboundary Issues

https://www.state.gov/key-topics-office-of-environmental-quality-and-transboundary-issues/convention-on-long-range-transboundary-air-pollution/

------------------


HEALTH RISKS OF PERSISTENT ORGANIC POLLUTANTS FROM LONG-RANGE TRANSBOUNDARY AIR POLLUTION


http://www.euro.who.int/__data/assets/pdf_file/0009/78660/e78963.pdf

---------------------------


A natural experiment: City in pristine Amazon shows pollution alters ecosystem

2015

https://blogs.agu.org/geospace/2015/12/18/a-natural-experiment-city-in-pristine-amazon-shows-pollution-alters-ecosyste/

------------------------

Climate Change Will Affect Water Processes of the Amazon Basin, Study Finds

2016

https://newsroom.wcs.org/News-Releases/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/9342/Climate-Change-Will-Affect-Water-Processes-of-the-Amazon-Basin-Study-Finds.aspx


------------------------

Climate change and human activities in Brazil with emphasis on the coastal zone

2008

https://www.ige.unicamp.br/terrae/V3/PDF-N3/T_A5.pdf

------------------------

Brazil's Mangroves on the front line of climate change

May 2019

https://widerimage.reuters.com/story/brazils-mangroves-on-the-front-line-of-climate-change

------------------------

MANGROVE LEAVES (RHIZOPHORA MANGLE) AS ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION BIOMONITORS.

https://inis.iaea.org/collection/NCLCollectionStore/_Public/47/013/47013774.pdf

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Phosphorus enriched effluents increase eutrophication risks for mangrove systems in northeastern Brazil

May 2019

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0025326X19302152

------------------------

Estrogen levels in surface sediments from a multi-impacted Brazilian estuarine system

May 2019

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0025326X19302371

------------------------

 Oil spill threatens vast areas of mangroves and coral reefs in Brazil

Nov 2019

Pollution stretches across 2,400km of coastline, with scientists fearing contamination of food chain

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/nov/07/oil-spill-threatens-vast-areas-of-mangroves-and-coral-reefs-in-brazil

-------------------

Modeling of coastal water contamination in Fortaleza (Northeastern Brazil).

2015

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26360752

-------------------------

Amazon deforestation has a significant impact on the local climate in Brazil

8-30-2019

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/08/190830112813.htm

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Natural high: Brazil's Guarana growers ditch chemicals for ancient knowledge

2019

For the Guarana growers of the Amazon, the caffeine-rich berries aren't just a fortifying brew but part of ancient tradition that respects their rainforest home.

https://www.dw.com/en/natural-high-brazils-guarana-growers-ditch-chemicals-for-ancient-knowledge/a-49073771

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The Amazon Rainforest Was Profoundly Changed by Ancient Humans

2017

The region’s ecology is a product of 8,000 years of indigenous agriculture.

https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2017/03/its-now-clear-that-ancient-humans-helped-enrich-the-amazon/518439/

-----------------------

Amazon Jungle Once Home to Millions More Than Previously Thought

3-27-2018

Forget small nomadic tribes and pristine jungle: the southern Amazon was likely covered in a network of large villages and ceremonial centers before Columbus.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2018/03/amazon-jungle-ancient-population-satellite-computer-model/

-----------------------

 

Conquistadors caused Toxic Air Pollution 500 years ago by changing Incan Mining

12 February, 2015

https://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/conquistadors-caused-toxic-air-pollution-500-years-ago-020213

 

-----------------------

Climate breakdown is pushing Brazil’s iconic Araucaria tree to extinction – new research

9-10-2019

https://theconversation.com/climate-breakdown-is-pushing-brazils-iconic-araucaria-tree-to-extinction-new-research-123068


-----------------------

Humans Present at Brazil’s Santa Elina Rock Shelter 23,120 Years Ago, Confirms National Museum of Natural History in Paris

2017

http://ancientnews.net/2017/09/07/humans-present-at-brazils-santa-elina-rock-shelter-23120-years-ago-confirms-national-museum-of-natural-history-in-paris/

-----------------------

Sinkhole discovery suggests humans were in Florida 14,500 years ago

May 2016

Knife, bone, and dung cast doubt on Bering Strait theory and indicate humans spread through Americas 1,500 years earlier than thought, researchers say

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2016/may/14/archaeology-florida-sinkhole-ancient-humans-mastodon-knife-bones-bering-strait

-----------------------

Chagas Disease in Ancient Hunter-Gatherer Population, Brazil

2008

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2600313/

-----------------------


Did the Deaths of 50 Million Indians Cause Climate Change?

Sep 15, 2017

https://newsmaven.io/indiancountrytoday/archive/did-the-deaths-of-50-million-indians-cause-climate-change-KQ3ZksIy_0Cw1U-8TK2mdw

Did the European invasion cause the deaths of approximately 50 million people?

No historian seriously questions that the European invasion of the Americas resulted in millions of deaths. The serious debate has been how many millions. What if it was enough millions to change the carbon dioxide (CO2) content in the atmosphere and therefore the climate and ultimately the geology of the Earth?



-----------------------------

European colonization of the Americas killed 10 percent of world population and caused global cooling

1-31-2019

https://www.pri.org/stories/2019-01-31/european-colonization-americas-killed-10-percent-world-population-and-caused

----------------------------

Native American depopulation, reforestation, and fire regimes in the Southwest United States, 1492–1900 CE

2016

https://www.pnas.org/content/113/6/E696

Significance

Debates about the magnitude, tempo, and ecological effects of Native American depopulation after 1492 CE constitute some of the most contentious issues in American Indian history. Was population decline rapid and catastrophic, with effects extensive enough to change even the earth’s atmosphere? Or was depopulation more moderate, with indigenous numbers declining slowly after European colonization? Through a study of archaeology and dendrochronology, we conclude that neither of these scenarios accurately characterizes Pueblo peoples in the Southwest United States. Among the Jemez pueblos of New Mexico, depopulation struck swiftly and irrevocably, but occurred nearly a century after first contact with Europeans. This population crash subsequently altered the local environment, spurring the growth of trees and facilitating the spread of frequent forest fires.

----------------------------

Earth system impacts of the European arrival and Great Dying in the Americas after 1492

March 2019

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277379118307261


----------------------

Sphenodontian Fossil from Ancient Gondwana Found in Brazil

9-30-2019

https://magazine.scienceconnected.org/2019/09/sphenodontian-fossil-from-ancient-gondwana-found-in-brazil/

A new reptile fossil was recently discovered in Brazil, in the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul. The research was published in the journal Scientific Reports and describes the species Clevosaurus hadroprodon, which has turned out to be the oldest fossil of its kind from what was formerly Gondwana—the ancient supercontinent that split up into Africa, South America, Australia, Antarctica, the Indian subcontinent, and the Arabian Peninsula. The remains of the fossil, consisting mostly of the mandible and skull bones, were found in rocks that date back to the late Triassic period, from approximately 237 to 228 million years ago.


-----------------------

Brazilian fossil lizard is a remnant of ancient supercontinent’s break up

http://www.eartharchives.org/articles/brazilian-fossil-lizard-is-a-remnant-of-ancient-supercontinent-s-break-up/

-----------------------

Death-spirit dragons stalked the ancient deserts of Brazil

9-3-2019

https://blogs.plos.org/paleocomm/2019/09/03/death-spirit-dragons-stalked-the-ancient-deserts-of-brazil/

-----------------------

Ancient amphibian fossils unearthed in Brazil

2015

https://www.nhm.ac.uk/discover/news/2015/november/ancient-amphibian-fossils-unearthed-in-brazil.html

-----------------------

What Brazil was like 100 million years ago

3-16-2016

http://agencia.fapesp.br/what-brazil-was-like-100-million-years-ago/22837/

By Peter Moon  |  Agência FAPESP – One hundred and forty million years ago, at the start of the Cretaceous Period, Brazil was covered by a vast desert of dunes. This desert was much larger than the Sahara, but it vanished when it was swallowed up in an ocean of lava disgorged by the greatest magma overflow of the last 500 million years. Seven of the planet’s ten largest volcanic eruptions during this period, including the top three, occurred in southeastern Brazil. The picture of Brazil’s geological origins that researchers are piecing together is startling.

-----------------------

Vancouver Island’s ancient rainforests destroyed three times faster than Brazil’s Amazon rainforest

1-3-2019

https://sierraclub.bc.ca/vancouver-islands-ancient-rainforests-destroyed-three-times-faster-than-brazils-amazon-rainforest/

-----------------------

Mexico’s Pyramid of the Sun could collapse, 169 new species found in the last four years in Brazil, and fossils tell of ancient climate in Paraguay.

http://latinamericanscience.org/2014/02/mexicos-pyramid-of-the-sun-could-collapse-169-new-species-found-in-the-last-four-years-in-brazil-and-fossils-tell-of-ancient-climate-in-paraguay/

-----------------------

Brazilian Atlantic Forest lato sensu: the most ancient Brazilian forest, and a biodiversity hotspot, is highly threatened by climate change

2010

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842010000400002

--------------------------

How Amazon forest loss may affect water—and climate—far away

8-27-2019

A surge in deforestation under Brazil's president could "tip" the Amazon, affecting weather and water supplies—in Brazil and beyond.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/2018/11/how-cutting-the-amazon-forest-could-affect-weather/

--------------------------

Climate change, oxygen and biodiversity: Amazon rainforest fires leave plenty at stake

Aug. 22, 2019

"The effects of forest destruction in the Amazon don't stay in the Amazon. They affect us all," one expert said.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/climate-change-oxygen-biodiversity-amazon-rainforest-fires-leave-plenty-stake-n1045446

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-----------------------
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Section 12: Microplastics & Microcontamination

-----------------------
-----------------------
-----------------------

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--------------------------

Characterization and Analysis of Microplastics

2017

https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/chemistry/organochlorine-pesticides

Lorena M. Rios Mendoza, ... Hrissi K. Karapanagioti, in Comprehensive Analytical Chemistry, 2017
3.2 Organochlorine Pesticides

OCPs are synthetic compounds that are hydrophobic and chemically stable. Because of their properties such as persistence, biomagnification and long-range transport, their use and production is forbidden in many countries. Among OCPs, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) is the one largely used in agriculture and against vectors and pests that cause tropical diseases, such as malaria and leishmaniasis, in many countries such as South Africa, China, and Brazil. Concentrations of DDT in microplastic debris also depend on their historical use and their proximity to the sources. Rios found high concentrations of DDT (7100 ng/g) in plastic pellets. The authors attributed such high amounts of DDT to its proximity to an industrial area in Los Angeles (The United States) and the extensive use of this compound when it was still legal. Taniguchi also found relatively high amounts of DDT in plastic pellets from the Brazilian coast (840 ng/g) where it was heavily used in agriculture and to combat the vector that causes malaria, mainly in the northeastern region of the country. These concentrations were higher than those found in other parts of the world (Table 1), such as those reported by Mato in pellets collected in Japan, by Ogata, who analysed samples from 17 countries in the initial phase of the International Pellet Watch, and by Zhang, who investigated DDT concentrations in pellets collected from two beaches in China, one of which was close to the largest coal port in the country. In South Africa, where this compound was still used in anti-malarial operations and even illegally in agricultural applications at the time of collection (i.e., 2005 and 2008), the highest concentration of DDT in plastic debris was recorded at 1281 ng/g. DDT found was probably likely due to the existence of illegal applications or dumpsites, as well as the presence of DDT as an impurity in other permitted pesticides, such as dicofol. Different proportion of dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene (DDE), dichlorodiphenyldichloroethane (DDD) and DDT can be observed among locations (e.g., Ogata, Rios, Karapanagioti and Taniguchi). The degradation of DDT to DDD or DDE may occur in dumpsites before being carried to the marine environment. The transformation may occur also in sediment, from which the DDT metabolite may be resuspended and desorbed in water, followed by further sorption to plastic.

Hexachlorobenzene (HCB) may be released into the environment as a product of incomplete waste combustion in incinerators and as a by-product of industrial processes. Moreover, this product has also been used as a fungicide in some countries where it has caused considerable environmental and health problems, such as leukopenia. Mirex is known in some countries as dodecachlor and was principally used for ant control, with restricted distribution. Mirex was used as both a pesticide and flame retardant and its persistence is associated with high chlorination levels. In plastic pellets collected in the southeastern coast of Brazil, Taniguchi reported concentrations from 1.8 to 55.8 ng/g for HCB and <0.24–3.1 ng/g for Mirex.

Hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH) can be found in microplastic, but usually in low concentrations, which reflect the less retention of HCH due to relatively lower hydrophobicity and higher vapour pressure in comparison to PCBs. The concentrations of HCH found in several countries during the initial phase of the International Pellet Watch programme ranged from 0.14 to 37.1 ng/g, which demonstrated that these compounds were used at that time in some countries, such as Mozambique. Isomers of HCH and particularly ?-HCH were widely employed in cotton and coffee plantations and used in public health campaigns against insects (Triatoma sp.) that cause Chagas' disease. HCHs are much less bioaccumulative than other organochlorines due to their relatively low degree of lipophilicity. In contrast, the relatively high vapour pressures, particularly for the a-HCH isomer, determine the long-range transport of these pollutants in the atmosphere. The amounts of other OCPs such as dieldrin and chlordanes in microplastic are usually very low (i.e., close to method detection limits).

-----------------------

 Analysis of microcontaminants in aqueous samples by fully automated on-line solid-phase extraction-gas chromatography-mass selective detection

1996

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/0021967395009795

------------

How Our Cleanliness Testing Services for Microcontamination Propel Excellence in the Hard Drive Industry

2018

https://www.innovatechlabs.com/newsroom/1913/combating-microcontamination-hard-drive-industry/

------------

Amazon Deforestation Not A Local Issue When It Comes To Pollution

Sep 24, 2019

https://www.forbes.com/sites/andrewwight/2019/09/24/amazon-deforestation-not-a-local-issue-when-it-comes-to-pollution/#207e4c2739a9

With 130,000 acres of forest reported cleared and burned in Brazil in 2019, according to various satellite sources, that means minerals once sequestered inside plants are now being sent into the atmosphere.

Ascorra said the danger was that air pollution that starts in the Amazon will arrive at the Pacific and can be carried by airborne currents to Asia.  He also warned that mercury, which is a liquid at room, evaporates easily, spreading contamination.

According to a Colombian environmental toxicologist, what comes after the land is denuded poses a different kind of threat.

Jesus Olivero-Verbel, a researcher at the University of Cartagena, says that accelerating deforestation, hundreds of kilometers from the sea, is potentially bringing heavy metal contamination, particularly mercury pollution, to coastlines across the world.

Olivero-Verbal said, based on his team’s research in Colombia, once forests are cut down or burned for roads or pasture-land, soils containing heavy metals flow into creeks, with this silt eventually arriving at the sea.

His research team has seen how microplastics, full of molecule-sized crevices, can then carry these heavy metal molecules to far-away coasts.

They conducted a study, published in 2019, of microplastics washed on a beach in Cartagena, Colombia, on the Carribean coast.

The team found that the most degraded microplastics had the highest concentrations of contaminants.

Barium, Chromium, Rubidium, Strontium, Cerium, Zirconium, Nickel and Lead were among the heavy metals most likely to be found trapped inside the microscopic pores of microplastics particles.

Many of these metals are well documented human health effects, varying from acute symptoms like diarrhea and vomiting to more long-term effects like cancer and kidney failure.

“When there is deforestation in a river basin then the contamination flows to the sea and then microplastics spread that contamination to any coast in the world via ocean currents,” Olivero-Verbal said.

Of all the contaminants, Olivero-Verbal is most concerned by mercury – It is one of the most toxic elements. Even at low concentrations it can cause detrimental effects to wildlife and humans.

The human health impacts include neurological effects, alterations in behavior, decreased IQ, severe headache, loss of sensory capacity, muscle weakness, fatigue, irregular menstrual cycles and miscarriages, among others.

In his previous studies of mercury levels in the hair strands of populations in Colombia, Olivero-Verbal found that fisherman in Cauca region had an average concentration of 9 parts per million (ppm), while indigenous communities on the Caquetá River, in the country’s south had 17.3 ppm. The internationally recognised ‘safe’ level is only 1 ppm.

Adding to the giant blazes in Brazil, the rate of deforestation in two other major Amazon countries is sky-rocketing, each from a different cause.

In Colombia, a 2016 peace accord between the government and the FARC guerrilla group has allowed ranchers and other farmers onto large tracts of land that were previously fiercely defended by the now-demobilised guerilla.

In Peru, illegal gold mining is a key deforestation driver.  In 2018 alone, 22,930 acres of forest in Peru had been destroyed by miners.

------------

80% Of Fish In The Amazon River Have Plastic In Their Stomach

https://www.iflscience.com/plants-and-animals/plastic-has-been-found-in-the-stomachs-of-amazon-fish-for-the-first-time/

------------

RUBBER ENTERPRISES IN THE BRAZILIAN AMAZON, 1870-1930

http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/2869/1/U615818.pdf

------------

Tropical forest conversion to rubber plantation affects soil micro- & mesofaunal community & diversity

2019

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-42333-4

------------

 The biggest likely source of microplastics in California coastal waters? Our car tires

Oct. 2, 2019

https://www.latimes.com/environment/story/2019-10-02/california-microplastics-ocean-study

--------------

 Study Finds Microplastics in More than 90 Percent of Tested Water Bottles

3-16-2018

But the effects of microplastics on human health are far from clear

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/study-finds-microplastics-more-90-percent-tested-water-bottles-2-180968507/

--------------


Uptake and Accumulation of Polystyrene Microplastics in Zebrafish (Danio rerio) and Toxic Effects in Liver

2016

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.est.6b00183

-----------------------

Review of micro- and nanoplastic contamination in the food chain

2019

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19440049.2019.1583381

--------------

Joane: Plastic Is Killing Us in the Amazon

7-16-2019

https://pulitzercenter.org/reporting/joane-plastic-killing-us-amazon

--------------

Plastics polluting the oceans creep into household sea salt

2017

https://www.efe.com/efe/english/technology/plastics-polluting-the-oceans-creep-into-household-sea-salt/50000267-3375901

--------------

Sea salt around the world is contaminated by plastic, studies show

2017

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/sep/08/sea-salt-around-world-contaminated-by-plastic-studies

-----------------------

Effects of road salt on microbial communities: Halophiles as biomarkers of road salt pollution

2019

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0221355

Abstract

Increased use of salting to de-ice roadways, especially in urban areas, is leading to elevated salinity levels in soil as well as surface- and ground water. This salt pollution may cause long-term ecological changes to soil and aquatic microbial communities. In this study, we examined the impact on microbial communities in soils exposed to urban road salt runoff using both culturing and 16S amplicon sequencing. Both methods showed an increase in halophilic Bacteria and Archaea in samples from road salt-exposed areas and suggested that halophiles are becoming persistent members of microbial communities in urban, road salt-impacted soils. Since salt is a pollutant that can accumulate in soils over time, it is critical to begin assessing its impact on the environment immediately. Toward this goal, we have developed a facile semi-quantitative assay utilizing halophilic microbes as biomarkers to evaluate on-going salt pollution of soils.

--------------


Effects of road salt on microbial communities: Halophiles as biomarkers of road salt pollution

2019

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0221355

Abstract

Increased use of salting to de-ice roadways, especially in urban areas, is leading to elevated salinity levels in soil as well as surface- and ground water. This salt pollution may cause long-term ecological changes to soil and aquatic microbial communities. In this study, we examined the impact on microbial communities in soils exposed to urban road salt runoff using both culturing and 16S amplicon sequencing. Both methods showed an increase in halophilic Bacteria and Archaea in samples from road salt-exposed areas and suggested that halophiles are becoming persistent members of microbial communities in urban, road salt-impacted soils. Since salt is a pollutant that can accumulate in soils over time, it is critical to begin assessing its impact on the environment immediately. Toward this goal, we have developed a facile semi-quantitative assay utilizing halophilic microbes as biomarkers to evaluate on-going salt pollution of soils.


------------------------------

Unlocking Pandora - Insights from Pre-salt Reservoirs in Campos and Santos Basins (Offshore Brazil)

June 2015

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/279783392_Unlocking_Pandora_-_Insights_from_Pre-salt_Reservoirs_in_Campos_and_Santos_Basins_Offshore_Brazil

-----------------------------


Critically Evaluating the Current Depositional Models for the Pre-Salt Barra Velha Formation, Offshore Brazil

http://www.searchanddiscovery.com/pdfz/documents/2017/51439wright/ndx_wright.pdf.html


-----------------------------


Exploration Opportunities in the Pre-Salt Play, Deepwater Campos Basin, Brazil

Feb 2017

https://www.sepm.org/files/151article.bg4mhtdfm4ho1mb7.pdf

-----------------------------

Subsalt seen as promising exploration frontier for Brazil

Brazil’s subsalt exploration is focused in the Santos, Campos and Espirito Santo basins.

6-1-2007

https://www.offshore-mag.com/geosciences/article/16761140/subsalt-seen-as-promising-exploration-frontier-for-brazil

-----------------------------

Marine Debris in the Island of Santa Catarina, South Brazil: Spatial Patterns, Composition, and Biological Aspects

Abstract

The prevalence of marine debris is a worldwide issue, especially in coastal areas. Half of the Brazilian population live within 200 km of the coast and generate large amounts of garbage, which is not always sent to an appropriate destination. This study aims to assess patterns of spatial variability and composition of marine debris in the beaches of Florianópolis, an important tourist destination in Brazil. Biological aspects were also assessed. Five beaches were sampled twice, and abundances of litter ranging from 12.8 to 498 items/100 m2 were found, depending on location and time of sampling. Plastic items accounted for almost 90% of the material collected. Only 5% of the items collected showed biological encrustations, suggesting that most items had a local origin. A weak negative correlation was found between the number of items and the number of ghost crab (Ocypode quadrata) open burrows. These results can be used for management purposes and to make comparisons with other coastal cities.

https://www.jcronline.org/doi/abs/10.2112/JCOASTRES-D-09-00072.1

--------------

Over 90% of sampled salt brands globally found to contain microplastics

2018

https://www.greenpeace.org/international/press-release/18975/over-90-of-sampled-salt-brands-globally-found-to-contain-microplastics/

The study highlights Asia as a hotspot for global plastic pollution meaning that the ecosystem and human health in Asian marginal seas could potentially be at greater risk because of severe maritime microplastics pollution. In one Indonesian sea salt sample, researchers found the highest quantities of microplastics. The country is considered to be the second worst plastic emitter into the world’s oceans.

Assuming intake of 10 grams per day of salt, the average adult consumer could ingest approximately 2,000 microplastics each year through salt alone, as the study suggests. Even after discounting the highly contaminated Indonesian salt sample from this study, the average adult could still be consuming many hundreds of microplastics each year.

“The findings suggest that human ingestion of microplastics via marine products is strongly related to plastic emissions in a given region,” said Professor Kim, Seung-Kyu, corresponding author of the study. “In order to limit our exposure to microplastics, preventative measures are required, such as controlling the environmental discharge of mismanaged plastics and more importantly, reducing plastic waste” he added.

Earlier this month, Greenpeace along with the Break Free From Plastic coalition released a report naming Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, and Nestlé as among the most frequent companies whose packaging relies on the single-use plastics that pollute our oceans and waterways globally.

--------------

Accumulation of Microplastic on Shorelines Woldwide: Sources and Sinks

2011

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/es201811s

--------------

Microplastics in the Marine Environment: A Review of the Methods Used for Identification and Quantification

2012

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/es2031505

--------------

Microplastics in our oceans and marine health

https://journals.openedition.org/factsreports/5257

--------------

Marine microplastics spell big problems for future generations

2-22-2016

https://www.pnas.org/content/113/9/2331

--------------

Understanding How Microplastics Affect Marine Biota on the Cellular Level Is Important for Assessing Ecosystem Function: A Review

10-15-2019

https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-20389-4_6

--------------

Microplastics in coastal and marine environments of the western tropical and sub-tropical Atlantic Ocean

2015

https://pubs.rsc.org/tr/content/articlelanding/2015/em/c5em00158g/unauth#!divAbstract

--------------

Plastic Resin Pellets as a Transport Medium for Toxic Chemicals in the Marine Environment

2000

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/es0010498

---------------

First evidence of microplastic ingestion by fishes from the Amazon River estuary

June 2018

Abstract

This study investigated occurrence of microplastic particles in digestive tracts of fishes from the Amazon River estuary. A total of 189 fish specimens representing 46 species from 22 families was sampled from bycatch of the shrimp fishery. Microplastic particles removed from fish gastrointestinal tracts were identified using Attenuated Total Reflectance – Fourier Transform Infrared (ATR-FTIR). In total, 228 microplastic particles were removed from gastrointestinal tracts of 26 specimens representing 14 species (30% of those examined). Microplastic particles were categorized as pellets (97.4%), sheets (1.3%), fragments (0.4%) and threads (0.9%), with size ranging from 0.38 to 4.16 mm. There was a positive correlation between fish standard length and number of particles found in gastrointestinal tracts. The main polymers identified by ATR-FTIR were polyamide, rayon and polyethylene. These findings provide the first evidence of microplastic contamination of biota from the Amazon estuary and northern coast of Brazil.

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/325945268_First_evidence_of_microplastic_ingestion_by_fishes_from_the_Amazon_River_estuary

----------------


'Sad surprise': Amazon fish contaminated by plastic particles

Nov 2018

Scientists in Brazil find first evidence of plastic pollution in Amazon basin freshwater fish

Scientists have found the first evidence of plastic contamination in freshwater fish in the Amazon, highlighting the extent to which bags, bottles and other waste dumped in rivers is affecting the world’s wildlife.

Tests on the stomach contents of fish in Brazil’s Xingu River, one of the major tributaries of the Amazon, revealed plastic particles in more than 80% of the species examined, including the omnivorous parrot pacu, herbivorous redhook silver dollar, and meat-eating red-bellied piranha.

The researchers focused on fish in the Xingu because of their rich diversity and breadth of feeding habits. The fish ranged from 4cm to nearly a foot in length, and weighed from 2g to nearly a kilogram.

Analysis of the fishes’ stomach contents identified a dozen distinct polymers used to manufacture plastic items, including bags, bottles, and fishing gear. Most pieces were black, red, blue, white or translucent and varied from 1mm-sized particles to flakes measuring 15mm in width.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/nov/16/sad-surprise-amazon-fish-contaminated-by-plastic-particles

---------------

Microplastics in fisheries and aquaculture Status of knowledge on their occurrence and implications for aquatic organisms and food safety

http://www.fao.org/3/a-i7677e.pdf

--------------

Microplastics in coastal areas and seafood: implications for food safety

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19440049.2019.1585581

--------------

Study shows how mussels handle microplastic fiber pollution

12-4-2018

https://phys.org/news/2018-12-mussels-microplastic-fiber-pollution.html

--------------

Efficiency in the environmental management of plastic wastes at Brazilian ports based on data envelopment analysis

May 2019

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0025326X19302474

--------------

Plastic ingestion by sea turtles in Paraíba State, Northeast Brazil

2015

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0073-47212015000300265

--------------

Plastic litter on an urban beach---a case study in Brazil.

2009

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19220998

---------------

Microplastics in the aquatic and terrestrial environment: sources (with a specific focus on personal care products), fate and effects

2016

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5044952/

---------------

Uptake and Retention of Microplastics by the Shore Crab Carcinus maenas

2014

https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es501090e

---------------

Microplastics as contaminants in the soil environment: A mini-review

11-15-2019

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048969719333236

----------------

The Brazilian villagers turning plastic pollution into profit

2018





After plastic waste contributed to deadly floods in Recife, one neighbourhood took action. Now people can earn a living by cleaning up the river in a scheme being imitated around the world

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/apr/12/the-brazilian-villagers-turning-plastic-pollution-into-profit

--------------

Research finds humans across the globe have microplastics in their stool

11-6-2018

https://news.mongabay.com/2018/11/research-finds-humans-across-the-globe-have-microplastics-in-their-stool/


-----------------------

Tiny pieces of plastic found in Arctic snow

The discovery suggests that microplastics are being carried around the planet in atmospheric winds, and that we’re breathing them in.

8-14-2019

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/2019/08/microplastics-found-in-arctic-snow/

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Section 13: Beaches & Transboundary Pollution

-------------------
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13 of the dirtiest beaches in the world

Jul 13, 2018

https://www.insider.com/dirtiest-polluted-beaches-2018-6

Guanabara Bay Beaches, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Rio's notoriously polluted Guanabara Bay gained media attention before and during the 2016 Summer Olympics, when athletes competing in events like sailing and rowing were exposed to its mucky waters.

According to an investigation conducted by the Associated Press, the bay water "contained dangerously high levels of viruses and bacteria from human sewage." Athletes who ingested as little as three teaspoons of the polluted water faced a 99% chance of infection.

El Gringo Beach, Bajos de Haina, Dominican Republic

Pure Earth — a New York-based nonprofit formerly known as the Blacksmith Institute that aims to identify and clean up polluted sites around the world — once designated Bajos de Haina as one of the most polluted places on Earth.

Nicknamed "Dominican Chernobyl," the city outside El Gringo Beach is filled with chemical and pharmaceutical plants — not to mention an oil refinery. The Inter Press Service news agency reports that these factories emit high quantities of toxic substances including formaldehyde, lead, ammonium, and sulfuric acid each year. In addition to releasing airborne toxins, local factories are also said to dispose of waste by dumping it into the water.

---------------------

 
Chevron is refusing to pay for the 'Amazon Chernobyl' – we can fight back with citizen action

17 Sep 2020

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/sep/17/chevron-amazon-oil-toxic-waste-dump-ecuador-boycott

 

---------------------

A Look at Brazil’s Polluted Waters

Jun 14, 2017

https://psmag.com/news/a-look-at-brazils-polluted-waters

Water-transmitted diseases are responsible for about 65 percent of all the hospitalizations in Brazil. Drug-resistant bacteria have been found around Flamengo Beach, where Olympic sailing competitions are scheduled. Some of these “super-resistant” strains are able to withstand antibiotics up to 600 times higher than what would normally be administered for treatment, according to studies.




Tons of dead fish float on the waters of the Rodrigo de Freitas lagoon in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. (Photo: Christophe Simon/AFP/Getty Images)

A massive fish kill in April wiped out 50 tons of twait shad from Guanabara Bay. While government officials cited a sudden change in water temperature as the cause of the mysterious die-off, scientists blamed the waterway’s extreme pollution as the root cause of the kill, according to reports.

---------------------

Oil Washes Up on Tourist Beaches in ‘Brazilian Caribbean’

10-17-2019

https://www.voanews.com/americas/oil-washes-tourist-beaches-brazilian-caribbean

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THEMATIC REPORT FOR THE GUIANAS–BRAZIL SUB-REGION

February 2007

https://www.clmeproject.org/phaseone/CLME%20Guianas%20Brazil%20Shelf%20thematic%20report[1].pdf

------------------

Humans Have Created a New Natural Disaster

8-29-2018

Massive seaweed infestations are killing sea turtles and befouling beaches across the Caribbean—and scientists say it's just the beginning. 

The June Sargassum invasion in Barbados claimed the lives of three sea turtles, six dolphins, and “countless” fish and eels, The Daily Nation reported. But surely more have perished in the months since, as sheets of the bulbous-tipped seaweed—sometimes several feet deep—have become regular visitors to the country’s eastern and southern shorelines.


 

(Sargassum on the beach of the city of Le Gosier on the French Caribbean Island of Guadeloupe in April 2018).

https://newrepublic.com/article/150775/humans-created-new-natural-disaster

------------------


Mysterious Oil Spill Becomes New Environmental Crisis for Brazil

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/08/world/americas/brazil-oil-spill-beaches.html

----------------------

Nearly three months after Brazil oil spill, origins remain uncertain

11-18-2019

https://news.mongabay.com/2019/11/nearly-three-months-after-brazil-oil-spill-origins-remain-uncertain/

-----------------------

2019 Northeast Brazil oil spill

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2019_Northeast_Brazil_oil_spill

As of 23 October, contamination had reached more than 200 localities from the nine states of Northeast Brazil. More than 1,000 tonnes of oil have already been collected from beaches along the 2,250 km (1,400 mi) of coastline affected.

------------------

Spill and run: Brazil struggles to identify tanker behind major oil leak

12-20-2019

Mystery ship responsible for contaminating half Brazil’s coast highlights gaps in global shipping industry regulations

https://chinadialogueocean.net/12324-spill-and-run-brazil-oil-leak/

----------------


Amazon rainforest's final frontier under threat from oil and soya

Feb 2017

In Brazil’s least developed state, Amapá, locals fear that government plans to increase soya and oil production will destroy the area – and their livelihoods

https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2017/feb/16/amazon-rainforest-final-frontier-in-brazil-under-threat-from-oil-and-soya

-----------------

Effects of a shipwreck on the zooplankton community in a port region of the Amazon

2019

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11356-018-3999-2

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Brazil's new oil frontier threatens Amazon reef

May 12, 2017

Environmentalists are now pressuring regulators to block oil exploration.

https://abcnews.go.com/International/brazils-oil-frontier-threatens-amazon-reef/story?id=47372986

-----------------

Brazil's forgotten state: oil and agribusiness threaten Amapá forests – in pictures

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/gallery/2017/feb/16/brazils-forgotten-state-oil-agribusiness-threaten-amapa-forests-in-pictures

------------------

 

Oil spill at sea: who will pay for Peru’s worst environmental disaster?

7 Mar 2022

As the state, the refinery and tanker owners play the blame game, damage to the region’s ecosystems continues to spread

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/mar/07/oil-spill-at-sea-who-will-pay-peru-worst-environmental-disaster

 

------------------

Oil spill clean-up on Brazilian beaches making volunteers sick

10-25-2019

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-environment-oil-health/oil-spill-clean-up-on-brazilian-beaches-making-volunteers-sick-idUSKBN1X42I8

------------------

Turtles Die As Mystery Oil Spill Washes Up On Brazil’s Shores

2019

https://www.iflscience.com/environment/turtles-die-as-mystery-oil-spill-washes-up-on-brazil-s-shores/

------------------------

Mystery oil spills blot more than 130 Brazilian beaches


2019

https://phys.org/news/2019-10-mystery-oil-brazilian-beaches.html

----------------------------

Oil spills reach more than 100 regions of Brazil’s coast

2019

https://apnews.com/e2d4b64a86c542028c08e53e13389892

------------------------------

Assessing the sources of high fecal coliform levels at an urban tropical beach

2015

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1517-83822015000401019

------------------------------

Sao Jose Beach {Brazil}

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g667504-d2391180-Reviews-Sao_Jose_Beach-Itacare_State_of_Bahia.html

PhoenixSaoPaulo wrote a review Mar 2013

The owners destroyed this beach by building too many infrastructure around, an ecological crime. Years ago thsi was a virgin, wonderful beach, and by financial interest the nature was ireversibley violated, a real shame.

------------------------------

Guanabara Bay ecosystem health report card: Science, management, and governance implications

January 2019

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235248551830238X

------------------------------

Environmental and Sanitary Conditions of Guanabara Bay, Rio de Janeiro

2015

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4653747/

------------------------------

Rio's Relentless Beach Pollution

2014

https://www.citylab.com/equity/2014/03/rios-relentless-beach-pollution/8729/

------------------------------

World's Deadliest Beaches

2018

https://www.farandwide.com/s/most-dangerous-beaches-world-3d2e3a80e3454d9d

------------------------------

Brazil environment: Clean-up on beaches affected by oil spill

2019

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-50113383

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Scientists rush to rescue sea turtles threatened by mysterious Brazil oil spill

10-15-2019

https://www.pri.org/stories/2019-10-15/scientists-rush-rescue-sea-turtles-threatened-mysterious-brazil-oil-spill

------------------------------

Underwater Images Give First Glimpse of Newly Discovered Brazilian Reef

1-31-2017

The Amazon Reef once shocked scientists. Now, for the first time, we know what it looks like

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/these-are-first-images-once-brazilian-reef-180961976/

----------------------

Brazil lost 80 percent of coral reef in 50 years

9-25-2012

https://www.pri.org/stories/2012-09-25/brazil-lost-80-percent-coral-reef-50-years

----------------------

Brazil: Coral Diseases Endanger Reefs

https://www.wri.org/brazil-coral-diseases-endanger-reefs

Provided by Ronaldo Francini-Filho and Fabiano Thompson of the Universidade Federal da Paraiba, and Rodrigo Moura of Conservation International, Brazil

The Abrolhos Bank, off the shores of the populous state of Bahia in northeastern Brazil, is home to the largest and richest coral reefs in the South Atlantic.1 Eight of the 18 coral species commonly found in the Abrolhos Bank occur only in the South Atlantic, with one species (Mussismilia braziliensis) endemic to the eastern Brazilian coast alone. Brazil’s reefs are also a primary source of food and employment for thousands of people along the coast.2

In the last 20 years, the Bahia coast has experienced increased tourism, urbanization, and large-scale agriculture, leading to the discharge of untreated wastes, fertilizers, and nutrients that contaminate the region’s reefs. Destruction of the Atlantic rainforest has also led to increased erosion and a high influx of land-based sediments onto the reefs. As a result, pathogenic bacteria are now common on the reefs.3

Coral disease prevalence on the Brazilian coastline has escalated from negligible to alarmingly high levels in recent years. Scientists have recorded six types of diseases on the Abrolhos Bank.4 White-plague-like disease was by far the most common, affecting primarily the key endemic reef coral M. braziliensis.

Studies link the global proliferation of coral diseases to elevated seawater temperature and to the human impacts mentioned.5 Should disease-induced coral mortality continue, Brazil’s reefs will suffer a massive coral cover decline in the next 50 years, and M. braziliensis will be nearly extinct in less than a century. If seawater temperatures continue to rise and local threats continue to plague Brazil’s reefs, these ecosystems may collapse even sooner.



----------------------

What the world can learn from Brazilian coral reefs

2018

https://sciencenorway.no/animals--plants-climate-change-forskningno/what-the-world-can-learn-from-brazilian-coral-reefs/1461014

Unlike Australia, coral reefs in Brazil haven’t seen any mass mortality events related to bleaching so far. Could Brazilian corals hold the key to more resilient reefs?


-----------------------

 Amazon coral reef would be ruined by planned oil drilling, scientists say

2018

The 56,000 sq km reef is thought to contain dozens of undiscovered species, in an area where a French company intents to drill for oil

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/apr/17/amazon-coral-reef-oil-drilling-destruction-greenpeace

-----------------------

Almost all 29 Coral Reefs on the U.N. World Heritage List Damaged by Bleeching

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2017/06/almost-all-29-coral-reefs-un-world-heritage-list-damaged-bleaching

----------------------

Half of the Great Barrier Reef Is Dead

2018

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/2018/08/explore-atlas-great-barrier-reef-coral-bleaching-map-climate-change/

See where coral in the world's largest coral reef system has been bleached to death.

----------------------

Ocean Temperature Increase Has Destroyed 90 Percent of Coral Reef in Southern Bahia

9-9-2019

According to researchers of the project Coral Vivo, the coral reefs are suffering from stress and decolorization process. The temperature has risen because of the "El Niño" weather phenomenon.

https://riotimesonline.com/brazil-news/miscellaneous/increase-in-ocean-temperature-has-already-destroyed-90-percent-of-the-coral-reef-in-southern-bahia/


----------------------

BLACK DEATH Sea turtles and birds wash up dead after mysterious oil spill devastates 180 Brazilian beaches and threatens coral reefs

 21 Oct 2019

https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/10181044/oil-spill-brazil-turtles-dead-coral-threatened-destroy-ecosystem/

----------------------

Oil drilling near newly discovered Amazon coral reef attacked by scientists

July 2017

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/oil-drilling-amazon-coral-reef-near-fossil-fuels-global-warming-a7865591.html

Campaigners say oil spills could put the 'precious and unique' reef at risk

Plans to drill for oil near the newly discovered Amazon Reef – one of the largest in the world – have been attacked by leading scientists, conservationists and explorers.

The reef extends for about 600 miles off the north coast of Brazil, near the mouth of the mighty Amazon river, and covers an area about half the size of Wales.

Oil companies BP and Total plan to drill for oil in the area and there is concern that any spills would damage the “precious and unique ecosystem”.

Now a group of scientists and others have signed a statement calling the reef, the existence of which was only revealed last year, to be protected.

----------------------


Massive Oil Spill Turns Brazil's Beaches Black, Kills Marine Life, Threatens Communities


Nov. 05, 2019


https://www.ecowatch.com/brazil-oil-spill-2019-2641228354.html?rebelltitem=1


----------------------

Recreational Exposure during Algal Bloom in Carrasco Beach, Uruguay: A Liver Failure Case Report

2017

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5618200/

Abstract

In January 2015, a 20-month-old child and her family took part in recreational activities at Carrasco and Malvín beaches (Montevideo, Uruguay). An intense harmful algae bloom (HAB) was developing along the coast at that time. A few hours after the last recreational exposure episode, the family suffered gastrointestinal symptoms which were self-limited except in the child’s case, who was admitted to hospital in Uruguay with diarrhea, vomiting, fatigue, and jaundice. The patient had increased serum levels of liver enzymes and bilirubin and five days later presented acute liver failure. She was referred to the Italian Hospital in Buenos Aires, being admitted with grade II–III encephalopathy and hepatomegaly and requiring mechanical respiratory assistance. Serology tests for hepatitis A, B, and C, Epstein-Barr virus, and cytomegalovirus were negative. Laboratory features showed anemia, coagulopathy, and increased serum levels of ammonium, alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), and bilirubin. Autoimmune Hepatitis Type-II (AH-II) was the initial diagnosis based on a liver kidney microsomal type 1 antibodies (LKM-1) positive result, and twenty days later a liver transplant was performed. The liver histopathology had indicated hemorrhagic necrosis in zone 3, and cholestasis and nodular regeneration, which were not characteristic of AH-II. LC/ESI-HRMS (liquid chromatography electrospray ionization high-resolution mass spectrometry) analysis of MCs in the explanted liver revealed the presence of Microsytin-LR (MC-LR) (2.4 ng·gr−1 tissue) and [D-Leu1]MC-LR (75.4 ng·gr−1 tissue), which constitute a toxicological nexus and indicate a preponderant role of microcystins in the development of fulminant hepatitis.

-----------------------

In Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro’s Anti-Environment Agenda Goes Far Beyond the Amazon

Nov 13, 2019

An oil spill has been contaminating the northeastern shore for weeks.

https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2019/11/brazil-jair-bolsonaro-anti-environment-agenda-wildfires-oil-spill.html

----------------------

As Brazil tries to recover from huge oil spill, ExxonMobil and Chevron bid to dig even more into the country’s oil reserve

11-4-2019

https://350.org/press-release/as-brazil-tries-to-recover-from-huge-oil-spill-exxonmobil-and-chevron-bid-to-dig-even-more-into-the-countrys-oil-reserve/


----------------------

 Oil contaminating Brazil's beaches 'very likely from Venezuela', minister says

2019


Government says foreign ship appears to have caused the spill, in accusation likely to further strain Brazilian-Venezuelan relations

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/oct/09/brazil-beach-oil-slick-venezuela-government

----------------------


What Canada can learn from the devastating oil spill in Brazil

11-29-2019

https://blog.wwf.ca/blog/2019/11/29/canada-can-learn-devastating-oil-spill-brazil-2/

----------------------

Microplastic pollution of the beaches of Guanabara Bay, Southeast Brazil

August 2016

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/301759105_Microplastic_pollution_of_the_beaches_of_Guanabara_Bay_Southeast_Brazil

----------------------

Three-dimensional distribution of plastic pellets in sandy beaches: shifting paradigms

March 2014

https://www.nature.com/articles/srep04435

----------------------

Brazil's Northeastern Coast Faces Pollution on Two Frontsoil and Sewage

Dec.23.2019

There are organisms and chemicals harmful to human health in the ocean

https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/internacional/en/scienceandhealth/2019/12/brazils-northeastern-coast-faces-pollution-on-two-frontsoil-and-sewage.shtml

----------------------

Toxic seaweed a menace to Caribbean tourists

2019

https://www.physiciansweekly.com/toxic-seaweed-a-menace/

Tourists to the Caribbean may not realize that a brown drifting seaweed that’s been piling up on beaches in recent years is dangerous, researchers say.

Travelers and doctors alike should be aware that prolonged contact with the Sargassum weed, or inhaling the hydrogen sulfide gas it gives off as it decomposes on the beach, can cause heart palpitations, shortness of breath, dizziness, vertigo, headache and skin rashes, the authors write in the Journal of Travel Medicine.

“I’ve observed patients returning from affected areas with unusual symptoms that were reminiscent of an intoxication syndrome in the absence of alternate explanations,” said co-author Dr. Andrea Boggild, clinical director of the Tropical Disease Unit at Toronto General Hospital.

“The more research I did on the topic, the more I realized that this really is an issue that continues to fly under the radar of most medical professionals,” she told Reuters Health by email.

Boggild and co-author Dr. Mary Elizabeth Wilson of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston report that beginning in 2011, larger-than-normal rafts of the brown seaweed began washing up on shores around the Caribbean, originating from the northeast coast of Brazil, and by 2018, record amounts were reported. The seaweed also occurs in China’s Yellow Sea, where it’s known as “golden tide.”

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Study discusses origin of floating seaweed that invaded Brazilian coast

May 31, 2017

http://agencia.fapesp.br/study-discusses-origin-of-floating-seaweed-that-invaded-brazilian-coast/25386/

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Researchers link seaweed blooms to pollution in ocean water

Jul 21, 2019

https://www.news-journalonline.com/news/20190721/researchers-link-seaweed-blooms-to-pollution-in-ocean-water

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Miami Beach wrestles with a new and unwelcome visitor: Seaweed — foul piles of it

June 20, 2019

https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/environment/article231709143.html

----------------------

 Mexico struggling to deal with seaweed invading some of its Caribbean beaches

2019

https://www.usatoday.com/story/travel/news/2019/06/28/mexico-beaches-country-struggles-solve-seaweed-invasion/1593664001/

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Mysterious masses of seaweed assault Caribbean islands

2018

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2018/06/mysterious-masses-seaweed-assault-caribbean-islands

--------------

Brazil’s Dirty Beaches

2014

https://www.totallycoolpix.com/magazine/2014/03/brazils-dirty-beaches

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Brazil's main tourist cities have 42% of polluted beaches – 21/12/2019 – Daily life

Dec 2019

https://www.time24.news/2019/12/brazils-main-tourist-cities-have-42-of-polluted-beaches-21-12-2019-daily-life.html

The sun shining in the clear blue water of a quiet corner of Barra da Tijuca, in the west of Rio de Janeiro, explains the amazement of Argentine tourist Florencia Pérez, 34, when she learns that this stretch is considered unsuitable for bathing almost all year long. “It's very beautiful here, I would never think about that.

Our beaches near Buenos Aires look a lot dirtier, ”she says shortly after leaving the sea with her daughter on her lap. Visiting Brazil for the first time, she could hardly imagine that almost half of the country's main tourist beaches would be dirty.

The data is in the survey of the leaf. In the calculation, the 31 cities of the Brazilian coast classified in category A by the Ministry of Tourism were included – those that receive more visitors, generate more jobs in the sector and have more lodging beds.

In these municipalities, 42% of the 663 monitored points had water rated as poor or very poor between November 2018 and October 2019. This means that these stretches of water were unsuitable for bathing in at least one in four measurements taken during the period.

The data, which the newspaper collects with local governments four years ago, indicates a worsening. In 2018, 40% of these priority beaches were bad or very bad, and in 2016 and 2017, 35%. The trend is also upwards when considering all the more than one thousand points monitored on the Brazilian coast: 35% were classified as dirty in this area. four years ago were 29%.

Swimming in inappropriate areas can cause health problems, especially gastrointestinal or skin diseases such as mycoses. Other foci of contamination, which are not considered in this analysis, may be the presence of garbage in the sand and the oil spill that reached the northeastern coast in the last semester.

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Pervasive smell of sewage at Copacabana and Ipanema beaches?

https://www.tripadvisor.com/ShowTopic-g303506-i1199-k10379190-Pervasive_smell_of_sewage_at_Copacabana_and_Ipanema_beaches-Rio_de_Janeiro_State_of_Rio_de.html

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For Brazil, Rio Sewage is One of Many Water Challenges

2016

https://www.circleofblue.org/2016/south-america/brazil-rio-sewage-one-many-water-challenges/

------------------------

 

‘Toxic’ levels of pharmaceuticals found in quarter of world’s rivers

February 15 2022

Potentially toxic levels of pharmaceutical drugs have been found in a quarter of river locations examined across the world, a study has found.

Researchers from around the world surveyed more than 1,000 sites on 258 rivers, from the Thames in London to the Brazilian Amazon and rivers in major cities such as Delhi, New York and Guangzhou.

The assessment measured the presence of 61 pharmaceuticals, including some compounds also linked to lifestyles such as caffeine, and whether they were above levels where they could have an effect on the environment.

The study, published in the ‘Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)’, warns that pollution of the world’s rivers by medicinal chemicals is a global problem.

Pollution poses a risk to freshwater habitats and wildlife, potentially could contribute to the build-up of antimicrobial resistance, and also threatens global goals on water quality and pollution, the research warns.

The analysis, carried out at the University of York, found pharmaceutical pollution in rivers on every continent, with nicotine and cotinine, caffeine and paracetamol turning up everywhere, including Antarctica.

An array of chemicals such as beta blockers, antibiotics, antidepressants, sleeping medication and antihistamines were found in rivers on all inhabited continents.

While most chemicals seen in rivers globally are lower than concentrations that could cause ecological effects, there were levels of contaminants that could pose a threat to environmental or human health in more than a quarter of the studied locations.

And some rivers are exposed to complex mixtures of chemicals. Contaminants found at potentially harmful concentrations at some sites included beta blocker propranolol and antibiotic ciprofloxacin.

For the study, water samples were obtained from sites spanning from a village in Venezuela, where modern medicines are not used, to cities ranging from Lagos to Las Vegas, along with areas of political instability such as Baghdad and the Palestinian West Bank.

https://www.independent.ie/world-news/toxic-levels-of-pharmaceuticals-found-in-quarter-of-worlds-rivers-41347568.html

 

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Brazil’s sewage woes reflect the growing global water quality crisis

2016

https://www.downtoearth.org.in/news/waste/brazil-s-sewage-woes-reflect-the-growing-global-water-quality-crisis-55216

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Is It Safe to Visit Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro?

July 2019

https://www.laidbacktrip.com/posts/copacabana-beach-rio-de-janeiro-safety

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Temporal trend of litter contamination at Cassino beach, Southern Brazil

http://www.aprh.pt/rgci/pdf/rgci-201_Tourinho.pdf

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The influence of river discharge and wind on Patos Lagoon, Brazil, Suspended Particulate Matter

2019

http://www.seasurface.umaine.edu/pdf/2019_Tavora_etal_IJRS_Brazil.pdf

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Assessment of Water Pollution Signs in the Brazilian Pampa Biome Using Stress Biomarkers in Fish (Astyanax sp.)

https://www.hindawi.com/journals/jeco/2015/415293/

---------------------

Assessment of water pollution in the Brazilian Pampa biome by means of stress biomarkers in tadpoles of the leaf frog Phyllomedusa iheringii (Anura: Hylidae)

2015

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4458136/

---------------------


Mississippi Beaches Have Been Vacant For 2 Months As A Toxic Algae Bloom Lurks Offshore

09/08/2019

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/algae-mississippi-gulf-of-mexico_n_5d715cc6e4b03b3b730a914a

An algal bloom in the Gulf is devastating coastal businesses.


Ship Island Excursions has survived hurricanes, global recessions, a world war and a host of economic challenges since the ferry company began taking passengers to the barrier islands that dot coastal Mississippi in the 1920s. But this year, a new threat has emerged: an explosion of blue-green algae, or cyanobacteria, that has shut down virtually all of Mississippi’s beaches since July 4.

No one knows when the algae will disappear, and many wonder how many businesses that operate in the region will survive the hit.

---------------------

Recreational Exposure during Algal Bloom in Carrasco Beach, Uruguay: A Liver Failure Case Report


https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5618200/

------------------------------

 After Amazon fires, Brazil now faces oil spill crisis

10-11-2019

Mysterious oil slicks have spread across 2,000 kilometres of the country’s northern coast since September, contaminating beaches and killing wildlife

https://www.downtoearth.org.in/news/pollution/after-amazon-fires-brazil-now-faces-oil-spill-crisis-67192

---------------------------

Poisoning by crude oil in sheep and goats

https://www.revmedvet.com/2013/RMV164_517_520.pdf


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Blood Red Waters in Brazil a Sign of Apocalypse-Fiction!

 June 1, 2015

https://www.truthorfiction.com/blood-red-waters-in-brazil-a-sign-of-apocalypse/

Summary of eRumor:

A viral video claims that photos of blood red waters off the shore of Brazil prove that the apocalypse is coming.

The Truth:

It’s true that the waters off the shores of Brazil turn blood red sometimes, but it’s not a sign of the apocalypse.

That rumor started with a video posted at the Christian World News YouTube channel in May 2015. The video, which had nearly 366,000 views, shows images of red waves as a narrator warns that the blood red water is a sign of the coming apocalypse:

“A friend sent me some pictures, and I wanted to get this uploaded as soon as a I could. Check this out you guys, blood red waters in Brazil this time. These pictures were taken around the week of April 27 … This is definitely a sign of the times that we are living in right now. The Lord said in Revelation chapter 16, verse four, ‘And the third angel poured out his vial upon the rivers and fountains of waters; and they became blood.’ And that is definitely what we are seeing all around the world.”

Water off the shore of Brazil turns blood red sometimes because of naturally occurring algae blooms there. The Brazilian Journal of Oceanography reports that the blood red water was first noticed in Brazil in 2001:

“Present data indicates that changes in the oceanographic conditions during the passage of a cold front were sufficient to cause the bloom dispersion. In general, the water column stability plays an important role in the red tide formation. (The algae), similar to dinoflagellates, has the ability to swim through the water column and concentrate in the surface waters causing water discoloration. Its behavior has been assumed to consist of an upward phototaxis, followed by downward migration, or dispersal, at night. This ability was clearly shown in the red water described in São Paulo, where data showed that the red water was constrained within a 30 cm thick layer.”

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Brazil Subsidiary Awarded $62 Million In U.S. Farm Aid Is Sued Over Colorado Pollution

05/27/2019

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/62-million-farm-aid-jbs-colorado-pollution-lawsuit_n_5ceb4c91e4b00356fc244a97

A lawsuit accuses JBS Swift Beef of violating federal discharge permit by dumping illegal levels of slaughterhouse waste for years.


A U.S. subsidiary of a Brazilian meatpacking company awarded $62 million in American farm subsidy funds has been hit with a lawsuit accusing it of polluting Colorado waterways.

JBS USA (also known as JBS Swift Beef) — a subsidiary of Brazil-based JBS S.A. — is accused of illegally dumping slaughterhouse waste that’s fouling the South Platte River and Lone Tree Creek near Greeley. The U.S. Justice Department is investigating JBS’ foreign parent — the largest meatpacking company in the world — for potential violations of U.S. anti-bribery laws. The billionaire brothers who own JBS S.A. confessed to bribing top Brazilian officials in a massive corruption scandal in Brazil.

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MICROBIAL CONTAMINATION OF SAND FROM MAJOR BEACHES IN FORTALEZA, CEARÁ STATE, BRAZIL

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1517-83822001000200001

ABSTRACT

The presence of faecal contamination and pathogenic microorganisms in samples of dry and wet sand collected from three major beaches in Fortaleza, Ceará State, Brazil: (Praia do Mucuripe, Praia do Futuro and Praia do Caça e Pesca), during the period of May 1999 to January 2000 was evaluated. Praia do Caça e Pesca had the highest incidence of E. coli in dry sand (56%) followed by Praia do Mucuripe (28%) and Praia do Futuro (16%). In wet sand, results were 48%, 28% and 24% for Praia do Caça e Pesca, Praia do Futuro and Praia do Mucuripe, respectively. Only two samples from Praia do Futuro, one from dry sand and another one from wet sand, were positive for Salmonella. V. parahaemolyticus was isolated from four samples from Praia do Caça e Pesca (two from dry-sand samples and two from wet-sand), one from Praia do Futuro (wet sand), and three and four from Praia do Mucuripe (wet and dry sand, respectively). Yeasts belonged to the Candida genus. Dry-sand samples presented higher yeast contaminations level than wet-sand ones. Praia do Futuro had the highest level of yeast contamination (41%), followed by Praia do Caça e Pesca (33%) and Praia do Mucuripe (26%).

-------------------


Beach clean-up study shows global scope of plastic pollution

10-10-2018

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/2018/10/greenpeace-beach-cleanup-report-highlights-ocean-plastic-problem/

What items retrieved from beaches tell us about trash.

On isolated Saint Helena in the South Atlantic, mid-way between Brazil and Namibia, Ocean Conservancy volunteers discovered “an exorbitant number” of plastic bottles on one beach, Mallos says. An audit of the brand names on the bottles revealed that none of them were sold on the island, but came from Asian countries thousands of miles away. Piecing the story together, the group concluded the bottle trash had not leaked from poor waste practices on the island, but rather more likely came from traveling fishing fleets working nearby waters.

The Ocean Conservancy has long audited the trash collected by item. For the first time in 2017, all of the top ten items retrieved were plastics, displacing glass bottles, aluminum cans, and rope that had been stalwarts on the list. The list includes cigarette butts (with plastic filters), food wrappers, bottles, bottle caps, and shopping bags.

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As A Massive Garbage Dump Closes In Brazil, Trash-Pickers Face An Uncertain Future

1-20-2018


 


The world's second-biggest garbage dump is in Brasilia. It has been growing since the 1950s, when city planners failed to factor in proper facilities for trash disposal, and now occupies the equivalent of 250 football fields.








Some 2,000 trash-pickers — known as catadores — survive by fishing out plastics, metal, cardboard and other recyclables from the dump to sell to middlemen. More than half the trash-pickers are women — often single mothers in need of cash to feed their families.


https://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2018/01/20/579105943/as-a-massive-garbage-dump-closes-in-brazil-trash-pickers-face-an-uncertain-futur

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Toxic Waste from Norwegian Hydro Threatens Amazon and Drinking Water Supply in Brazil

2018





Half state owned Norwegian aluminum company Hydro is accused of serious environmental damage in Brazil.

In addition to a leak of toxic mining debris that has contaminated several communities in Barcarena, the Norwegian giant Hydro is accused to have used a “clandestine pipeline to discharge untreated effluent”, according to Brazilian media.

The report from Health’s Ministry’s Evandro Chagas Institute reveals that heavy rains led to the overflow of several basins, including those in Hydro Alunorte’s compound around the metropolitan area of Para’s capital, located in the Amazon region, threatening the area’s drinking water supply.

The report issued last week by the Ministry notes that at least three communities in the region of the Amazon are at risk.

Samples taken by the ministry’s technicians found high levels of lead, aluminum, sodium and other substances harmful to human and animal health, wrote Rio Times.

After denying irregularities for weeks, Hydro and Para’s environmental agency admitted, in a note, the existence of the channel found by the researchers and will look in to the claims, wrote Universo Online.

But two days ago Hydro wrote: “Technical surveys by different surveillance authorities have confirmed that there has been no leakage from or rupture of red mud. Hydro cooperates with the relevant authorities and the local community.”


 https://www.tnp.no/norway/panorama/toxic-waste-from-norwegian-hydro-amazon-water-brazil



---------------

Norwegian company poisons the Amazon Rainforest and the press keeps silent

2018

The Norwegian mining company Hydro has been dumping toxic waste in Amazonian waters and refusing to pay fines, but somehow this has gone nearly unnoticed by the international press.

https://medium.com/@annacivolani/why-is-the-press-so-quiet-about-the-norwegian-company-that-consistently-poisons-the-amazon-dfa00d1ed260

--------------

Norway hits back at Brazilian president's whale hunt tweet

8-20-2019

https://www.thelocal.no/20190820/norway-hits-back-at-brazilian-presidents-whale-hunt-claims

--------------


Brazil Fines MSC Cruises R$2,505,000 for Dumping Bags of Garbage

9-20-2015

https://www.cruiselawnews.com/2015/09/articles/cruise-pollution/brazil-fines-msc-cruises-r2505000-for-dumping-bags-of-garbage/

The Instituto Brasileiro do Meio Ambiente E Dos Recursos Naturais Renováveis (Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources) (IBAMA) levied a fine of R$ 2.505 million against MSC Cruises.

Based on today’s exchange rate, the fine is approximately $635,545 in U.S. dollars.

IBAMA said that MSC Cruises released garbage into the sea during a cruise between Madeira

Island and the Port of Recife.

---------------

Bilge Dumping off the Coast of Brazil

11-8-2019

https://skytruth.org/2019/11/bilge-dumping-off-the-coast-of-brazil/


The cause of the massive oil spill plaguing Brazil’s beaches is still unknown, but monitoring reveals a potential new bilge dumping incident

We still haven’t found the cause of the massive oil spill that’s been plaguing Brazil’s beaches since early September.


---------------

Around 3,000 cases of illegal dumping of hydrocarbons in European seas are reported every year

12-3-2003

The destination of most of the more than 20 million cubic metres of oil waste produced in Europe is yet unknown.

https://eu.oceana.org/en/press-center/press-releases/around-3000-cases-illegal-dumping-hydrocarbons-european-seas-are


---------------

STRATEGIES FOR INNOVATION IN CONSTRUCTION DEMOLITION WASTE MANAGEMENT IN BRAZIL

https://www.irbnet.de/daten/iconda/CIB9698.pdf

---------------

Brazilian Government Asked To Stop Dumping Toxic Ships On South Asian Beaches

6-15-2017

https://www.shipbreakingplatform.org/press-release-brazilian-government-asked-to-stop-dumping-toxic-ships-on-south-asian-beaches/

The Brazilian CONTTMAF trade union federation and its member SINDMAR have recently criticized the shipbreaking practices of Transpetro, the oil and gas transportation subsidiary of the Brazilian petroleum corporation Petrobras, majority-owned by the State. In the last five years, more than twenty vessels owned by the oil and gas giant have been dismantled on the beaches of India and Pakistan, where shipbreaking activities endanger both workers and the environment.



In an official letter sent on 2 June 2017 to Transpetro, Severino Almeida, president of CONTTMAF and SINDMAR, expresses his serious concerns about the Petrobras’ poor end-of-life fleet management. Several of the ships that ended up in South Asia were built thanks to financing provided by the Merchant Marine Fund. In other words, public money has therefore been used to build ships that now put workers’ lives at risk and pollute the environment in developing countries.


--------------------------

North Brazil Shelf


https://www.climatehotmap.org/global-warming-locations/north-brazil-shelf.html


-------------------------


Oceans (Sea level) Recife, Brazil


https://www.climatehotmap.org/global-warming-locations/recife-brazil.html

--------------------------



--------------------------

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------------------

----------------
----------------

Section 14: Dams & Water Pollution

----------------
----------------

------------------
------------------


--------------------------



Brazil-China fund greenlights $2.4 bln in potential loans

May 9, 2018

https://www.reuters.com/article/brazil-china-investment/brazil-china-fund-greenlights-2-4-bln-in-potential-loans-idUSL4N1RI4YT



--------------------


Brazil's Petrobras to pre-pay Chinese loans, end oil supply obligation

8-14-2019

https://www.reuters.com/article/petrobras-debt/brazils-petrobras-to-pre-pay-chinese-loans-end-oil-supply-obligation-idUSE6N21601S


--------------------------


Chinese dam builder eyeing major Amazon mega-dam contract

CTG’s record of violations in other nations

2-26-2016

The China Three Gorges company arrived in Brazil almost twenty years after being founded for the purpose of building the largest hydropower plant in the world, the Three Gorges Dam, on the Yangtze river, in China.

https://news.mongabay.com/2016/02/chinese-dam-builder-eyeing-major-amazon-mega-dam-contract/



--------------------------


Brazil's mega hydro plan foreshadows China's growing impact on the Amazon


5 Oct 2017

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/oct/05/brazil-amazon-tapajos-hydrovia-scheme


--------------------------



China Opened the Three Gorges Dam, Flooding Cities; Swine Flu 2.0 | Crossroads | Joshua Philipp


Jun 30, 2020

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sdx7r3UcHzk


-------------------------



 Floods in China Reach Biblical Proportions; Why Would TikTok Spy On Americans | Crossroads | Joshua


Jul 2, 2020

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5CQY0lgvLSw


--------------------------



 China bridge guardrail crumbles under man's touch; officials warn flooding will last through summer


July 2020

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M3pCyoEFX9I


------------------------


 Bad Chinese Dams Could Kill Thousands in Malaysia

Nov 21, 2018

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bd5ZUOdJ4cU


-------------------------


Malaysia Hits Brakes on China’s Corrupt Investment

July 11, 2018


 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ThedGta_zr4



------------------------


Malaysia Warns Philippines Over China Debt | Mahathir Mohamad Warns Duterte about CCP Loans

Mar 11, 2019


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xY6FZioxlgw


--------------------------


 4/15/2020 - Coronavirus Investigation News - Race Virus 201 - Pollution Science 101 (COVID-19 & SARS-CoV-2)


https://coronavirusinvestigation.blogspot.com



--------------------------



China Overseas Dams List

https://www.internationalrivers.org/resources/china-overseas-dams-list-3611



-------------------------


In Bolsonaro’s Brazil, dams are ticking time bombs


11-5-2019

https://newint.org/features/2019/11/05/bolsanaro-brazil-dams-are-ticking-time-bombs

---------------

Photos: Haunting images show the devastating effects of a toxic mud slide in Brazil

https://qz.com/560131/photos-haunting-images-show-the-devastating-effects-of-a-toxic-mud-slide-in-brazil/

---------------

Brazil dam toxic mud reaches Atlantic via Rio Doce estuary

11-22-2015

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-34892237


A wave of toxic mud travelling down the Rio Doce river in Brazil from a collapsed dam has reached the Atlantic Ocean, amid concerns it will cause severe pollution.

The waste has travelled more than 500km (310 miles) since the dam at an iron mine collapsed two weeks ago.

Samarco, the mine owner, has tried to protect plants and animals by building barriers along the banks of the river.

Workers have dredged the river mouth to help the mud flow out to sea fast.

The contaminated mud, tested by the water management authorities, was found to contain toxic substances like mercury, arsenic, chromium and manganese at levels exceeding human consumption levels.

Samarco has insisted the sludge is harmless.


In an interview with the BBC, Andres Ruchi, director of the Marine Biology school in Santa Cruz in Espirito Santo state, said that mud could have a devastating impact on marine life when it reaches the sea.

He said the area of sea near the mouth of the Rio Doce is a feeding ground and a breeding location for many species of marine life including the threatened leatherback turtle, dolphins and whales.

"The flow of nutrients in the whole food chain in a third of the south-eastern region of Brazil and half of the Southern Atlantic will be compromised for a minimum of a 100 years," he said.

The magazine Chemistry World quotes Aloysio da Silva Ferrao Filho, a researcher at the respected Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, as saying that the impact has been severe in the river itself.

"The biodiversity of the river is completely lost, several species including endemic ones must be extinct."

Samarco has erected 9km of temporary floating barriers similar to those used at sea during oil spills in the river to try to hold back the mud from river banks and to protect flora and fauna from the mud.

One concern is that because the mud is high in iron ore and silica it will set hard as concrete when it dries out.

At the mouth of the river, the company has been using heavy equipment to remove sand banks and dredge so that the mud, when it reaches the sea, can flow out as fast as possible and be diluted quickly.

It is the fish and turtle breeding season at this time of year. Local people have been helping get fish into tanks and have been collecting turtle eggs to incubate.

In the meantime, Samarco says it is doing repairs on two other dams it uses to hold waste water which is says are at risk of collapsing.

Eleven people were killed and 12 are missing - presumed dead - in the disaster.

Samarco is owned by mining giants, Vale, from Brazil, and the Anglo-Australian company, BHP Billiton.

It has agreed to pay the Brazilian government 1bn (£170m; $260m) compensation.

The money will be used to cover the initial clean-up and to offer compensation to families.

Oil barriers were placed at the mouth of the Rio Doce to protect the vegetation from the mud before it arrives.

-----------------

Brazil's Doce River still foul eight months after dam collapse

05.07.2016

Eight months after a mining dam collapsed in southeastern Brazil, the 1.6 million people living along the Doce River are still struggling not only with health risks, but also with a crisis of public confidence.

 

 (Dredging near the town of Rio Doce shows the extent of ongoing contamination).

https://www.dw.com/en/brazils-doce-river-still-foul-eight-months-after-dam-collapse/a-19375872

-----------------

Another Deadly Dam Collapse in Brazil

1-14-2019

https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/144501/another-deadly-dam-collapse-in-brazil

For the second time in three years, Brazil faces a humanitarian and environmental disaster in the wake of a mining dam collapse.

On January 25, 2019, a retaining wall abruptly failed along the edge of a pond of mud-like waste material from a Brazilian mine. The collapse at the Córrego do Feijão mine in the southeastern state of Minas Gerais released a torrent of tailings that quickly flattened buildings, overwhelmed a bus, and swamped nearby houses. Tailings rushed through the mine, the nearby town of Brumadinho, and the Paraopeba River, a key source of drinking and irrigation water for people in the area. More than 100 people have died and hundreds of people are missing, according to multiple news reports.

------------------

 Mud from Brazil dam disaster is toxic, UN says, despite mine operator denials

Nov 2015

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/nov/26/mud-from-brazil-dam-disaster-is-toxic-un-says-despite-mine-operator-denials

The UN contradicts claims by Samarco, the operator co-owned by BHP Billiton, that the 60 million cubic metres of waste was no danger to humans

--------------

Brazil's mining tragedy: was it a preventable disaster?

Nov 2015

https://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/2015/nov/25/brazils-mining-tragedy-dam-preventable-disaster-samarco-vale-bhp-billiton

--------------

 Arsenic and mercury found in river days after Brazil dam burst

26 Nov 2015

Unacceptable levels of pollutants found at several places along Rio Doce following Brazil’s worst ever environmental disaster

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/nov/26/brazil-dam-arsenic-mercury-rio-doce-river

------------------

Arsenic occurrence in Brazil and human exposure.

2007

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17351814

Abstract

Environmental exposure to arsenic (As) in terms of public health is receiving increasing attention worldwide following cases of mass contamination in different parts of the world. However, there is a scarcity of data available on As geochemistry in Brazilian territory, despite the known occurrence of As in some of the more severely polluted areas of Brazil. The purpose of this paper is to discuss existing data on As distribution in Brazil based on recent investigations in three contaminated areas as well as results from the literature. To date, integrated studies on environmental and anthropogenic sources of As contamination have been carried out only in three areas in Brazil: (1) the Southeastern region, known as the Iron Quadrangle, where As was released into the drainage systems, soils and atmosphere as a result of gold mining; (2) the Ribeira Valley, where As occurs in Pb-Zn mine wastes and naturally in As-rich rocks and soils; (3) the Amazon region, including the Santana area, where As is associated with manganese ores mined over the last 50 years. Toxicological studies revealed that the populations were not exposed to elevated levels of As, with the As concentrations in surface water in these areas rarely exceeding 10 microg/L. Deep weathering of bedrocks along with formation of Fe/Al-enriched soils and sediments function as a chemical barrier that prevents the release of As into the water. In addition, the tropical climate results in high rates of precipitation in the northern and southeastern regions and, hence, the As contents of drinking water is diluted. Severe cases of human As exposure related to non-point pollution sources have not been reported in Brazil. However, increasing awareness of the adverse health effects of As will eventually lead to a more complete picture of the distribution of As in Brazil.


--------------------

Arsenic contamination of groundwater


 

(Groundwater arsenic contamination areas).

Argentina

The central portion of Argentina is affected by arsenic-contaminated groundwater. Specifically, the La Pampa produces water containing 4–5300 microgram per litre.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arsenic_contamination_of_groundwater

--------------------

 Dams on the Amazon River could have widespread, devastating impacts—and we keep building more of them

2017

https://www.popsci.com/environmental-damage-amazon-river-dams/

----------------

Hydroelectric Dams in the Brazilian Amazon as Sources of ‘Greenhouse’ Gases

1995

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/environmental-conservation/article/hydroelectric-dams-in-the-brazilian-amazon-as-sources-of-greenhouse-gases/B02E5246EF25F78DD96E05E9EBCC79CD

-----------------------

Brazil's hydro dams could make its greenhouse gas emissions soar

July 01, 2013

https://www.pri.org/stories/2013-07-01/brazils-hydro-dams-could-make-its-greenhouse-gas-emissions-soar

----------------

Environmental impact in Brazil

1997

https://www.partagedeseaux.info/Environmental-impact-in-Brazil

In Brazil, traditional fishermen are today confronted with problems created by, among other things, the construction of large dams and other developmental projects, water pollution by mining activities, the invasion of lakes and rivers by industrial fishing boats, and by the establishment of national parks and reserves.

----------------

What’s Up With Water – Brazil’s Water After Rupture of Mining Waste Dam, and More

Feb 4, 2019

https://www.circleofblue.org/2019/world/whats-up-with-water-brazils-water-after-rupture-of-mining-waste-dam-and-more/

------------------------

AP Explains: What are dangers of mining waste in Brazil?

1-28-2019

https://apnews.com/98cf6d47bf8547b88d12c9b151ee19ed

--------------


A dam holding back iron mining waste burst in Brazil—again

1-26-2019

https://qz.com/1534542/a-dam-holding-back-iron-mining-waste-burst-in-brazil-again/

---------------

 Santo Antônio mega-dam on Brazil’s Madeira River disrupts local lives

2018

https://news.mongabay.com/2018/12/santo-antonio-mega-dam-on-brazils-madeira-river-disrupts-local-lives/

-----------------

Viewpoint–Brazil’s Madeira River Dams: A Setback for Environmental Policy in Amazonian Development

http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol7/v7issue1/244-a7-1-15/file

-------------

Amazon dams and waterways: Brazil’s Tapajós Basin plans

2015

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4510327/

--------------

Top Scientists: Amazon's Tapajós Dam Complex "a Crisis in the Making"

2016

Leading researchers call Brazil's plan for 40+ dams in Tapajós River Basin “devastating” – a threat to Amazon ecosystems, people and global climate

https://amazonwatch.org/news/2016/1128-top-scientists-amazons-tapajos-dam-complex-a-crisis-in-the-making

---------------

Battle for the Amazon: Tapajós Basin threatened by massive development

2017

https://news.mongabay.com/2017/01/battle-for-the-amazon-tapajos-basin-threatened-by-massive-development/

---------------------------


Metal pollution in the environment of Minas Gerais State - Brazil.

2006

Abstract

Intense mining activities in Minas Gerais State - Brazil brings out tons of waste to the environment. Considerable concentrations of toxic elements penetrate the soil, ground waters and rivers. This endangers the environment quality not only in the surrounding areas but also in ichthyofauna and in more distant areas of cattle raising and agricultural activities. After seasonal floods, veterinary clinic studies have shown that most animals raised in this region are affected by symptomatologic nervous diseases, still not clearly diagnosed, which suggests intoxication. These pathologies are mostly noted after floods. Instrumental Neutron Activation Analysis was applied to determine Al, As, Au, Ba, Br, Ca, Cl, Co, Cr, Cs, Cu, Fe, Hg, K, La, Mg, Mn, Na, Nd, Rb, Sb, Sc, Sm, Th and Zn in environmental samples. The obtained results show that the water and sediment contaminated with heavy metals and toxic elements from the Das Velhas River upstream basin, the mining region, carry contamination to the ichthyofauna and farming region within a distance of approximately 400 km.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16917705

----------------------

Metal distribution in sediment cores from São Paulo State Coast, Brazil.

2011

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21440269

Abstract

Ten sediment core samples with lengths ranging from 35 to 100 cm were collected in the Baixada Santista region and analyzed to determine As, Br, Co, Cr, Cs, Fe, Rb, Sb, Ta, Th, U, Zn and rare earths (Sc, Ce, Eu, La, Lu, Nd, Sm, Tb and Yb) level concentrations using instrumental neutron activation analysis (INAA). The studied region is located in the southeastern coast of São Paulo State and is comprised of a densely urbanized area, the largest industrial complex of the country, with a predominance of petrochemical and fertilizer plants. It is also home to Brazil's most important and busiest port. The conclusions found that the As, La, Sm, Ne, Ce, Eu, Hf, Ta, Th, and U elements have a high background level in the region and that Fe and Zn were the main indicators of anthropogenic contribution in the sediments.

----------------------

Long-term uncertainties and potential risks to urban waters in Belo Horizonte

December 2010

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/228338583_Long-term_uncertainties_and_potential_risks_to_urban_waters_in_Belo_Horizonte

----------------------

Evolution in revegetation of iron-ore mines in Minas Gerais State, Brazil

http://www.fao.org/3/y2795e/y2795e04.htm

----------------------

Brazil: where the toxic river feeds communities

12-21-2015

https://www.slowfood.com/brazil-where-the-toxic-river-feeds-communities/

On November 5, the Rio Doce, in the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais, suffered the country’s worst environmental disaster, after the collapse of two tailings dams at a Brazilian iron ore mine owned by Samarco, a Brazilian company founded in 1977 and based in Belo Horizonte.

----------------------

Water quality modeling at Poti river in Teresina (Piauí, Brazil).

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?pid=S1413-41522018000100003&script=sci_abstract

The uncontrolled growth of Piauí’s capital, in Brazil, characterized mainly by the occupation of the banks of the river Poti and the existence of illegal connections of raw sewage in rainwater drainage pipes, has contributed significantly to water pollution in the basin of Parnaíba river (semiarid region of Brazil). This research aims at performing the mathematical modeling of water quality in an area of 36.8 km of the Poti river, based on the QUAL-UFMG platform. The research is presented as the first study involving modeling of water quality in said river. Modeled components were: dissolved oxygen (DO), biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and thermotolerant coliforms (TC). The results obtained from field measurements indicated nonconformities of the parameter TC with respect to CONAMA Resolution nº 357/2005. The calibration of the decay coefficients for each parameter resulted in mean deviations between measured and modeled data of up to 20% and Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency coefficients higher than 0.75, which indicate that the QUAL-UFMG can be used as a basis for predicting the water quality in rivers of semiarid areas. The calibrated model was also compared to field data obtained from the literature. Finally, model simulations were performed for different flow scenarios (minimum and maximum), with consistent results that can be used for the management of the Piauí state water resources.


---------------------

Cytotoxicity and genotoxicity of Guaribas river water (Piauí, Brazil), influenced by anthropogenic action.

Abstract

In general, tropical rivers have a great impact on human activities. Bioaccumulation of toxins is a worldwide problem nowadays and has been, historically, overlooked by the supervisory authorities. This study evaluated cytogenotoxic effects of Guaribas river (a Brazilian river) water during dry and rainy seasons of 2014 by using the Allium cepa test system. The toxicogenetic variables, including root growth, mitotic index, and chromosomal aberrations, were analyzed in meristematic cells of A. cepa exposed to water samples taken from the up-, within, and downstream of the city Picos (state: Piauí). The physical-chemical parameters were also analyzed to explain water quality and possible anthropogenic action. Additionally, the presence of heavy metals was also analyzed to explain water quality and possible damaging effects on eukaryotic cells. The results suggest that the river water exerted cytotoxic, mutagenic, and genotoxic effects, regardless of the seasons. In addition, Guaribas river presented physico-chemical values outside the Brazilian laws, which can be a characteristic of human pollution (domestic sewage, industrial, and local agriculture). The genetic damage was positively correlated with higher levels of heavy metals. The pollution of the Guaribas river water may link to the chemical contamination, including the action of heavy metals and their impacts on genetic instability in the aquatic ecosystem. In conclusion, necessary steps should be taken into account for further toxicogenetic studies of the Guaribas river water, as it has an influence in human health of the same region of Brazil.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28555439

----------------------

Genesis of sandstone-derived soils in the Cerrado of the Piauí State, Brazil

2019

http://www.ambi-agua.net/seer/index.php/ambi-agua/article/view/2127

Abstract

This study characterized the morphological, physical and chemical attributes of sandstone-derived soils at the Cerrado of the Piauí State, Brazil, in order to identify evolutionary standards. The study was carried out with five representative soil profiles identified as P1-RY (Typical Flavic Psychotic Neosol - Aquents), P2-PA (Typical Dystrophic Yellow Argisol - Alfisol), P3-RL (Fragmentary Litholic Distrophic Neosol - Psammenit), P4-RQ (Typical Ortic Quartzenetic Neosol - Orthents) and P5-PV (Typical Dystrophic Red Argisol - Ultisol). Soil samples were submitted laboratory analysis described morphologically. In general, the soils presented high sand content, low pH, low content of exchangeable bases and low cation exchange capacity (CEC). Organic matter governed the CEC in most cases, suggesting dependence of organic matter in the supply of charges. These soils showed a low degree of weathering, but with iron of high crystallinity. Thus, the relief and the parent material are the major important soil-forming factors at the Cerrado of the Piauí State. Moreover, these soils are young, with the soils from the Piauí Formation being more evolved. However, the sandstones from the Canindé Group apparently are providing lithological secondary minerals for the soil.

----------------------

Burden of disease in Brazil, 1990–2016: a systematic subnational analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2016

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(18)31221-2/fulltext

----------------------

Cytotoxicity and genotoxicity of Guaribas river water (Piauí, Brazil), influenced by anthropogenic action

2016

https://search.proquest.com/openview/3400d97aee0588ddef49c4dc6fe63190/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=54151


----------------------

Pollutants of the Guaribas river water and their toxicogenic effects

Mar. 1, 2019

https://go.gale.com/ps/anonymous?id=GALE%7CA580262167&sid=googleScholar&v=2.1&it=r&linkaccess=abs&issn=20084935&p=AONE&sw=w


 Introduction

Aquatic environments that often serve as temporary or final receptors of a wide variety of contaminants may consequently contaminate the entire watershed (Tsangaris et al. 2011; Klobucar et al. 2012). Many of these toxic compounds released into the water are cytotogenotoxic in nature, therefore, may affect living organisms in the ecosystem through DNA damage (Akinboro et al. 2011). The presence of contaminating agents in our environment is responsible for many diseases in human, including cancer (Grzesiuk et al. 2018). Thus, it is extremely important to assess toxicological effects of the aquatic system in the viewpoint of environmental monitoring and risk assessment (Ansari et al. 2011; Kern et al. 2015).

Using fish, through the micronucleus (MN) test, is a popular genetic model to monitor pollutants and toxic contaminants in an aquatic environment (Hoshina et al. 2008). According to Cavas and Ergene-Gozukara (2005a, b), the species Oreochromis niloticus (tilapia) is an excellent test system for this purpose. This species is commonly found in estuaries around the world, and is recognized for its fast response to environmental changes (Jha 2004).

----------------------

The influence of heavy metals on toxicogenetic damage in a Brazilian tropical river

2017

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0045653517311554

----------------------

Metal(oid)s contamination in rural and urban vegetable gardens of Teresina (Brazil)

https://www.actahort.org/books/1189/1189_92.htm

----------------------

Brazil Sets Up an Innovative Model to Reverse Land Degradation

https://www.indepthnews.net/index.php/the-world/latin-america-the-caribbean/2157-brazil-sets-up-an-innovative-model-to-reverse-land-degradation

-------------------


Evidence of transboundary mercury and other pollutants in the Puyango-Tumbes River basin, Ecuador–Peru

2018

https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2018/em/c7em00504k/unauth#!divAbstract

------------------

An investigation of mercury sources in the Puyango-Tumbes River: Using stable Hg isotopes to characterize transboundary Hg pollution.

2018

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29609178

-----------------

Transboundary Water Management of the Amazon Basin

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/233228236_Transboundary_Water_Management_of_the_Amazon_Basin

------------------

THE SHARED MANAGEMENT OF TRANSBOUNDARY WATERS, BRAZIL AND COLOMBIA

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?pid=S1984-22012015000200099&script=sci_arttext&tlng=en

------------------

IAEA Impact: Brazil and Its Neighbours Work to Protect One of the World's Largest Groundwater Reservoirs

2015

https://www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/iaea-impact-brazil-and-its-neighbours-work-protect-one-worlds-largest-groundwater-reservoirs

----------------------

Is land speculation helping destroy Brazil’s “birthplace of waters”?


by Jeff Conant, senior international forests program manager

An interview with Fabio Pitta of the Brazilian Network for Social Justice and Human Rights


 

(Giant chain pulled between tractors to deforest land owned by TIAA in Piaui State).



(Dried up river in the Cerrado. Photo via FIAN).


https://foe.org/land-speculation-helping-destroy-brazils-birthplace-waters/

----------------------

Mapping and assessment of protection of mangrove habitats in Brazil

https://panamjas.org/pdf_artigos/PANAMJAS_5(4)_546-556.pdf

---------------------

Changing tide for the Rio Doce: bringing a river back to life

19.03.2018







https://www.iucn.org/crossroads-blog/201803/changing-tide-rio-doce-bringing-river-back-life

---------------------

Genotoxicity effects on Geophagus brasiliensis fish exposed to Doce River water after the environmental disaster in the city of Mariana, MG, Brazil

2018

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?pid=S1519-69842019000400659&script=sci_arttext&tlng=en

---------------------

Pictures: Toxic Foam Chokes Brazil River

2010




An outbreak of toxic foam pollution in Brazil's Tietê River has been made worse by the driest August in decades, experts say.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/9/100921-toxic-foam-river-brazil-science-environment-pictures/

---------------------

Polluted Tiete River in Brazil

2015

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/928861.shtml

--------------------

São Paulo’s Tietê River’s Polluted Stretch Increases 33 Percent Over Last Year

9-20-2019

On the eve of Tietê Day, celebrated on September 22nd, the study shows that the river's environmental quality is inappropriate for use, with bad or very water quality over some 163 kilometers, corresponding to 28.3 percent of the river monitored by the organization.

https://riotimesonline.com/brazil-news/sao-paulo/politics-sao-paulo/tiete-polluted-stretch-increases-33-percent-and-is-163-kilometers-long/

---------------------

A Willing Explorer of São Paulo’s Polluted Rivers

DEC. 14, 2012

https://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/15/world/americas/a-diver-sifts-through-sao-paulos-polluted-rivers.html

---------------------

Heavy metal distribution in recent sediments along the Tietê River basin (São Pauro, Brazil)

https://oatao.univ-toulouse.fr/5436/1/Mortatti_5436.pdf

-----------------------

 The Paraguay-Paraná Hidrovía: Protecting the Pantanal with Lessons from the Past: Large-scale channelization of the northern Paraguay-Paraná seems to be on hold, but an ongoing multitude of smaller-scale activities may turn the Pantanal into the next example of the “tyranny of small decisions”

April 2001

https://academic.oup.com/bioscience/article/51/4/301/247105

-----------------------

Alismatales from the upper and middle Araguaia river basin (Brazil)

2004

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-84042004000300005

------------------------

Occurrence of Boto-do-Araguaia (Inia araguaiaensis) in a Region of the Araguaia River, Brazil, Documented for an Environmental Impact Study for a Hydroelectric Dam

 12-15-2017

https://go.gale.com/ps/anonymous?id=GALE%7CA509163662&sid=googleScholar&v=2.1&it=r&linkaccess=fulltext&issn=01675427&p=AONE&sw=w

------------------------

The fishing productivity of the Araguaia river, Tocantins, Brazil

2019

http://www.ajer.org/papers/Vol-8-issue-2/ZZH0802248252.pdf

-----------------------

Projections of hydrology in the Tocantins-Araguaia Basin, Brazil: uncertainty assessment using the CMIP5 ensemble

https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1469358/3/Brierley_1469358.pdf

-----------------------

TOCANTINS RIVER, BRAZIL. Vicinity Maraba, Amazon. This river is heavily polluted with mercury used by miners to extract gold from sediment. Mining activities also increase turbidity which kills fish.

http://www.hardrainproject.com/hrpl?n=6374

-----------------------

 The environmental impacts of the tucuri dam on the middle and lower tocantins river basin, Brazil

1987

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/rrr.3450010106

Like many developing country environmental impact assessments, that carried out at Tucuruí was begun after the construction site had been selected and construction had begun. Tucuruí impact studies have tended to concentrate on the environmental and socioeconomic impacts generated in the vicinity of the dam and reservoir; downstream impacts have received less attention but are already apparent. Major impacts identified include reservoir siltation, disruption of fisheries and agriculture (especially floodland cultivation) downstream, and human disease problems.

-----------------------


Projections of hydrology in the Tocantins-Araguaia Basin, Brazil: uncertainty assessment using the CMIP5 ensemble

2014

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/02626667.2015.1057513

-----------------------

Tucuruí Dam and Amazon/Tocantins River Basin - Brazil case study

11-1-2000

https://www.internationalrivers.org/resources/tucuru%C3%AD-dam-and-amazon-tocantins-river-basin-brazil-case-study-2554

------------------------

Response of the river discharge in the Tocantins River Basin, Brazil, to environmental changes and the associated effects on the energy potential

2019

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10113-018-1396-5


------------------------

The environmental impacts of the tucuri dam on the middle and lower tocantins river basin, Brazil

1987

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/rrr.3450010106

Like many developing country environmental impact assessments, that carried out at Tucuruí was begun after the construction site had been selected and construction had begun. Tucuruí impact studies have tended to concentrate on the environmental and socioeconomic impacts generated in the vicinity of the dam and reservoir; downstream impacts have received less attention but are already apparent. Major impacts identified include reservoir siltation, disruption of fisheries and agriculture (especially floodland cultivation) downstream, and human disease problems.

------------------------

Alismatales from the upper and middle Araguaia river basin (Brazil)

2004

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-84042004000300005

------------------------

The Araguaia River as an Important Biogeographical Divide for Didelphid Marsupials in Central Brazil

2015

https://academic.oup.com/jhered/article/106/5/593/2961883

------------------------

The fishing productivity of the Araguaia river, Tocantins, Brazil

2019

http://www.ajer.org/papers/Vol-8-issue-2/ZZH0802248252.pdf

-----------------------

Projections of hydrology in the Tocantins-Araguaia Basin, Brazil: uncertainty assessment using the CMIP5 ensemble

https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1469358/3/Brierley_1469358.pdf

-----------------------

TOCANTINS RIVER, BRAZIL. Vicinity Maraba, Amazon. This river is heavily polluted with mercury used by miners to extract gold from sediment. Mining activities also increase turbidity which kills fish.

http://www.hardrainproject.com/hrpl?n=6374

-----------------------

Description of a new catfish genus (Siluriformes, Loricariidae) from the Tocantins River basin in central Brazil, with comments on the historical zoogeography of the new taxon

2016

https://zookeys.pensoft.net/article/7400/

-----------------------

New cave catfish threatened by deforestation, mining, pollution

March 2017

https://news.mongabay.com/2017/03/new-cave-catfish-threatened-by-deforestation-mining-pollution/

-----------------------

Madeira River dams may spell doom for Amazon’s marathon catfish: Studies

March 2019

https://news.mongabay.com/2019/03/brazil-madeira-river-dams-may-spell-doom-for-amazons-marathon-catfish-studies/

-----------------------

The largest fish in the world’s biggest river: Genetic connectivity and conservation of Arapaima gigas in the Amazon and Araguaia-Tocantins drainages

August 16, 2019

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0220882


-----------------------

Whole Genome Sequencing of the Pirarucu (Arapaima gigas) Supports Independent Emergence of Major Teleost Clades



https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6143160/


Arapaima gigas belongs to the superorder Osteoglossomorpha of bony-tongued fishes whose tongue contains sharp bony teeth for disabling and shredding preys (Sanford and Lauder 1990; Burnie and Wilson 2001). Together with Elopomorpha (eels and tarpons) and Clupeocephala (most of extant fish species), the Osteoglossomorpha comprises one of the three main teleosts groups whose phylogenetic position has been controversial (Le et al. 1993; Inoue et al. 2003; Near et al. 2012; Betancur-R 2013; Faircloth et al. 2013; Chen et al. 2015; Hughes et al. 2018). Fossil records and some early molecular studies, including a recent comprehensive analysis of >300 Actinopterygii species (Hughes et al. 2018), placed Osteoglossomorpha as the oldest teleost group (Greenwood 1970; Inoue et al. 2003), while other studies placed Elopomorpha as the most ancestral one (Near et al. 2012; Betancur-R 2013; Faircloth et al. 2013). Recently, a phylogenetic study based on whole genome sequencing of the bony-tongued Asian arowana (Scleropages formosus) suggested that the branching of Elopomorpha and Osteoglossomorpha occurred almost simultaneously, placing them as sister lineages of Clupeocephala (Bian 2016). Within this context, the genome of the Pirarucu provides new insights to study the evolutionary history of teleosts as well as providing useful information for sustainable exploration of this giant Amazon fish. Here, we present the first whole genome assembly, gene annotation, and phylogenomic inference of the Pirarucu which should facilitate the molecular characterization and conservation of this economically important fish species.


-----------------------

Fish Consumption, Fish Lore, and Mercury Pollution—Risk Communication for the Madeira River People

2000

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0013935100940350

-----------------------


Mercury Contamination in the Madeira River, Amazon-Hg Inputs to the Environment

1989

https://www.jstor.org/stable/2388449?seq=1

-----------------------

Impacts of Brazil's Madeira River Dams: Unlearned lessons for hydroelectric development in Amazonia

Jan 2013

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/259471383_Impacts_of_Brazil's_Madeira_River_Dams_Unlearned_lessons_for_hydroelectric_development_in_Amazonia

-----------------------

The Madeira River Complex: Socio-Environmental Impact in Bolivian Amazonia and Social Resistance

2009

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/10455750903215712

-----------------------

Will mega-dams destroy the Amazon?

2012

150 new dams may destroy connectivity of the Amazon River to the Andes and drive deforestation.

https://news.mongabay.com/2012/04/will-mega-dams-destroy-the-amazon/

------------------------

Belo Monte Dam: A spearhead for Brazil’s dam-building attack on the Amazon?

2012

https://news.mongabay.com/2012/03/belo-monte-dam-a-spearhead-for-brazils-dam-building-attack-on-the-amazon/

------------------------

Brazil’s plan to cut protected areas for dams faces constitutional challenge

17 February 2012

https://news.mongabay.com/2012/02/brazils-plan-to-cut-protected-areas-for-dams-faces-constitutional-challenge/

------------------------

Amazon river ecosystems being rapidly degraded, but remain neglected by conservation efforts

2013











The main drivers of wetland degradation for which basin-wide data are available, and the protected area network. Courtesy of Castello et al (2013).


https://news.mongabay.com/2013/02/amazon-river-ecosystems-being-rapidly-degraded-but-remain-neglected-by-conservation-efforts/


------------------------

State of the Amazon: Freshwater Connectivity and Ecosystem Health

http://whrc.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/MacedoetalWWFReport.15.pdf

------------------------

Are Brazil’s Dams to Blame for Record Floods in Bolivia?

3/31/2014

https://nacla.org/blog/2014/3/31/are-brazil%25E2%2580%2599s-dams-blame-record-floods-bolivia

-----------------------

Record floods in Brazil bring chaos to Amazon towns

2014

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-28123680

-----------------------

Mercury Pollution in the Upper Beni River, -- Amazonian Basin:’ Bolivia

https://horizon.documentation.ird.fr/exl-doc/pleins_textes/pleins_textes_7/b_fdi_51-52/010019126.pdf

-----------------------

An overview of mercury contamination research in the Amazon basin with an emphasis on Brazil

https://www.scielosp.org/article/csp/2008.v24n7/1479-1492/

------------------------

The Madeira Dams: Impacts and Actions in Bolivian Territory

2009

https://amazonwatch.org/news/2009/0904-the-madeira-dams-impacts-and-actions-in-bolivian-territory

-----------------------

How Chile Can Avoid Brazil's Fate

BY Oliver Stuenkel | December 13, 2019

Chile's challenges are more than skin deep. As things stand, the political establishment will be hard-pressed to face them.

https://www.americasquarterly.org/content/chile-protests-brazil-2013

-----------------------


Jirau and Santo Antonio Dams on Madeira River, Brazil

https://ejatlas.org/conflict/jirau-and-santo-antonio-dams-on-madeira-river-brazil

-----------------------

Santo Antônio mega-dam on Brazil’s Madeira River disrupts local lives

2018

https://news.mongabay.com/2018/12/santo-antonio-mega-dam-on-brazils-madeira-river-disrupts-local-lives/

------------------------

Viewpoint–Brazil’s Madeira River Dams: A Setback for Environmental Policy in Amazonian Development

http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/articles/vol7/v7issue1/244-a7-1-15/file

-----------------------

Decline of fine suspended sediments in the Madeira River Basin (2003–2017)

March 2019

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/331708857_Decline_of_fine_suspended_sediments_in_the_Madeira_River_Basin_2003-2017

Abstract

The Madeira River is the second largest Amazon tributary, contributing up to 50% of the Amazon River’s sediment load. The Madeira has significant hydropower potential, which has started to be used by the Madeira Hydroelectric Complex (MHC), with two large dams along the middle stretch of the river. In this study, fine suspended sediment concentration (FSC) data were assessed downstream of the MHC at the Porto Velho gauging station and at the outlet of each tributary (Beni and Mamoré Rivers, upstream from the MHC), from 2003 to 2017. When comparing the pre-MHC (2003–2008) and post-MHC (2015–2017) periods, a 36% decrease in FSC was observed in the Beni River during the peak months of sediment load (December–March). At Porto Velho, a reduction of 30% was found, which responds to the Upper Madeira Basin and hydroelectric regulation. Concerning water discharge, no significant change occurred, indicating that a lower peak FSC cannot be explained by changes in the peak discharge months. However, lower FSCs are associated with a downward break in the overall time series registered at the outlet of the major sediment supplier—the Beni River—during 2010.

-------------------------

Diversity and Abundance of Fish Larvae Drifting in the Madeira River, Amazon Basin: Sampling Methods Comparison

2014

https://www.intechopen.com/books/biodiversity-the-dynamic-balance-of-the-planet/diversity-and-abundance-of-fish-larvae-drifting-in-the-madeira-river-amazon-basin-sampling-methods-c

-----------------------

Amazon Dams Keep the Lights On But Could Hurt Fish, Forests

2015

A surge in hydroelectric power could displace the iconic region’s indigenous peoples and resources.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2015/04/150419-amazon-dams-hydroelectric-deforestation-rivers-brazil-peru/

----------------------

Tragic History Repeats Itself on Brazil’s Madeira River

2009

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/tragic-history-repeats-it_b_242869

-----------------------

Brazilian and Australian researchers estimate the impact of gold panning on the Madeira River

https://smartwatermagazine.com/news/agencia-fapesp/brazilian-and-australian-researchers-estimate-impact-gold-panning-madeira-river

Artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) in the north region of Brazil, especially alluvial gold panning, has declined since 1985 but is still responsible for pollution by toxic metals in and near the Madeira River, which is the largest tributary of the Amazon River.

A study conducted by researchers at São Paulo State University (UNESP) in Rio Claro, Brazil, in partnership with colleagues at Queensland University of Technology in Australia found relatively high levels of mercury from gold panning that were accumulated in sediment in lakes in the Madeira Basin.


------------------------

Mercury in the environment and riverside population in the Madeira River Basin, Amazon, Brazil

http://philip.inpa.gov.br/publ_livres/Dossie/Mad/Outros%20documentos/bastos%20et%20al_2006_Stoten.pdf

------------------------

Mercury accumulation in sediment and fish from rivers affected by alluvial gold mining in the Brazilian Madeira River basin, Amazon

1994

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF00546279

------------------------

Spatial segregation between Chalceus guaporensis and Chalceus epakros (Osteichthyes: Characiformes) in the Madeira River, Amazon Basin

2018

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0044-59672018000300239

-------------------------


The Tiete, Sao Paulo State's main river, is filtered by dam reservoirs

2019

https://phys.org/news/2019-04-tiete-sao-paulo-state-main.html

----------------------

Case Study VI* - The Upper Tietê Basin, Brazil

https://www.who.int/water_sanitation_health/resourcesquality/wpccasestudy6.pdf

----------------------

Fish community alterations due to pollution and damming in Tietê and Paranapanema rivers (Brazil)

January 2003

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/rra.697

----------------------

Management of phosphorus in water: case study of the Tietê River, Brazil

2017

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/321262066_Management_of_phosphorus_in_water_Case_study_of_the_Tiete_River_Brazil/fulltext/5a177e53aca272df0808b542/Management-of-phosphorus-in-water-Case-study-of-the-Tiete-River-Brazil.pdf

----------------------

The upper reached ichthyofauna of the Tietê River, São Paulo, Brazil: aspects of their diversity and conservation

2006

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10531-004-1460-y

---------------------

Explaining Brazil #44: How Sao Paulo Killed its Rivers

2019

https://brazilian.report/podcast/2019/01/23/sao-paulo-killed-rivers/

----------------------


Photojournalist’s Notebook: São Paulo’s Wastewater

 2019

https://www.circleofblue.org/2019/world/photojournalists-notebook-sao-paulos-wastewater/

----------------------

Urban Sewage in Brazil: Drivers of and Obstacles to Wastewater Treatment and Reuse Governing the Water-Energy-Food Nexus Series

https://www.die-gdi.de/uploads/media/DP_26.2016.pdf

----------------------

How São Paulo will clean up the Pinheiros river

8-19-2019

https://www.bnamericas.com/en/news/how-sao-paulo-will-clean-up-the-pinheiros-river

----------------------

The Amazon effect: how deforestation is starving São Paulo of water

2017

A drought two years ago triggered fighting, looting and official ‘states of calamity’ across the metropolis, with the army preparing to send in troops. Now, new warnings suggest it could happen again – and point to a surprising culprit

https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2017/nov/28/sao-paulo-water-amazon-deforestation

------------------------

 Paraná River Basin

https://www.itaipu.gov.br/en/energy/parana-river-basin


----------------------

POLLUTION OF NATURAL WATER SOURCES IN AMAZONIA: SOURCES, RISKS AND CONSEQUENCES

https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/9d63/3693987dbf890bac1a8e3f5e7d444ae73dc5.pdf

-----------------------

An Inentory of Brazilian Wetlands

https://portals.iucn.org/library/sites/library/files/documents/WTL-014.pdf

-----------------------

Amazonian freshwater habitats experiencing environmental and socioeconomic threats affecting subsistence fisheries

2015

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4510326/

-----------------------

Restricted-Range Fishes and the Conservation of Brazilian Freshwaters

2010

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0011390


------------------------

José Bueno: Discovering rivers hidden in the concrete jungle

‘Rios and Ruas’ finds unpolluted springs underneath the largest city in Latin America. Believe it or not, they exist!

https://believe.earth/en/jose-bueno-discovering-rivers-hidden-in-the-concrete-jungle/

----------------------

Nestle agrees to sell Brazilian water brands to local company

2018

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-nestle-brazil-divestiture/nestle-agrees-to-sell-brazilian-water-brands-to-local-company-idUSKBN1H429C

----------------------


Lawsuit Seeks To Stop Nestlé From Sucking Water Out Of Drought-Plagued California

2015

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/lawsuit-nestle-water-california_n_561ea2a1e4b050c6c4a3e900

It’s simply not OK to extract and profit from local waters during a drought, says everyone but Nestlé and the Forest Service.


----------------------

Nestlé water bottling operations raise fears about future water shortages in Ontario

3-27-2019

The bottled water giant's operations abroad are drying up local aquifers and forcing communities to pipe in water from neighbouring towns

https://nowtoronto.com/news/nestle-world-water-day-doug-ford-ontario/

----------------------

Why Nestle is one of the most hated companies in the world

2015

https://www.zmescience.com/science/nestle-company-pollution-children/

Pollution

As with any “respectable” large company, Nestle has been involved in several incidents regarding pollution. A 1997 report found that in the UK, over a 12 month period, water pollution limits were breached 2,152 times in 830 locations by companies that included Cabdury and Nestle. But again, the situation in China was much worse.

While people in the US and Europe are slowly becoming more environmentally concerned and some are opting for more sustainable sources of water, Nestle has moved to another market – Asia. Alongside companies such as Kraft or Shell, Nestle made several environmental violations.

Nestle Sources Shanghai Ltd’s bottled water manufacturing plant also made the list for starting operation before its wastewater treatment facilities had passed an environmental impact assessment.

    “These are only some of the water pollution violations committed by multinational companies in China, since our website has yet to cover information about air and solid waste pollution,” said Ma Jun, director of the Institute of Public & Environmental Affairs. “The parent companies in their home countries are models for environmental protection. But they have slackened their efforts in China.”

Another article claims that Nestle capitalizes on China’s already-polluted waters to make a good profit, while Corporate Watch highlights the fact that Nestle continues to extract water illegally from Brazil for their Perrier brand. Although Nestlé lost the legal action, pumping continues as it gets through the appeal procedures, something which can take ten years or more.

----------------------

The fight to stop Nestlé from taking America's water to sell in plastic bottles

Oct 2019

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/oct/29/the-fight-over-water-how-nestle-dries-up-us-creeks-to-sell-water-in-plastic-bottles

Meanwhile, Maine’s regulatory apparatus is stacked with former Nestlé employees or contractors. The Maine Public Utilities Commission was set to rule on the Fryeburg water deal in 2013 when it was revealed the three commissioners considering the case included a former Nestlé lobbyist, attorney, and consultant. Former governor Paul LePage last year appointed a Nestlé manager to the state’s environmental protection board, while former Nestlé lobbyist Patricia Aho previously ran the state’s department of environmental protection.

According to Food and Water Watch, Nestlé or its lobbyists donated $634,000 to Maine politicians between 2001 and 2012.

“They’re in bed together,” Swinton said.

Such strategies are part of Nestlé’s playbook. In Michigan, where the company is pumping 1,100 gallons per minute across several wells, it paid for new ambulances and fireworks for economically struggling communities. Evart public schools’ superintendent Howard Hyde said in 2005 that he was “tickled” by Nestlé funding new baseball diamonds for the district’s baseball team.

----------------------

While Flint drinks poison, Nestlé is pumping 200 gallons of fresh water out of Michigan every minute

https://actions.sumofus.org/a/while-flint-drinks-poison-nestle-is-pumping-out-200-gallons-of-fresh-water-every-minute

----------------------

  Nestlé plan to take 1.1m gallons of water a day from natural springs sparks outcry

Aug 2019

Opponents fighting to stop the project say the fragile river cannot sustain such a large draw


https://www.theguardian.com/business/2019/aug/26/nestle-suwannee-river-ginnie-springs-plan-permit

The crystal blue waters of Ginnie Springs have long been treasured among the string of pearls that line Florida’s picturesque Santa Fe River, a playground for water sports enthusiasts and an ecologically critical haven for the numerous species of turtles that nest on its banks.

Soon, however, it is feared there could be substantially less water flowing through, if a plan by the food and beverage giant Nestlé wins approval.

In a controversial move that has outraged environmentalists and also raised questions with authorities responsible for the health and vitality of the river, the company is seeking permission to take more than 1.1m gallons a day from the natural springs to sell back to the public as bottled water.

Opponents say the fragile river, which is already officially deemed to be “in recovery” by the Suwannee River water management district after years of earlier overpumping, cannot sustain such a large draw – a claim Nestlé vehemently denies. Critics are fighting to stop the project as environmentally harmful and against the public interest.

Meanwhile, Nestlé, which produces its popular Zephyrhills and Pure Life brands with water extracted from similar natural springs in Florida, has spent millions of dollars this year buying and upgrading a water bottling plant at nearby High Springs in expectation of permission being granted.

----------------------

Stop Nestlé's Theft of Six Nations Water!

https://www.thepetitionsite.com/721/655/050/stop-nestl%C3%A9s-theft-of-six-nations-water/

----------------------

Africa: trapped in water privatization

2011

https://newint.org/blog/majority/2011/06/20/africa-water-privatization

‘Nestlé is the global leader in the exploitation of water across the globe. It has 67 bottling factories and sells in more than 130 countries. In Pakistan, Nestlé, the world leader in bottled water, invented a “blue-print factory” that could be shipped to any location in the world. It chose Pakistan for a number of reasons, one of which is that it is the only country in the region that has an unregulated groundwater sector, meaning that anyone can simply dig a hole and extract as much water as they want without paying a penny. The Pure Life water has been produced in Pakistan, Asia, Africa and South America and is marketed as “capturing nature in its purest form”. In short, Nestlé now owns and distributes “nature” on every continent.’ (New Internationalist)

----------------------

Brazilian Water Protection a $100 Million Market?

2010

With conservation cheaper than cleanup, governments are paying people to protect water supplies at the source

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/6/100604-brazil-watershed-protection/

----------------------

Settlement Ends Nestlé’s Expired 'Zombie' Permit to Siphon Water From San Bernardino National Forest


2018


https://www.ecowatch.com/nestle-water-san-bernardino-2575958681.html


Federal officials and conservation groups reached an agreement Wednesday that will finally end Nestlé Corp.'s ability to rely on a permit that expired 30 years ago to siphon water from the San Bernardino National Forest for its massive bottled-water operation. The company's diversion has severely reduced water in spring-fed Strawberry Creek, which forest wildlife and plants need to survive.

----------------------

French town of Vittel suffering water shortages as Nestle accused of 'overusing' resources

2018

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2018/04/26/french-town-vittel-suffering-water-shortages-nestle-accused/

----------------------


'The river is dead': is a mine polluting the water of Brazil's Xikrin tribe?

2018

Federal courts are battling to shut down a nickel mining plant said to be contaminating the Cateté river – a charge the company denies

https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2018/may/15/brazil-xikrin-catete-river-amazon


----------------------

Ten towns hit by river pollution from Brazil dam disaster

1-13-2019

https://phys.org/news/2019-02-ten-towns-river-pollution-brazil.html

----------------------

Seasonal variations, metal distribution and water quality in the Todos os Santos River, Southeastern Brazil: a multivariate analysis

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0001-37652018000602701

----------------------


Influence of water quality on diversity and composition of fungal communities in a tropical river

2018

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-33162-y

----------------------

Deviation of the Sao Francisco River, Brazil

Name of conflict:

    Deviation of the Sao Francisco River, Brazil

Country:
    Brazil


https://ejatlas.org/conflict/deviation-of-the-sao-francisco-river-brazil

RIO DE JANEIRO — A torrent of muddy mining waste unleashed by a dam breach that killed at least 84 people in southeastern Brazil is now heading down a small river with high concentrations of iron oxide, threatening to contaminate a much larger river that provides drinking water to communities in five of the country’s 26 states.

The release of the muddy waste has already turned the normally greenish water of the Parapoeba River brown about 11 miles (18 kilometers) downstream from the southeastern city of Brumadhinho, where the broken dam is.

The chief of an indigenous community said Tuesday that Brazilian environmental agents warned his community to stop fishing in the river, bathing in it and using its water for the plants they cultivate as food.

The Parapoeba flows into the much larger Sao Francisco River, which provides drinking and irrigation water to hundreds of municipalities and larger cities such as Petrolina, in the state of Pernambuco, 1,400 kilometers (870 miles) from Brumadhino, which is in Minas Gerais state.

As grieving relatives of the dead bury family members and searchers continue looking for 276 people who are missing, Brazilian authorities and companies involved with river water management are trying to figure out how to prevent the contamination.

Their main focus is the Retiro Baixo hydroelectric dam and plant complex about 186 miles (300 kilometers) from Brumadinho. Officials and environmentalists hope the dam’s reservoirs can be used to isolate the muck so it can be cleaned before that water is released to head farther downstream to the Sao Francisco River...

----------------------

Brazilian actor Domingos Montagner drowns in river near set of TV show

2016

Witnesses thought he was being filmed so initially did not try to help him

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/domingos-montagner-death-brazil-actor-drowns-river-tv-show-velho-chico-a7311746.html

---------------------

WATER QUALITY EVALUATION OF THE LOWER SÃO FRANCISCORIVER, SERGIPE, BRAZIL

https://iwra.org/member/congress/resource/PAP00-4888.pdf

----------------------

Reappearance of matrinxã Brycon orthotaenia(Characiformes: Bryconidae) in the lower São Francisco river, Brazil

http://www.bioflux.com.ro/docs/2016.949-953.pdf

----------------------

Genotoxic effects of water from São Francisco River, Brazil, in Astyanax paranae.

2014

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24849712

----------------------

SÃO FRANCISCO RIVER BASIN Integrated Management of Land Based Activitiesin the São Francisco River Basin

http://www.oas.org/en/sedi/dsd/IWRM/Past_Projects/Documents/Sao_Francisco_Brochure.pdf


----------------------

Challenge and response in the São Francisco River Basin

2014

https://iwaponline.com/wp/article-abstract/16/S1/153/20180/Challenge-and-response-in-the-Sao-Francisco-River?redirectedFrom=fulltext

----------------------

Suspended sediment fluxes in the large river basins of Brazil

2005

https://iahs.info/uploads/dms/13042.48%20355-363%20S11-19%20Werneck%20et%20al.pdf

----------------------

Economic impacts of regional water scarcity in the São Francisco River Basin, Brazil: an application of a linked hydro-economic model

2011

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/environment-and-development-economics/article/economic-impacts-of-regional-water-scarcity-in-the-sao-francisco-river-basin-brazil-an-application-of-a-linked-hydroeconomic-model/0CD7D172C7BF71D712297F2FF37CF28C

----------------------

Inter-annual variability on the water quality in the Lower São Francisco River (NE-Brazil)

http://www.ablimno.org.br/acta/pdf/v28/acta28n105.pdf

----------------------

Contaminated Sludge Rushes toward Drinking Water, Irrigation Supplies in Five Brazil States

1-30-2019

https://www.environmentalleader.com/2019/01/contaminated-sludge-oozes-toward-drinking-water-irrigation-supplies-in-five-brazil-states/

----------------------

Waste unleashed from Brazil dam on its way to a larger river

2019

https://www.ctvnews.ca/sci-tech/waste-unleashed-from-brazil-dam-on-its-way-to-a-larger-river-1.4274718

----------------------


River running through Brumadinho shows high level of heavy metals

2019

http://agenciabrasil.ebc.com.br/en/geral/noticia/2019-02/river-running-through-brumadinho-shows-high-level-heavy-metals

----------------------


Management of Tropical River Basins and Reservoirs under Water Stress: Experiences from Northeast Brazil

2019

https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3298/6/6/62/htm

----------------------

Fallout from Brumadinho dam collapse harming crucial Brazilian River

2019

https://brazilian.report/society/2019/03/24/brumadinho-sao-francisco-river/

----------------------

Brazil's Pataxo depended on a river that's now polluted with mud

12 Feb 2019

The Pataxo indigenous tribe's main source of food and water was destroyed after January's dam collapse in eastern Brazil

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/02/brazil-pataxo-depended-river-turned-mud-190212165216265.html

----------------------

Reappearance of matrinxã Brycon orthotaenia(Characiformes: Bryconidae) in the lower São Francisco river, Brazil

2016

http://www.bioflux.com.ro/docs/2016.949-953.pdf

----------------------

Anaerobic degradation of anionic surfactants by indigenous microorganisms from sediments of a tropical polluted river in Brazil

2015

https://www.scielo.sa.cr/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-77442015000100024

----------------------


10 Most Polluted Rivers in Brazil

https://thebrazilbusiness.com/article/10-most-polluted-rivers-in-brazil


1. Rio Tietê, State of São Paulo
2. Rio Iguaçu, State of Paraná
3. Rio Ipojuca, State of Pernambuco
4. Rio dos Sinos, State of Rio Grande do Sul
5. Rio Gravataí, State of Rio Grande do Sul
6. Rio das Velhas, State of Minas Gerais
7. Rio Capibaribe, State of Pernambuco
8. Rio Caí, State of Rio Grande do Sul
9. Rio Paraíba do Sul, States of São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Minas Gerais
10.Rio Doce, State of Minas Gerais


----------------------


This is the 9 most bizarre colored rivers and lakes of our planet

3. Tietê River (Brazil)

 



This Brazilian river did not take hit us with its peculiar color, but by thick layer of foam which forms regularly every year from June to August. When drought occurs, the level of the river is reduced and smaller volume accumulates hazardous components, which in reaction with water form the foam.
It is estimated that poorly regulated waste from huge city of São Paolo is behind the production of toxic foam.

https://www.hydrotech-group.com/blog/9-najbizarnejsie-sfarbenych-riek-jazier-planety

----------------------

World's Most Polluted Rivers

2013

https://weather.com/news/news/worlds-most-polluted-rivers-20130627#/7

Overview of foam blocks floating on the surface of Tiete river emitting harmful gases as it goes through Pirapora de Bom Jesus historical city, 60km north from Sao Paulo, Brazil.

----------------------

Distribution of heavy metals in the geochemicalphases of sediments from the Tietê River, Brazil

2013

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.3184/095422913X13785624164620


----------------------

Sediment-contact fish embryo toxicity assay with Danio rerio to assess particle-bound pollutants in the Tietê River Basin (São Paulo, Brazil).

2011

http://europepmc.org/article/med/21802730

----------------------


Fish diversity in the upper Paraná River basin: habitats, fisheries, management and conservation

2007

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14634980701341719?scroll=top&needAccess=true

--------------

Fish diversity in the cascade of reservoirs along the Paranapanema River, southeast Brazil

2018

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1679-62252018000200213

ABSTRACT

The Paranapanema River is a major tributary of the upper Paraná river basin. Eleven hydropower dams regulate its main course, but no study has investigated fish diversity in these impoundments at the basin-scale. The present study investigated spatial patterns of richness, composition, and abundance of native (non-migratory and migratory) and non-native fishes in the cascade of reservoirs along the Paranapanema River. The study is based on data collected from 34 independent studies conducted in nine reservoirs (47 samples). The compilation recorded 161 species, being 111 native (14 migratory) and 50 non-native. Total richness ranged between 56 and 112 species/reservoir, with a mean of 72 (49.9 non-migratory, 8.1 migratory and 14 non-native). The number of non-migratory species showed no spatial trend along the cascade system, but migratory and non-native richness increased toward downstream reaches. We also observed spatial variation in species composition along the cascade system, but some non-native fishes were widely distributed. Migratory fishes showed low relative abundance (usually < 10%), while non-native species were common and more abundant, especially in reservoirs downstream. Our results revealed a high diversity of fishes in the cascade of impoundments, but indicated that migratory fishes are rare, while non-native species are common or dominant.

--------------

Subfossil and periphytic diatoms from the upper Paraná river, Brazil: last ~1000 years of a transition period

2018

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2236-89062018000300431

--------------

Paraná River

https://www.britannica.com/place/Parana-River

--------------

The Paraná River system

https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-94-017-3290-1_11

--------------

Parana River: Its Importance and Its Threats

2018

https://ourglobalclimate.com/parana-river/

------------------------

ARGENTINA: Parana River Not What It Used to Be

BUENOS AIRES, Feb 17 2012 (IPS) - Lower water levels and increasing pressure from overfishing in the Paraná river are causing an unprecedented decline in fish stocks in the river that is regarded as the second most biodiverse in South America after the Amazon river.

http://www.ipsnews.net/2012/02/argentina-parana-river-not-what-it-used-to-be/


--------------


Lead pollution from waterfowl hunting in wetlands and rice fields in Argentina

2015 Dec 31

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26745298/

 

--------------

Water quality monitoring of the Pirapó River watershed, Paraná, Brazil

2015

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842015000900148

--------------

Water quality of the main tributaries of the Paraná Basin:glyphosate and AMPA in surface water and bottom sediments

2015

https://www.foroambiental.net/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/ronco2016-Glifo-parana.pdf

--------------

Environmental risk assessment in five rivers of Parana River basin, Southern Brazil, through biomarkers in Astyanax spp.

2017

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28540546

--------------

Folder Argentina - Water quality measurement on the Parana river - technical report - S-0140-0001-01

https://search.archives.un.org/argentina-water-quality-measurement-on-parana-river-technical-report

--------------

Overview of Parana Delta

http://www.delta-alliance.org/gfx_content/documents/documentation/overview%20Parana%20delta.pdf

The Parana River is considered the third largest river in the American Continent, after the Mississippi in the United States and the Amazonas in Brazil. It is located in South America and it runs through Brazil, Paraguay and Argentina, where it flows into the Río de la Plata. Its length is 2570 Km and its basin surface is around 1.51 million km2. The two initial tributaries of the Parana are the Paranaiba River and the Grande River, both in Brazil, but the most important tributary is the Paraguay River, located in homonymous country. In comparison with other rivers, the Paraná is about half the length of the Mississippi River (6211 km), but it has similar flow. Parana River’s mean streamflow is 18500 m3/s (Menendez, 2002) and Mississippi’s flow is 17704 m3/s. Thus, the Parana has twice the length of the Rhine (1320 km), but it has 8 times its flow (2300 m3/s).

Climate Change in the Delta


Some of the climatic trends for the area indicate:

A possible temperature raise from 0.4°C to 1.8°C by in the next ten years, and up to 7.5°C in the next eighty years (Magrin et al., 2007, IPCC).
An increase of precipitations. In La Plata Basin, precipitation increased 16% comparing he periods of 1951-1970 and 1980-1999 (Barros and Bejaran, 2005).
An increase of river discharges -from every one percent change in precipitations there is a two percent change in streamflow for the area- (Berbery et al., 2006).
Changes in evaporation rates, which must be balanced with precipitation level to pre-empt floods and guarantee aquifer refills (Barros et al., 2006). Displacement of isohyets towards west (Barros and Bejaran, 2005).
Increase of frequency and intensity of Extreme Hydrological Events (Sudestadas and ENSO). El Niño southern oscillation is the main source of variability in South America and in spite of not always being followed by precipitations, it has a great influence on them(Berbery et al., 2006).
Increase of the frequency and duration of positive storm surges, causing an increase of water level of the Rio de la Plata (D ́Onofrio et al., 2008).
Decrease of the frequency and duration of negative storm surges (causing decrease in water level of the Rio de la Plata), but an increase in intensity (causing troubles for water supply). (D ́Onofrio et al., 2008).
Increase of water level due to Sea Level Rise (Re, 2009).

All these events are related to the most important issue about climate change in the area, which is climate variability. This variability is related to long periods of droughts and floods, caused by the rise and fall of the rivers ́ water level and the changes in precipitations. This is a naturalphenomenon which takes place on the Delta and which is increasing due to climate change. The analysis of river discharges variability is important for the area because changes in river flow lead to floods and droughts. Parana River drains to the Rio de la Plata through the bifurcation into two rivers: the Parana de las Palmas River and the Parana Guazu River. Parana de las Palmas discharge represent 25% of the total Parana river ́s discharge and Paraná Guazu represents the other 75%. Between Parana river and Uruguay river there are a lot of natural and artificial canals


The analysis of river discharges variability is important for the area because changes in river flow lead to floods and droughts. Parana River drains to the Rio de la Plata through the bifurcation into two rivers: the Parana de las Palmas River and the Parana Guazu River. Parana de las Palmas discharge represent 25% of the total Parana river ́s discharge and Paraná Guazu represents the other 75%. Between Parana river and Uruguay river there are a lot of natural and artificial canals which flow from West to East or vice versa, depending on the rise and fall of river streamflow. This characteristic makes the territory a very changing environment.

Among other factors, changes in river streamflow are related to precipitations and also to the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO). The ENSO is a cycle that takes place in the tropical Eastern Pacific Ocean and is characterized by a change of temperature and pressure of surface waters. The warming phase is called El Niño and the cooling phase is called La Niña. ENSO is the main source of variability in South America and in spite of not always being followed by precipitations, it has a great influence on them. In the case study, precipitation variability is mostly influenced by ENSO during the warming phase El Niño and during neutral periods –phases between El Niño and La Niña. Scientific evidence shows that there is a deep connection between the ENSO phenomenon and extreme increases of river discharges, mostly during the period of 1971-2001.

---------------

Bleeding the Flying River Dry:

Deforestation, Climate Change and Drought in the Amazon

https://www.amazonfrontlines.org/chronicles/bleeding-river/

South American Lifeline

The Flying River is a lifeline for millions of people living in the Amazon and further to the south, where it empties onto the continent as essential seasonal rains. An innovative project using participatory methods (Indigenous Health Adaptation to Climate Change (IHACC)) identified both climate-change induced flooding and water shortages as having health-related outcomes in two indigenous populations of the Western Amazon (Peru). Flooding episodes have become more intense and lead to the spread of water-borne disease (e.g. diarrhea) and vector-borne diseases (e.g. malaria and Leishmaniasis). Water shortages at other times force people to consume stagnant, murky water. Water shortages also lead to rice and palm crop failure, while high water yields fewer and smaller plantain. Additionally, villagers described suffering from the hot temperatures, reducing their agricultural work day from 6 to 3 hours. (Hofmeijer et al., 2012; Sherman et al. 2015) Drought has also been linked to respiratory problems, especially among children. In periods of dry weather, hospitalizations for respiratory complaints soar throughout the Brazilian Amazon due to irritating particles billowing up from dry soil and forest fire fumes. (Smith et al. 2014).

A changing climate also impacts the wildlife which communities depend on for their food. A recent study in Pacaya-Samiria Park in the Peruvian Amazon found that flooding led to a devastating 95% decrease in terrestrial mammals. On the other hand, flooding had positive impacts on fish numbers. Drought had the opposite effect on fish but not on terrestrial mammals. The indigenous diet is dependent on these natural resources and well balanced in normal conditions. But climate disruptions are triggering a shift in local food systems. Hunting frequency among the Cocama people in the area decreased from 84% of families to only 33% as game populations crashed following five consecutive years of flooding. The worst-case scenario is when drought follows several years of flooding. Mammal populations take some time to recover so in dry periods following inundations indigenous people wouldn’t be able to rely on either game or fish. (Bodmer et al. 2018).


Taming the Turning Tides of the Flying River

All indicators point to continued alterations in the Flying River. There are three lines of defence to this desiccation: 1) prevent further disturbances in the Amazon; 2) adapt to the new ebbs and flows; and 3) reduce global carbon emissions.

Local solutions for preventing further deterioration of the atmospheric currents include keeping forests intact and using traditional agroforestry systems. Protecting forests has wide-reaching consequences. According to the theory of the Flying River, a single stand of trees saved in Ecuador can have ripple effects across the entire Amazon Basin. Ecuador’s traditional agroforestry practices mitigate carbon emissions from cultivation through sequestering carbon in the trees that are grown alongside crops and feeding moisture to the Flying River (Torres et al. 2015).


--------------

The pollution of Brazilian urban rivers, a study about Bombas river, Joao Pessoa/Paraíba-Brazil.

2017

https://www.iwra.org/member/congress/resource/ABSID308_ABSID308_The_pollution_of_Brazilian_urban_rivers_a_study_about_Bombas_river_Joao_PessoaParabaBrazil.pdf

---------------

Brazil's depleted rivers

2003

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3125459.stm

Explorer Captain Richard Burton, wrote in August 1867, in Sabara, Brazil: "Here a man can catch a half a dozen sprat like Piabas simply by heaving up a bucketful of water and throwing it upon the river bank."

--------------

The Plata River Basin: International Basin Development and Riverine Fisheries - R. Quirós

http://www.fao.org/3/ad525e/ad525e0h.htm

--------------

Climatology and Hydrology of the Plata Basin

https://www.atmos.umd.edu/~berbery/lpb/science_plan.html


----------------------


Amazon’s giant South American river turtle holding its own, but risks abound

December 2019

https://news.mongabay.com/2019/12/amazons-giant-south-american-river-turtle-holding-its-own-but-risks-abound/

----------------------

Drica: Resistance in the Quilombos of the Trombetas River

July 05, 2019

https://pulitzercenter.org/reporting/drica-resistance-quilombos-trombetas-river

----------------------

Phytoplankton in an Amazonian flood-plain lake (Lago Batata, Brasil): diel variation and species strategies

2000

https://academic.oup.com/plankt/article/22/1/63/1549631

----------------------

--------------------------



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-------------------
----------------
----------------

Section 15: Rivers

----------------
----------------
-------------------
---------------------


Brazil's river of death

12 Dec 2009

https://www.aljazeera.com/focus/climatesos/2009/12/2009121075234359382.html


Thousands of fish perish as drought dries up the Amazon's Manaquiri River.



Thousands of fish in the river have been killed by a sharp drop in water oxygen levels


The once free-flowing Manaquiri River, which runs through the state of Amazonas in northwest Brazil, is in the fight of its life against a spell of dry weather - and it appears to be losing the battle.

Thousands of dead fish are rotting on the river banks and hundreds more float on its surface, turning the area into a toxic cesspool.

Vultures circle overhead, picking away at the rotting carcasses. Even an alligator - one of the fiercest reptiles of the Amazon - floats belly up in the river.

Local fishermen say it has not rained in more than 25 days, leaving the large surrounding rivers in recession. This has in turn choked off the tributaries that provide fresh water to the Manaquiri.

With no fresh water coming in, oxygen levels in the river have dropped, leaving the fish to suffocate to death.

"One week the river water levels dropped, the next week all the fish died," Bruno dos Santos, a fisherman, told Al Jazeera.

"In five days all the fish were dead. We have nothing left, only this ugly water."

Fishermen unemployed

The town of Manaquiri lies about three hours from Manaus, the capital of Amazonas, and is home to a population of nearly 20,000, 800 of whom are fishermen. "All are unemployed now," says dos Santos.

When Al Jazeera visited the town last week, water levels were so low that fishing boats were beached on the banks, immobile.

"I used to make 100 or 200 reais ($57-$114) a day, but now nothing," fisherman Gevaldo Maciel says.

"All I do all day now is eat, sleep and drink water. We are prisoners here, because the water is so low if we try to get to another river our boats will get stuck. So what are we supposed to do?"

Estimates suggest that the 14,000 of the town's inhabitants who rely on the river as an economic lifeline are being adversely affected by the water shortage.

In November, local media reported that local schools suspended classes for 2,600 children who used the river as a means of transportation.

Some Amazon scientists warn that the drying up of the Manaquiri River may signal similar droughts occurring with higher frequency as the climate continues to change.

"This is something that fits with the climate changes that are happening now and that are expected to increase in the future," says Philip Fearnside, a research professor in the Department of Ecology at the National Institute for Research in the Amazon (INPA) in Manaus.

"We have an El Nino [weather pattern] beginning this year and that means that water is warming up in the Pacific Ocean. Whenever that happens we have droughts here in the Amazon."

Climate change 'fact'

Fearnside, who has lived in the Amazon for the past 33 years and is considered one of Brazil's top ecologists, says climate change theories are not built on speculation.

"This is something we have experience with and know from the data, it's not something that depends on the outcome of a computer simulation," he adds.

He says that while droughts can occur without climate change, such events are more likely to develop in a warming climate.

For the fishermen passing time on their now idle boats on the Manaquiri, the stench of fish carcasses baking under the sun is a constant reminder of their dwindling livelihood.

The ice chest on Antonio Farias' boat, which used to be filled with fish, is now empty. Although he admits that he has no scientific expertise, he does offer his own theories for the cause of his community's misery.

"I think this is related to some changes in the climate," he says.

"Because for us, it's been over 20 days without rain here. This was a surprise, because we have never experienced this before. It's sad, all the dead fish."

As Al Jazeera prepared to leave Manaquiri toward the end of the week, rain twice fell on the region , breaking the dry spell.

However, the fishermen say the damage has already been done. It will take a year at least, they say, for the river to recover.

--------------------------

Where the Xingu Bends and Will Soon Break

https://www.americanscientist.org/article/where-the-xingu-bends-and-will-soon-break

With its globally unique geomorphology, hydrology, and aquatic biota, Brazil’s Xingu River offers a seemingly foolproof argument for its preservation. Yet the will to harness the Xingu for hydroelectricity has prevailed over decades of heroic efforts to sustain its natural course.

--------------

Spatial patterns of water quality in Xingu River Basin (Amazonia) prior to the Belo Monte dam impoundment

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842015000500034

----------------

The natural and social history of the indigenous lands and protected areas corridor of the Xingu River basin.

2013

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23610170

-------------------------

The 18O: 16O of dissolved oxygen in rivers and lakes in the Amazon Basin: Determining the ratio of respiration to photosynthesis rates in freshwaters

June 1995

https://aslopubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.4319/lo.1995.40.4.0718


 Abstract

The concentration and 18O:16O ratio of dissolved oxygen were measured for 23 rivers and lakes of the Amazon Basin during 1988, 1990, and 1991. With only two exceptions, the rivers and lakes had dissolved oxygen concentrations that were at 20–90% of atmospheric saturation levels. The δ18O of the dissolved oxygen ranged from 15 to 30‰ (vs. SMOW). The δ18O for the lakes were the lowest at 15–23‰. δ18O <24.2‰ (the atmospheric equilibrium value) are the result of photosynthetic oxygen input. The δ18O of the rivers, in contrast, ranged from 24 to 30‰. δ18O > 24.2‰ resulted from respiration. Despite thisclear difference between the δ18O for rivers and lakes, these water bodies had similar levels of oxygen undersaturation. The δ18O and dissolved oxygen concentrations are used to determine the ratio of community respiration (R) to gross photosynthesis (P) rates. R : P varied between ∼ 1 and 1.5 for lakes and between 1.5 and 4 for rivers. For all rivers and lakes, the measured δ18O indicated the presence of photosynthetically produced oxygen, with the highest proportion occurring in lakes. The δ18O of dissolved oxygen is a unique tracer of photosynthetic oxygen and provides, through a determination of R : P, a means of quantifying the heterotrophic state of freshwaters.

--------------------------

 Large-scale degradation of Amazonian freshwater ecosystems.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26700407

--------------------------

The vulnerability of Amazon freshwater ecosystems

https://conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/conl.12008

--------------------------

Quality index of the surface water of Amazonian rivers in industrial areas in Pará, Brazil

2017

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0025326X17307373

--------------------------

Seasonal assessment and apportionment of surface water pollution using multivariate statistical methods: Sinos River, southern Brazil.


https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29884932

--------------------------

Amazon River 'Breathes' Carbon Dioxide from Rain Forest

May 23, 2013

https://www.livescience.com/34629-amazon-river-carbon-cycle.html

--------------------------

Assessment of surface water in two Amazonian rivers impacted by industrial wastewater, Barcarena City, Pará State (Brazil)

ABSTRACT

In 2007, surface waters were collected from 21 sampling points in Barcarena City in Northern Region of Brazil: one sampling point located in a stream that receives discharge of wastewater from a kaolin processing industry and flows into the Curuperê River, three sampling points located near sources that emerge on the left bank and flow into the Curuperê River, nine sampling points in Curuperê River, which flows into the Dendê River, and eight in Dendê River, a tributary on the right bank of the Pará River. For all water samples were quantified 14 physicochemical variables and levels of 12 metals. The results in the points near the sources of the Curuperê River presented physicochemical profile and metal levels which are typical of surface waters being used as reference to compare and identify possible changes in the chemical characteristics of the other sampling points. The comparison between the results obtained for the sources of the Curuperê River and the ones for the point near the discharge of industrial wastewater revealed strong changes in the values of 6 physicochemical variables (pH, electrical conductivity (EC), total dissolved solids (TDS), sulfate (SO4), ammoniacal nitrogen (NH4-N) and salinity) and an increase in magnitude of the levels of four metals (Al, Fe, Mn and Zn). These facts characterized that the wastewaters were discharged into the environment without adequate treatment. Results in other sampling sites showed that these anomalous conditions were also found along the Curuperê and Dendê Rivers, especially during low tide. This chemical characterization of the waters allowed to identify harmful conditions to aquatic ecosystems and potential health risk for the local people, who use the rivers for drinking water, recreation and transportation.

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-50532011000800013

--------------------------

 

Five years of soil moisture and ocean salinity

November 4, 2014

https://watchers.news/2014/11/04/five-years-of-soil-moisture-and-ocean-salinity/
 

--------------------------

 

The Geochemistry of Natural Radionuclides in Saline Soils from Brazil Treated with Phosphogypsum Imbituba

11 January 2017

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11270-016-3235-y

--------------------------

Spectral reflectance characteristics of soils in northeastern Brazil as influenced by salinity levels

13 October 2016

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10661-016-5631-6

--------------------------

Salinity of soil characteristics in crops in Brazil

January 2014

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/284769474_Salinity_of_soil_characteristics_in_crops_in_Brazil

--------------------------

Sodicity and salinity in a Brazilian Oxisol cultivated with sugarcane irrigated with wastewater

2008

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0378377408002023

--------------------------

Soil salinization and maize and cowpea yield in the crop rotation system using saline waters

2011

https://www.scielo.br/j/eagri/a/VSmSCrSGFQDCxqxhfDPxfKJ/

--------------------------

Laboratory Salinization of Brazilian Alluvial Soils and the Spectral Effects of Gypsum

25 March 2014

https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/6/4/2647/html

--------------------------

Role of Plant–Microbe Interactions in Combating Salinity Stress

06 May 2022

https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-981-16-7759-5_13

--------------------------

Effect of sulphur inoculated with Thiobacillus on soil salinity and growth of tropical tree legumes

2001

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11710345/

 

--------------------------



Surface water quality assessment of the main tributaries in the lower São Francisco River, Sergipe

Aug 06, 2018

ABSTRACT

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2318-03312018000100230

Contamination of water body by diffuse and point sources in springs has caused concerns mainly due to restrictions on its quality. The problem becomes more serious when contamination affects water for human consumption, as occurs in the river São Francisco, which supplies several municipalities of Sergipe. In this sense, the objective of the study was to evaluate water quality in eleven tributaries of the São Francisco river in its low course in the period from 2013 to 2014, in order to subsidize decision making by public management bodies operating in the region. For this purpose, it was used the Water Quality Index (WQI) and the Trophic State Index (TSI), as well the hierarchical grouping techniques associated to the samples to compare the different causes of contamination of each source. The lowest WQI values were observed in the rivers Betume and Jacaré and they were associated with high concentrations of coliforms related to the disposal of domestic effluents from the riverside cities. It was observed a tendency to eutrophication in the Jacaré stream, Santo Antônio, Pilões, Papagaio and Capivara rivers demonstrated by the high TSI in the rainy season. The results of the cluster analysis were close to their Euclidean distance, and showed that there were similarity relationships between the different water sources related to their parameters of water quality. In this piece of work, we also used the Factor Analysis resulted in the selection of five factors of water quality indicators which are mainly related to mineral content, organic matter, surface runoff and the level of pollution. Thus, it is concluded that the water quality of the São Francisco river tributaries is at a strong tendency towards contamination and that its tributaries need a constant monitoring for the environmental management decisions to be the most adequate for the sustainable survival of the riverside communities.


--------------------------

Rediscovery and redescription of the endangered Hypostomus subcarinatus Castelnau, 1855 (Siluriformes: Loricariidae) from the Rio São Francisco basin in Brazil

2019

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0207328

--------------------------

Carbon dioxide emissions from estuaries of northern and northeastern Brazil

(2014)

Abstract

The carbon dioxide flux through the air–water interface of coastal estuarine systems must be quantified to understand the regional balance of carbon and its transport through adjacent coastal regions. We estimated and calculated the emissions of carbon dioxide (FCO2) and the partial pressure of CO2 (pCO2) values in 28 estuarine environments at a variety of spatial scales in the northern and northeastern regions of Brazil. The results showed a mean FCO2 (water to air) of 55 ± 45 mmol·m-2·d-1. Additionally, a negative correlation between dissolved oxygen saturation and pCO2 was observed, indicating a control by biological processes and especially by organic matter degradation. This leads to increased dissolved CO2 concentration in estuarine waters which results in a pCO2 that reached 8,638 µatm. Our study suggests that northern and northeastern Brazilian estuaries act as sources of atmospheric CO2. The range of pCO2 observed were similar to those found in inner estuaries in other places around the world, with the exception of a few semi-arid estuaries (Köppen climate classification – BSh) in which record low levels of pCO2 have been detected.

https://www.nature.com/articles/srep06164


--------------------------

Modeling chlorophyll-a and dissolved oxygen concentration in tropical floodplain lakes (Paraná River, Brazil)

June 2009

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842009000300005

ABSTRACT

The need for prediction is widely recognized in limnology. In this study, data from 25 lakes of the Upper Paraná River floodplain were used to build models to predict chlorophyll-aand dissolved oxygen concentrations. Akaike's information criterion (AIC) was used as a criterion for model selection. Models were validated with independent data obtained in the same lakes in 2001. Predictor variables that significantly explained chlorophyll-aconcentration were pH, electrical conductivity, total seston (positive correlation) and nitrate (negative correlation). This model explained 52% of chlorophyll variability. Variables that significantly explained dissolved oxygen concentration were pH, lake area and nitrate (all positive correlations); water temperature and electrical conductivity were negatively correlated with oxygen. This model explained 54% of oxygen variability. Validation with independent data showed that both models had the potential to predict algal biomass and dissolved oxygen concentration in these lakes. These findings suggest that multiple regression models are valuable and practical tools for understanding the dynamics of ecosystems and that predictive limnology may still be considered a powerful approach in aquatic ecology.


--------------------------

Oxygen depletion and carbon dioxide and methane production in waters of the Pantanal wetland of Brazil

August 1995

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF00002727

This study examines dissolved O2, CO2 and CH4 in waters of the Pantanal, a vast savanna floodplain in Brazil. Measurements are presented for 540 samples from throughout the region, ranging from areas of sheet flooding to sluggish marsh streams to the major rivers of the region. Dissolved O2 is often strongly depleted, particularly in waters filled with emergent vascular plants, which are the most extensive aquatic environment of the region. Median O2 concentrations were 35 μM for vegetated waters, 116 μM for the Paraguay River, 95 μM for tributary rivers, and 165 μM for open lakes (atmospheric equilibrium, 230–290 μM). Airwater diffusive fluxes were calculated from dissolved gas concentrations for representative vegetated floodplain waters, based on data collected over the course of an annual cycle. These fluxes reveal about twice as much CO2 evasion as can be accounted for by invasion of O2 (overall means in nmol cm-2 s-1: O2 0.18, CO2 0.34, and CH4 0.017). Methanogenesis is estimated to account for ca. 20% of the total heterotrophic metabolism in the water column and sediments, with the remainder likely due mostly to aerobic respiration. Anaerobic respiration is limited by the low concentrations of alternate electron acceptors. We hypothesize that O2 transported through the stems of emergent plants is consumed in aerobic respiration by plant tissues or microorganisms, producing CO2 that preferentially dissolves into the water, and thus explaining most of the excess CO2 evasion. This hypothesis is supported by measurements of gases in submersed stems of emergent plants.



-------------------------

Evaluation of Primary Production in the Lower Amazon River Based on a Dissolved Oxygen Stable Isotopic Mass Balance

07 February 2017

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2017.00026/full

--------------------------

Flying Rivers of the Amazon Rainforest—a Critical Rain Generator for the Planet

October 04, 2016

https://blog.pachamama.org/flying-rivers-of-the-amazon-rainforest-a-critical-rain-generator-for-the-planet

A new theory proposes that the Amazon is the beating "heart of the Earth", as millions of trees work together as a kind of "biotic pump" that releases water vapor into the air, and circulates water and weather patterns around the globe.

“The importance of the Amazon rainforest in regulating not only South America’s climate but also that of the entire world cannot be overestimated. Like the Earth’s cryosphere, the Amazon and other rainforests are essential geographic features of the planet that help regulate the climate and provide habitat for unique wildlife. As with the melting polar regions, the loss of the Amazon to capitalist “resource development” will prove to be a self-destructive act for all of mankind.” - Forests Precede Us, Deserts Follow



---------------------------


Avocado Wars: The Battle Over Water Rights In Chile

Season 2, Episode 2

The popular demand for avocados, once considered an “exotic” item, is having a devastating impact on a drought-stricken community in Chile. Lying within one of the largest avocado producing regions in the country, Petorca avocado plantations are in a battle over water rights, where claims of illegal water diversion are creating civil unrest.

https://www.kcet.org/shows/earth-focus/episodes/avocado-wars-the-battle-over-water-rights-in-chile

 


----------------------------


----------------------------

 

--------------------------------

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Section 16: Cerrado

----------------------------------

-------------------------------

----------------------------


----------------------------








---------------------------------


The Cerrado: Brazil’s Other Biodiverse Region Loses Ground

 April 14, 2011

https://e360.yale.edu/features/the_cerrado_brazils_other_biodiversity_hotspot_loses_ground


While Brazil touts its efforts to slow destruction of the Amazon, another biodiverse region of the country is being cleared for large-scale farming. But unlike the heralded rainforest it borders, the loss of the cerrado and its rich tropical savanna so far has failed to attract much notice.

-----------------------------

Agricultural Expansion in the Brazilian Cerrado: Increased Soil and Nutrient Losses and Decreased Agricultural Productivity

https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/8/1/12


----------------------------

Soil, land use time, and sustainable intensification of agriculture in the Brazilian Cerrado region.

2017

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28116603

----------------------------

The expansion of Brazilian agriculture: Soil erosion scenarios

December 2013

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/275280668_The_expansion_of_Brazilian_agriculture_Soil_erosion_scenarios

----------------------------

Between Fenix and Ceres: The Great Acceleration and the Agricultural Frontier in the Brazilian Cerrado

2018

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0104-87752018000200409&lng=en&nrm=iso&tlng=en

----------------------------

Agricultural Intensification Can Preserve the Brazilian Cerrado: Applying Lessons From Mato Grosso and Goiás to Brazil’s Last Agricultural Frontier

August 30, 2017

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1940082917720662

----------------------------

Farming is destroying the Brazilian cerrado—one of the world's richest savannas

The cerrado covers 21% of Brazil, hosts 935 bird species and 10,000 plant species, and is an important carbon store, but farming has reduced it to less than half of its original size. The growing demand for food and biofuels has led to large-scale cultivation of soybean and sugarcane, forcing cattle ranchers and slash-and-burn farmers to re-locate ever deeper into the Amazon rainforest.

http://datazone.birdlife.org/sowb/casestudy/farming-is-destroying-the-brazilian-cerrado-one-of-the-worlds-richest-savannas

----------------------------

Pathways for recent Cerrado soybean expansion: extending the soymoratorium and implementing integrated crop livestock systems withsoybeans

https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/aafb85/pdf

----------------------------

The expansion of soybean production in the Cerrado

https://www.inputbrasil.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/The-expansion-of-soybean-production-in-the-Cerrado_Agroicone_INPUT.pdf

----------------------------

Amazon biome


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_biome


The Amazon biome (Portuguese: Bioma Amazônia) contains the Amazon rainforest, an area of tropical rainforest, and other ecoregions that cover most of the Amazon basin and some adjacent areas to the north and east. The biome contains blackwater and whitewater flooded forest, lowland and montane terra firme forest, bamboo and palm forest, savanna, sandy heath and alpine tundra. Some areas are threatened by deforestation for timber and to make way for pasture or soybean plantations.

----------------------------

Massive deforestation found in Brazil's Cerrado

April 2016

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/04/160401131123.htm

----------------------------

Climate challenges  and opportunities in the  Brazilian Cerrado

https://ipam.org.br/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/PB-Cerrado-COP23-web.pdf

----------------------------

The Brazilian Cerrado: assessment of water and soildegradation in catchments under intensive agricultural use

2014

http://www.geografiaufmt.com.br/docs/humboldt/hunke.pdf

----------------------------

Understanding patterns of land-cover change in the Brazilian Cerrado from 2000 to 2015

https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rstb.2015.0435

----------------------------

Brazil’s Cerrado forests won’t be saved by corporate pledges on deforestation

December 8, 2017

https://theconversation.com/brazils-cerrado-forests-wont-be-saved-by-corporate-pledges-on-deforestation-87130

----------------------------

Deforestation ticks up in Brazil's savannah

12 July 2018

The Cerrado is the most threatened biome in Brazil, environmentalists proclaim.

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-05695-9

----------------------------

Strategies to Reduce Deforestation in Brazil From controlling illegal deforestation to the challenge of sustainable production in the country’s forests and savannas

http://www.stapgef.org/sites/default/files/stap/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/Strategies-to-Reduce-Deforestation-in-Brazil.pdf

-----------------------------

Massive deforestation found in Brazil's Cerrado

April 2016

https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2016-04/uov-mdf040116.php

----------------------------

Scientists Are Making Brazil’s Savannah Bloom

OCT. 2, 2007

https://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/02/science/02tropic.html

----------------------------

About This Species

https://insideclimatenews.org/species/mammals/bats-brazilian-cerrado

The bats of the Cerrado—Brazil's vast tropical savannah— play a vital role in pollinating and dispersing seeds of important plants in one of the most biodiverse places on Earth. The Cerrado covers 23 percent of Brazil, an area the size of Western Europe. There are at least 118 bat species living there, representing 10.5 percent of the world's bat species. With rapid deforestation and climate change eating away at the Cerrado, however, bats face a threat to their existence. They have limited ability to adapt to the rapid climate change underway because of their slow reproductive rates. They also have specific habitat needs, so even if they could move elsewhere, they would be hard-pressed to find a suitable setting.

Conservation Status

Many of the bat species found in the Brazilian Cerrado are doing relatively well elsewhere in the world. But the Cerrado has become particularly inhospitable.

The Brazilian Cerrado was shown to be losing forest at more than twice the rate of the Amazon in 2008—5,482 square miles of its three-quarters of a million square miles were lost that year alone. The Cerrado is considered the most threatened savannah in the world and one of Brazil's most threatened biomes. As the Cerrado has become fragmented due to deforestation and agricultural expansion, so has the bats' habitat, isolating groups or even entire species and making them more vulnerable to climate change.

------------------------------


Threat Down Below: Polluted Caves Endanger Water Supplies, Wildlife

2009

Caves are home to some of the planet's most unusual creatures and important drinking water supplies. Now these underground resources are being polluted by surface activities, ranging from sewage spills to old factories.

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/pollution-caves-water-wildlife-trout/

------------------------------

NEMATODES: INDICATORS OF METAL POLLUTION IN THE WONDERFONTEIN CAVE (SOUTH AFRICA).

2014

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/279041916_NEMATODES_INDICATORS_OF_METAL_POLLUTION_IN_THE_WONDERFONTEIN_CAVE_SOUTH_AFRICA

-------------------------------

THE LEGAL SYSTEM OF THE BRAZILIAN SPELEOLOGICAL PATRIMONY


https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/0c58/0111f70d79d35980d53ad8f864b49621f402.pdf

-------------------------------

------------------------------

----------------------------
----------------------------

Section 17: Atlantic Forest

----------------------------
----------------------------

------------------------------


--------------------------------

Atlantic Forest





The Atlantic Forest (Portuguese: Mata Atlântica) is a South American forest that extends along the Atlantic coast of Brazil from Rio Grande do Norte state in the north to Rio Grande do Sul state in the south, and inland as far as Paraguay and the Misiones Province of Argentina, where the region is known as Selva Misionera.

 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_Forest

----------------------------

Almost Three Quarters of Brazil's Population Lives in Its Shrinking Atlantic Forest

https://psmag.com/social-justice/almost-three-quarters-of-brazils-population-lives-in-its-shrinking-atlantic-forest

----------------------------


Verrucomicrobia in Brazilian Atlantic Forest Soil

2011

https://aem.asm.org/content/77/11/3903


The Brazilian Atlantic forest is one of the main biodiversity hot spots in the world (4). This biome stretches along the Brazilian Atlantic coast, from the state of Rio Grande do Norte to Rio Grande do Sul, with an original area of 1,233,875 km2 that has been reduced to less than 8% of its original cover (Fig. 1). Also included in this hot spot is the offshore archipelago of Fernando de Noronha and several other islands off the Brazilian coast. In fact, the Atlantic forest is a continental biome; it extends inland to eastern Paraguay, into northeastern Argentina, and narrowly along the coast into Uruguay.

-----------------------------


Deforestation up 9 percent in Brazil's Atlantic forest

2014

https://www.worldbulletin.net/health-environment/deforestation-up-9-percent-in-brazils-atlantic-forest-h137520.html

Less known than the Amazon, the Atlantic Rainforest stretched the length of Brazil's eastern seaboard and is home to hundreds of species, including iconic birds and primates.


----------------------------

A Giant Brought to its Knees: The Atlantic Coastal Forest

June 9, 2011

http://coastalcare.org/2011/06/a-giant-brought-to-its-knees-the-atlantic-coastal-forest/

----------------------------

FACTS ON BRAZIL'S ATLANTIC FOREST

https://rainforests.mongabay.com/mata-atlantica/mata-atlantica.html

----------------------------

Emerging Threats and Opportunities for Large-Scale Ecological Restoration in the Atlantic Forest of Brazil

http://www.lerf.eco.br/img/publicacoes/Emerging%20Threats%20and%20Opportunities%20for%20Large-Scale%20Ecological%20Restoration%20in%20the%20Atlantic%20Forest%20of%20Brazil.pdf

----------------------------

Water Pollution In Atlantic Rainforest (South America)

2015

http://www.icontrolpollution.com/articles/water-pollution-in-atlantic-rainforest-south-america-.php?aid=65280

----------------------------

New Project Focuses on the Atlantic Forest of Southeastern Brazil

February 19, 2016

https://www.thegef.org/news/new-project-focuses-atlantic-forest-southeastern-brazil

----------------------------

Municipalities in Brazil take the lead in conserving fragile Atlantic Forest biome

16 Nov 2018

https://www.unenvironment.org/news-and-stories/story/municipalities-brazil-take-lead-conserving-fragile-atlantic-forest-biome

----------------------------

Espirito Santo, Brazil, saves the Atlantic Rainforest to ensure clean water for all

May 3, 2013

https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/feature/2013/05/03/brazi-saves-atlantic-rainforest-ensure-clean-water

----------------------------

Water pollution and distribution of the black fly (Diptera: Simuliidae) in the Atlantic Forest, Brazil

2015

https://www.scielo.sa.cr/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-77442015000300683

----------------------------

Wildlife Conservation Society Birds of Brazil, Volume 2: The Atlantic Forest of Southeast Brazil, including São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro

https://www.nhbs.com/wildlife-conservation-society-birds-of-brazil-volume-2-the-atlantic-forest-of-southeast-brazil-including-sao-paulo-and-rio-de-janeiro-book

----------------------------

Air pollution impact on the Atlantic forest in the Cubatäo region, SP, Brazil

1998

https://pesquisa.bvsalud.org/portal/resource/pt/lil-262164?lang=fr

----------------------------

Tree species impoverishment and the future flora of the Atlantic forest of northeast Brazil

March 2000

https://www.nature.com/articles/35003563

----------------------------

Land Changes Fostering Atlantic Forest Transitionin Brazil: Evidence from the Paraíba Valley

 24 May 2016

https://msu.edu/~moranef/documents/Silva%20et%20al%202016.pdf

----------------------------

Phylobetadiversity among Forest Types in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest Complex

August 14, 2014

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0105043

----------------------------

Restoring Ecology and Revitalizing Society in Brazil's Atlantic Rainforest

https://www.brown.edu/academics/institute-environment-society/news/story/restoring-ecology-and-revitalizing-society-brazils-atlantic-rainforest

----------------------------


Weakening the Brazilian legislation for forest conservation has severe impacts for ecosystem services in the Atlantic Southern Forest

2014

https://www.uvm.edu/giee/pubpdfs/Alarcon_2015_Land%20Use%20Policy.pdf

----------------------------

Socioeconomic changes and environmental policies as dimensions of regional land transitions in the Atlantic Forest, Brazil

https://ideas.repec.org/a/eee/enscpo/v74y2017icp14-22.html

----------------------------

Oxidant-antioxidant balance and tolerance against oxidative stress in pioneer and non-pioneer tree species from the remaining Atlantic Forest.

2018

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29289786

----------------------------

Brazil: Restoration of the Atlantic Forest (Mata Atlântica)

https://www.ser-rrc.org/project/brazil-restoration-of-the-atlantic-forest-mata-atlantica/

----------------------------

DEFORESTATION AND PRESERVATION OF THE ATLANTIC FOREST IN THE STATE OF SÃO PAULO, BRAZIL

http://faef.revista.inf.br/imagens_arquivos/arquivos_destaque/5GlbiOX4EJcZlxD_2013-4-24-15-42-32.pdf

----------------------------

Combined effort amplifies restoration in Brazil’s Atlantic Forest

https://www.iucn.org/news/forests/201611/combined-effort-amplifies-restoration-brazil%E2%80%99s-atlantic-forest

Nov 2016

In a new article published in World Development Perspectives, “Governance innovations from a multi-stakeholder coalition to implement large-scale Forest Restoration in Brazil,” the authors explore how bringing together the efforts of 270 groups made a stronger impact on forest landscape restoration.


----------------------------

The Other Brazilian Rainforest: Why Restoring the Atlantic Forest Can Help Tackle Climate Change

August 14, 2019

https://www.wri.org/blog/2019/08/other-brazilian-rainforest-why-restoring-atlantic-forest-can-help-tackle-climate-change


----------------------------


A Tale of Two Cities in Brazil (and the Forest that Connects Them)

https://thecityfix.com/blog/tale-two-cities-brazil-forest-connects-sabin-ray-will-anderson-maria-franco-chuaire/



----------------------------------



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----------------------------

Section 18: Caatinga

----------------------------
----------------------------

------------------------------
-------------------------------

----------------------------------

Recurrent connections between Amazon and Atlantic forests shaped diversity in Caatinga four-eyed frogs

https://carstenslab.osu.edu/Publication_files/Thome.etal.2016.pdf

----------------------------

Caatinga ecosystem almost wholly ignored in Brazil

26 September 2011

https://news.mongabay.com/2011/09/caatinga-ecosystem-almost-wholly-ignored-in-brazil/

----------------------------

In Brazil’s Drought-ravaged Caatinga Ecosystem, Small Farmers Know Best

June 21, 2018

https://www.wri.org/blog/2018/06/brazils-drought-ravaged-caatinga-ecosystem-small-farmers-know-best

----------------------------

Caatinga, the Brazilian dry tropical forest: can it tolerate climate changes?

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/309546684_Caatinga_the_Brazilian_dry_tropical_forest_can_it_tolerate_climate_changes

----------------------------

The role of game mammals as bushmeat In the Caatinga, northeast Brazil

https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol21/iss2/art2/

----------------------------

Latin America’s tropical dry forests fading away

30/03/18

https://www.scidev.net/global/forestry/news/latin-america-tropical-dry-forests-fading.html?__cf_chl_jschl_tk__=0fbeb779eeb3249026c6ca3d5b764de30f4ac70c-1578157243-0-Ado3hjZC9L-In4ZeC6z8_z4bMCilqNwbYCNLSflq29aRFJ49L7maE8_MDVIV_v9my6XZ1k9biXNFk3tc6ynwALu_8AaLFB9yDrhBNvK6W8QEbHOth5aOnZYPbG9u_W4GPOAtZX7rOrf1iIqU3YLN6qTf-F-ONwFKCDrOzK-rvyQlYOfO-T5yqxNFHB7KTj68mKerTqlWoUpFClyTqRo7ckeeCMXl4EJ-GBIDZSsvX9tGTJBO5vNZe9x0qIcHl2Noi_QtePQIsdmY4pgnNh-VfIwn5kc3pFW3ap7qJCyD0eYabZbfgkDJX5i0CCXnQ1lv3CrsfccLEdelN6OJf3W6LUZjsyeJOVSIGWqh45BoR9Ou

Speed read

    Tropical dry forests lost in Latin America, 13-year monitoring shows
    They prevent soil erosion, regulate water balance, support biodiversity
    Just one of 300 scientific papers on tropical rainforests relates to dry forests

[SÃO PAULO] Only 40 per cent of the “original extent” of tropical dry forests remains intact in Latin America, according to a 13-year-monitoring project. 

The rest have been irretrievably lost, mainly due to deforestation for pastureland, according to estimates by scientists from Tropi-Dry, a research network sponsored by Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research (IAI).

Using modelling techniques and remote sensing, they monitored changes in land use in the tropical dry forest areas of Brazil, Mexico and across Central America since 2005.


    “With the exception of Costa Rica, all the other tropical dry forests are quickly vanishing.”
    Arturo Sanchez-Azofeifa, University of Alberta in Canada

Unlike rainforests, tropical dry forests exist in areas with long dry seasons. The two most extensive contiguous areas that remain intact are located in northeastern Brazil (Caatinga) and across southeastern Bolivia, Paraguay and northern Argentina. In most other areas, these forests are fragmented.

“With the exception of Costa Rica, all the other tropical dry forests are quickly vanishing”, says Arturo Sanchez-Azofeifa, a professor at the University of Alberta in Canada, and Tropi-Dry’s lead researcher, in an interview with SciDev.Net.

He adds that the study’s results raise concerns over how these forests might respond to climate change — a concern that is even more pressing because they have received little attention from scientists over the last century.

For every 300 scientific papers on tropical rainforests published since the turn of the 20th century, just one was related to tropical dry forests, according to the research.

In the neotropical region of the American continent — which includes almost all of South America, Central America, Antilles, parts of the United States and Mexico — dry forests host at least 66 per cent of water reservoirs.

In addition to being an important source of firewood, medicinal plants and hunting animals, they provide important ecosystem services that regulate the water cycle and protect the soil from erosion.

“Dry forests were [until recently] believed to be ecosystems with low biological diversity”, biochemistry Antonio Salatino, from the University of Sao Paulo’s Bioscience Institute (IB-USP), tells SciDev.Net. Because of the harsh conditions in areas of dry and semi-arid climate, it was assumed these forests were incapable of sustaining a high diversity of animal and plant life”, he explains.

Salatino has been researching Caatinga’s biodiversity for at least two decades, funded by FAPESP. He believes tropical dry forests have been overlooked because the long dry seasons mean that many plant species lose chlorophyll, making the landscape look grey and desolate. “Taking their high biodiversity value into account, tropical dry forests should be given as high a priority for conservation as the Amazon rainforest”, Sanchez-Azofeifa points out.

Conserving these forests would also benefit terrestrial vertebrate species, such as the reptiles. In a study recently published in Nature Ecology & Evolution, an international group of researchers mapped the distribution of over 10,000 species of terrestrial reptiles.

The mapping revealed unexpected patterns, and high biodiversity in areas not considered a priority for conservation — including Caatinga, which is the world’s largest dry forest and takes up nearly 10 per cent of Brazil’s land area.

"Most of the lizards are distributed across open or semi-arid areas, such as the Caatinga, and there are several endemic species in these regions”, says ecologist Cristiano Nogueira, from the IB-USP, and one of the study’s authors.

----------------------------

Geographic review on the specimens of the Caatinga Biome in the Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro (RB) herbarium

https://bdj.pensoft.net/article/38248/

----------------------------

Land cover changes in the Brazilian Cerrado and Caatinga biomes from 1990 to 2010 based on a systematic remote sensing sampling approach

March 2015

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0143622815000284


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Section 19: Pantanal

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'The Pantanal is national heritage': protecting the world's largest wetlands

2016

Spanning Brazil, Paraguay and Bolivia and home to 4,700 species, the Pantanal wetlands are under threat from deforestation and agriculture. But local people are taking on the challenge to protect this unique region

https://www.theguardian.com/global-development-professionals-network/2016/nov/12/pantanal-conservation-wetlands-brazil-paraguay-bolivia

----------------------------

Deforestation threatens Brazil's wetland sanctuary

February 3, 2012

https://phys.org/news/2012-02-deforestation-threatens-brazil-wetland-sanctuary.html

----------------------------

 Report shows deforestation threatens Brazil's Pantanal

2006

Almost half of the Paraguay River Basin that includes vast Pantanal wetlands already transformed into grazing and crop lands

Deforestation from increased grazing and agriculture has destroyed 17 percent of the native vegetation in Brazil's Pantanal, considered the world's largest wetland.

https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2006-01/ci-rsd011006.php

----------------------------


The Pantanal: Saving the world’s largest tropical wetland

https://www.worldwildlife.org/projects/the-pantanal-saving-the-world-s-largest-tropical-wetland

----------------------------

World's largest wetland threatened in Brazil

2009

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-pantanal/worlds-largest-wetland-threatened-in-brazil-idUSTRE51F4RO20090217


----------------------------

Massive wildfires hit southern Brazil's Pantanal wetlands

1 Nov 2019

Local authorities warn blazes are 'bigger than anything seen before' with tens of thousands of hectares affected.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/11/massive-wildfires-hit-southern-brazil-pantanal-wetlands-191101052452347.html


----------------------------

Brazil's next fire disaster, in the Pantanal wetlands

Brazil's Pantanal wetlands are on fire. While the world was shocked by the wildfires that ravaged the Amazon, few seem to have noticed the destruction of the world's largest tropical wetland area.

https://www.dw.com/en/brazils-next-fire-disaster-in-the-pantanal-wetlands/a-51199164

----------------------------

DRY FOREST DEFORESTATION DYNAMICS IN BRAZIL’S PONTAL BASIN

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?pid=S1983-21252018000200385&script=sci_arttext&tlng=en

--------------------------------------------


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Section 20: Rio De Janeiro & São Paulo

------------------
------------------
--------------------


-------------------------------------------

Who Is Polluting Rio’s Bay?

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/07/28/magazine/rio-sarapu-guanabara-bay-pollution.html

A major part of Rio’s winning Olympic bid was a plan to capture and treat 80 percent of the sewage that flows into Guanabara Bay, something organizers now admit will not happen — certainly not by August, if ever. For the past couple of years, sailors in training for the Olympics have reported putrid conditions and floating debris, their stories and shocking pictures drawing worldwide attention to the tainted water. Some have unsuccessfully called for the relocation or postponement of sailing and other open-water events, such as kayaking, triathlon and marathon swimming.

But Olympic athletes and international visitors will come and go. Remaining will be roughly nine million people who live in the watershed of Guanabara Bay. About half of them are not hooked up to sanitation systems.


-----------------

Funding problems hit plan to clean Rio's polluted waterways ahead of Olympics

2016

Olympic swimmers and sailors face the prospect of heavily polluted waters at the Rio Olympics. Photograph: Silvia Izquierdo/AP

https://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/2016/feb/01/funding-problems-hit-plan-clean-rios-polluted-waterways-olympics

------------------


Rio 2016: Swimmers need to ingest only three teaspoons of water to be almost certain of contracting a virus

A report commisioned by the Associated Press has revealed that water in Rio's Olympic and Paralympic venues holds viral levels 1.7m times what would be considered alarming in the United States and Europe just five days before the Games get underway

https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/olympics/rio-2016-water-pollution-virus-risk-danger-swimming-sailing-rowing-chance-of-infection-almost-a7165866.html

------------------

 Keep Your Mouth Closed: Aquatic Olympians Face a Toxic Stew in Rio

https://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/27/world/americas/brazil-rio-water-olympics.html

------------------


 Rio 2016: 'Chance of infection very likely' after tests show extent of pollution

Experts say ‘virus levels are widespread’ after AP testing shows water is badly contaminated, even far offshore

https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2015/dec/02/rio-olympics-2016-water-pollution

-------------------------

Expert to Rio athletes: "Don't put your head under water"

2016

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/experts-warns-rio-de-janeiro-brazil-olympic-athletes-of-viruses-in-water-days-ahead-of-games/


-------------------------

Not many fish are left to bite in Rio's trash-lined bay

2016

 

 “Cup Island,” a mangrove island on Guanabara Bay in Brazil, is a magnet for the tons of trash that are dumped in the bay's waters each day.

https://www.pri.org/stories/2016-02-26/not-many-fish-are-left-bite-rios-trash-lined-bay

--------------------------


Water Statistics in Brazil: an Overview

https://unstats.un.org/unsd/environment/envpdf/pap_wasess4a4brazil.pdf

------------------

Rio’s most dangerous levels of deadly air pollution are at the Olympic Stadium

August 1, 2016

https://qz.com/747229/rios-most-dangerous-levels-of-deadly-air-pollution-are-at-the-olympic-stadium/

------------------

Corrosion in Brazil

The following map of the atmospheric corrosivity measured in Brazil was adapted from "Atmospheric Corrosion of Copper in Ibero-America" by M. Morcillo, E. Almeida, M. Marrocos, and B. Rosales, Corrosion, Vol. 57, No. 11, pages 967-980.

https://corrosion-doctors.org/AtmCorros/mapBrazil.htm

------------------

Bangu has the Worst Air Quality in Rio de Janeiro

https://www.rioonwatch.org/?p=6734

------------------


2016 Olympics: Rio's Air Is Toxic Too

8/2/16

https://www.newsweek.com/rio-olympics-2016-water-pollution-air-beijing-who-environment-dangerous-deadly-486666

In the lead-up to the 2008 Summer Olympic Games in Beijing, everyone was talking about air pollution. The situation was so bad that some athletes showed up wearing protective face masks. Now, eight years later, as Rio de Janeiro's Olympics approaches, athletes, fans and commentators are focused on a different scourge: toxic, sewage-filled water.

-------------------

Evaluation of the impact of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games on air quality in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

2019

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1352231019300998

------------------

Report: Polluted Rio air more dangerous for Olympians than filthy water

Aug 1, 2016

https://www.cbssports.com/olympics/news/report-polluted-rio-air-more-dangerous-for-olympians-than-filthy-water/

The air in Rio de Janeiro is not up to World Health Organization standards

-------------------

Distribution of indoor air pollutants in downtown Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-50532011001100016

-------------------

Why is Rio de Janeiro finding it so hard to clear up its waste?

Aug 2016

The Olympic Games host city is like thousands of others grappling with industrialisation, population growth and lack of money




 Pollution spreads off the coast of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, June 2015.


https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2016/aug/03/why-is-rio-de-janeiro-finding-it-so-hard-to-clear-up-its-waste-olympic-games

-------------------

Rio 2016: Rio de Janeiro's air more deadly than its water, study finds

 August 2016




(Pollution rests among pollution along the edge of Guanabara Bay, the venue for the Olympic sailing).

https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/olympics/rio-2016-rios-air-more-deadly-than-its-water-study-finds-a7169371.html

-------------------

Coarse and fine aerosol source apportionment in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

2008

http://lfa.if.usp.br/ftp/public/Publications_Paulo_Artaxo/2009/Coarse_and_fine_aerosol_source_apportionment_in_Rio_de_Janeiro_Brazil_Godoy_2009_Atmospheric-Environment.pdf

-------------------


Air pollution in São Paulo kills more people than car accidents, breast cancer, and AIDS combined

September 24, 2013

https://www.treehugger.com/environmental-policy/traffic-pollution-kills-more-people-traffic-accidents-sao-paulo-brazil.html

------------------

Respiratory diseases in children and outdoor air pollution in São Paulo, Brazil: a time series analysis

https://oem.bmj.com/content/57/7/477

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Socioeconomic inequalities and exposure to traffic-related air pollution in the city of São Paulo, Brazil

Jan 2014

https://www.scielosp.org/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0102-311X2014000100119

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Air quality of an urban school in São Paulo city

November 2019

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10661-019-7815-3

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Willingness to pay for mortality risk reduction associated with air pollution in São Paulo

 2009

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0034-71402009000100001

------------------

Air Pollution and Child Mortality: A Time-Series Study in São Paulo, Brazil

https://www.jstor.org/stable/3434781?seq=1

------------------

São Paulo tackles organic waste

 12 April, 2019


São Paulo is developing a network of composting facilities to reduce emissions from organic waste

https://www.ccacoalition.org/en/news/s%C3%A3o-paulo-tackles-organic-waste

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Air pollution affects tree growth in São Paulo

20-May-2019

https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-05/fda-apa052019.php


------------------


Air pollution and hospitalizations in the largest Brazilian metropolis

2017

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5708266/

-----------------

Exposure to pollution is uneven in the city of São Paulo

November 29, 2018

http://agencia.fapesp.br/exposure-to-pollution-is-uneven-in-the-city-of-sao-paulo/29315/

------------------

Ahead of World Cup, Sao Paulo's smog still killing thousands

2013

Smog in Sao Paulo kills more people annually than road accidents, AIDS and breast cancer combined says a recent report. While the city seeks a solution ahead of next year's World Cup, local residents remain frustrated.

https://www.dw.com/en/ahead-of-world-cup-sao-paulos-smog-still-killing-thousands/a-17203179

------------------

Quantifying the impact of air pollution on the urban population of Brazil

2007

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0102-311X2007001600013


------------------

Influence of air pollution residues on the respiratory health of urban public transport drivers in a city of São Paulo State - Brazil

2018

https://erj.ersjournals.com/content/52/suppl_62/PA5074


------------------

Urban air pollution and cardiovascular hospitalizations in Salvador, BA, Brazil: a time series study

https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/doi/abs/10.1289/isee.2016.4715

------------------

Impacts of a high-discharge submarine sewage outfall on water quality in the coastalzone of Salvador (Bahia, Brazil)

2015

http://www.goat.fis.ufba.br/uploads/userfiles/362.pdf

------------------

Historical  overview of air pollution in Sao Paulo metropolitan area, Brazil: influence of mobile sources and related health effects

https://www.witpress.com/Secure/elibrary/papers/UT01/UT01033FU.pdf


------------------

These 5 Cities have WORSE air quality than M-A does right now

    São Paulo, Brazil experienced 163 on the Air Quality Index. This smog is a byproduct of clay extraction and transportation near this South American city.

https://www.machronicle.com/these-5-cities-have-worse-air-quality-than-m-a-does-right-now/

-------------------

These Workers in São Paulo, Brazil Are Marching Toward Zero Waste

https://storyofstuff.org/blog/they-did-it-in-sao-paulo/

The streets of Belo Horizonte were filled with singing, dancing, chanting, and marching. It was not a holiday or an election day or a soccer game. The chant was: “We don’t want incineration! Recycle! Recycle!”

It was September 19, 2014, and this was the launch of a national Zero Waste Alliance, Brazil style. Exuberant, celebratory, and led by recycling workers.

The recycling workers of Brazil have long been a powerful force in protecting their communities and the climate. Now they are on the forefront of a nation-wide movement for zero waste.


--------------------

Effects of air pollution caused by sugarcane burning in Western São Paulo on the cardiovascular system

2015

https://researchmgt.monash.edu/ws/portalfiles/portal/38644051/38643989_oa.pdf

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The Effects of Driving Restrictions on Air Quality: São Paulo, Bogotá, Beijing, and Tianjin

2011

https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/103381/?ln=en

--------------------

Recent study linking air pollution to lower intelligence sparks concern for São Paulo residents

August 28, 2018

https://brazilreports.com/recent-study-linking-air-pollution-to-lower-intelligence-sparks-concern-for-sao-paulo-residents/1638/

--------------------

Air Pollution Consequences in Sao Paulo: Evidence for Health

https://www.stata.com/meeting/brazil17/slides/brazil17_Guidetti.pdf

--------------------

Particulate pollutants in the Brazilian city of São Paulo:1-year investigation for the chemical compositionand source apportionment

2017

https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/17/11943/2017/acp-17-11943-2017.pdf



---------------------------------


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Section 21: Endangered Animals & Plants

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50 endangered species that only live in the Amazon Rainforest

August 30, 2019

https://thestacker.com/stories/3452/50-endangered-species-only-live-amazon-rainforest

------------------

Endangered Animals of the Amazon Rainforest

February 21, 2019

https://www.rainforestcruises.com/jungle-blog/endangered-animals-of-the-amazon-rainforest

------------------

São Paolo Trafficking: Smuggling Brazil’s Wildlife

2015

https://news.mongabay.com/2015/10/sao-paolo-trafficking-smuggling-brazils-wildlife/

-------------------

Walking dead: the Amazon's endangered species

2012

Study says some rainforest species are doomed to disappear even if deforestation were halted overnight

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2012/jul/12/amazon-endangered-species-doomed-brazil

------------------

Report: 100 Amazon Bird Species Are at Greater Risk of Extinction Due to Deforestation

June 8, 2012

https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/extinction-countdown/100-amazon-bird-species-extinction-deforestation/

------------------

What threatens Brazilian endangered species and how they are Red-2 Listed

2019

https://www.biorxiv.org/content/biorxiv/early/2019/07/26/711242.full.pdf

------------------


List of threatened mammals of Brazil


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_threatened_mammals_of_Brazil


Contents


    1 Threatened mammals of Brazil - ICMBio (2014)

        1.1 Order Didelphimorphia (opossums)

        1.2 Order Pilosa (anteaters and sloths)

        1.3 Order Cingulata (armadillos)

        1.4 Order Chiroptera (bats)

        1.5 Order Primates (monkeys, marmosets, tamarins)

        1.6 Order Carnivora (cats, dogs and relatives)

        1.7 Order Cetacea (whales and dolphins)

        1.8 Order Sirenia (manatees)

        1.9 Order Perissodactyla (odd-toed ungulates)

        1.10 Order Artiodactyla (even-toed ungulates)

        1.11 Order Rodentia (rodents)




Threatened mammals of Brazil - ICMBio (2014)


Order Didelphimorphia (opossums)


Family Didelphidae


    Caluromysiops irrupta (Black-shouldered opossum) LC IUCN - ICMBio status CRPEx

    Marmosops paulensis (Brazilian slender opossum) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Thylamys macrurus (Paraguayan fat-tailed mouse opossum) NT IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Thylamys velutinus (Dwarf fat-tailed mouse opossum) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Order Pilosa (anteaters and sloths)


Family Bradypodidae (Three-toed sloths)


    Bradypus torquatus (Maned sloth) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Family Myrmecophagidae (Anteaters)


    Myrmecophaga tridactyla (Giant anteater) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Order Cingulata (armadillos)


Family Dasypodidae


    Priodontes maximus (Giant armadillo) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Tolypeutes tricinctus (Brazilian three-banded armadillo) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Order Chiroptera (bats)


Family Furipteridae (Smoky bats)


    Furipterus horrens (Thumbless bat) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Family Natalidae (funnel-eared bats)


    Natalus macrourus (Brazilian funnel-eared bat) NE - ICMBio status VU


Family Phyllostomidae (New World leaf-nosed bats)


    Glyphonycteris behnii (Behn's bat) DD IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Lonchophylla aurita (NR) - ICMBio status VU

    Lonchophylla dekeyseri (Dekeyser's nectar bat) NT IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Xeronycteris vieirai (Vieira's long-tongued bat) DD IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Family Vespertilionidae (Vesper bats)


    Eptesicus taddeii NE - ICMBio status VU


Order Primates (monkeys, marmosets, tamarins)


Family Atelidae (howlers, spider and woolly monkeys, muriquis)


    Alouatta belzebul (Red-handed howler) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Alouatta discolor (Spix's red-handed howler) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Alouatta guariba clamitans (Southern brown howler) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Alouatta guariba guariba (Northern brown howler) CR IUCN - ICMBio status CR

    Alouatta ululata (Maranhão red-handed howler) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Ateles belzebuth (White-bellied spider monkey) EN IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Ateles chamek (Peruvian spider monkey) EN IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Ateles marginatus (White-cheeked spider monkey) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Brachyteles arachnoides (Southern muriqui) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Brachyteles hypoxanthus (Northern muriqui) CR IUCN - ICMBio status CR

    Lagothrix cana cana (Gray woolly monkey) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Lagothrix lagothricha (Brown woolly monkey) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Lagothrix poeppigii (Silvery woolly monkey) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Famlily Callitrichidae (tamarins and marmosets)


    Callithrix aurita (Buffy-tufted marmoset) VU IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Callithrix flaviceps (Buffy-headed marmoset) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Leontopithecus caissara (Superagui lion tamarin) CR IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Leontopithecus chrysomelas (Golden-headed lion tamarin) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Leontopithecus chrysopygus (Black lion tamarin) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Leontopithecus rosalia (Golden lion tamarin) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Mico rondoni (Rondon's marmoset) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Saguinus bicolor (Pied tamarin) EN IUCN - ICMBio status CR

    Saguinus niger (Black tamarin) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Family Cebidae (capuchins and squirrel monkeys)


    Cebus kaapori (Kaapori capuchin) CR IUCN - ICMBio status CR

    Saimiri vanzolinii (Black squirrel monkey) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Sapajus cay (Azaras's capuchin) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Sapajus flavius (Blond capuchin) CR IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Sapajus robustus (Crested capuchin) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Sapajus xanthosternos (Golden-bellied capuchin) CR IUCN - ICMBio status EN


Family Pitheciidae (titis, saki monkeys and uakaris)


    Cacajao hosomi (Neblina uakari) VU IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Callicebus barbarabrownae (Barbara Brown's titi) CR IUCN - ICMBio status CR

    Callicebus coimbrai (Coimbra Filho's titi) EN IUCN - ICMBio status CR

    Callicebus melanochir (Coastal black-handed titi) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Callicebus personatus (Atlantic titi) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Chiropotes satanas (Black bearded saki) CR IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Chiropotes utahicki (Uta Hick's bearded saki) EN IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Order Carnivora (cats, dogs and relatives)


Family Canidae (dogs)


    Atelocynus microtis (Short-eared dog) NT IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Chrysocyon brachyurus (Maned wolf) NT IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Lycalopex vetulus (Hoary fox) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Speothos venaticus (Bush dog) NT IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Family Mustelidae (otters)


    Pteronura brasiliensis (Giant otter) EN IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Family Felidae (cats)


    Leopardus colocolo (Colocolo) NT IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Leopardus geoffroyi (Geoffroy's cat) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Leopardus guttulus (Southern tigrina) NE - ICMBio status VU

    Leopardus tigrinus (Oncilla) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Leopardus wiedii (Margay) NT IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Puma concolor (Cougar) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Puma yagouaroundi (Jaguarundi) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Panthera onca (Jaguar) NT IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Order Cetacea (whales and dolphins)


Family Balaenidae (whales)


    Eubalaena australis (Southern right whale) LC IUCN - ICMBio status EN


Family Balaenopteridae (rorquals)


    Balaenoptera musculus (Blue whale) EN IUCN - ICMBio status CR

    Balaenoptera physalus (Fin whale) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Balaenoptera borealis (Sei whale) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN


Family Delphinidae (dolphins)


    Sotalia guianensis (Guiana dolphin) DD IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Family Iniidae (river dolphins)


    Inia geoffrensis (Amazon river dolphin) DD IUCN - ICMBio status EN


Family Physeteridae (sperm whales)


    Physeter macrocephalus (Sperm whale) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Family Pontoporiidae (river dolphins)


    Pontoporia blainvillei (La Plata dolphin) VU IUCN - ICMBio status CR


Order Sirenia (manatees)



Family Trichechidae


    Trichechus inunguis (Amazonian manatee) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Trichechus manatus (West Indian manatee) VU IUCN - ICMBio status CR


Order Perissodactyla (odd-toed ungulates)


Family Tapiridae (tapirs)


    Tapirus terrestris (Brazilian tapir) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Order Artiodactyla (even-toed ungulates)



Family Cervidae (deers)


    Blastocerus dichotomus (Marsh deer) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Mazama bororo (Small red brocket) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Mazama nana (Pygmy brocket) VU IUCN - ICMBio status CR

    Ozotoceros bezoarticus bezoarticus (Pampas deer) NE - ICMBio status VU

    Ozotoceros bezoarticus leucogaster (Pampas deer) NE - ICMBio status VU


Family Tayassuidae (peccaries)


    Tayassu pecari (White-lipped peccary) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Order Rodentia (rodents)



Family Caviidae (cavies)


    Cavia intermedia (Santa Catarina's guinea pig) CR IUCN - ICMBio status CR

    Kerodon acrobata (Acrobatic cavy) DD IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Kerodon rupestris (Rock cavy) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Family Cricetidae (New World rats and mice)


    Akodon mystax (Caparaó grass mouse) DD IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Cerradomys goytaca NE - ICMBio status EN

    Euryoryzomys lamia (Buffy-sided oryzomys) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Gyldenstolpia planaltensis NE - ICMBio status EN

    Juscelinomys candango (Candango mouse) EX IUCN - ICMBio status CRPEx

    Microakodontomys transitorius (Transitional colilargo) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Noronhomys vespuccii (Vespucci's rodent) EX IUCN - ICMBio status EX

    Oligoryzomys rupestris DD IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Rhipidomys cariri (Cariri climbing mouse) DD IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Rhipidomys tribei (Yellow-bellied Climbing Mouse) NE - ICMBio status EN

    Thalpomys cerradensis (Cerrado mouse) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Thalpomys lasiotis (Hairy-eared cerrado mouse) LC IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Wilfredomys oenax (Greater Wilfred's mouse) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN


Family Ctenomyidae (tuco-tucos)


    Ctenomys bicolorNE - ICMBio status EN

    Ctenomys flamarioni (Flamarion's tuco-tuco) EN IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Ctenomys lami (Lami tuco-tuco) VU IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Ctenomys minutus (Tiny tuco-tuco) DD IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Family Echimyidae


    Callistomys pictus (Painted tree-rat) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Phyllomys lundi (Lund's Atlantic tree-rat) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Phyllomys unicolor (Short-furred Atlantic tree-rat) CR IUCN - ICMBio status CR

    Phyllomys brasiliensis (Orange-brown Atlantic tree-rat) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Phyllomys thomasi (Giant Atlantic tree-rat) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Trinomys eliasi (Elias' Atlantic spiny rat) EN IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Trinomys moojeni (Moojen's Atlantic spiny rat) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Trinomys mirapitanga (Dark-caped Atlantic spiny rat) DD IUCN - ICMBio status EN

    Trinomys yonenagae (Yonenaga's Atlantic spiny rat) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN


Family Erethizontidae (New World porcupine)


    Chaetomys subspinosus (Bristle-spined rat) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

    Coendou speratus NE - ICMBio status EN

-----------------


List of threatened mammals of Brazil


https://www.wikiwand.com/en/List_of_threatened_mammals_of_Brazil


----------------------

Striking National Geographic photos show animals that could disappear from the face of the Earth


Nov 26, 2019


https://www.insider.com/photos-endangered-species-that-are-going-extinct-2019-9


-----------------

Amazon Rainforest Animals: A Beginner’s Guide to 21 Species

https://www.ietravel.com/blog/amazon-rainforest-animals-beginners-guide-21-species


-----------------


What about the animals caught in the Amazon rainforest fires?

29 August 2019

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-49497857

It's believed about three million different species of plant and animal - one in 10 of all the species in the world - live in the Amazon.

This has been the worst year for Amazon fires since 2010.

At the time of writing, Brazil's space agency Inpe reports that there have been almost 85,000 fires in the rainforest so far.

So what does this mean for the many animals who call the Amazon home?

-----------------

What Is Happening to the Animals in the Amazon?

8/28/19

https://www.newsweek.com/what-happening-animals-amazon-1456689

-----------------


How the Amazon Rainforest Fire Impacts Animals

Posted on August 29, 2019

https://www.greengeeks.com/blog/2019/08/29/how-the-amazon-rainforest-fire-impacts-animals/

Of course, there are plenty of other animals that are in trouble. Even before these fires began, the giant otter was endangered due to the illegal fur trade.

While you may think that aquatic life would be safe from a fire, it’s the exact opposite. The ash from the burned trees makes its way into the water along with sediment. This will alter the oxygen levels in the water.

The flames will raise the water’s temperature rapidly, which is too much for fish to cope with. This will kill off the main food supply that the giant otter eats.

Plants Will Burn

Unlike animals, plants are stationary and have zero defenses against a fire. The Amazon Rainforest is home to over 40,000 unique plant species and they are all susceptible.

The destruction of the trees will allow more sunlight into the rainforest, which will make certain plant species unable to cope. Of course, trees that produce fruits will be missed.

These trees provide a much-needed food source to birds, monkeys, and other animal species.

Relief Is Needed

Since the fires are manmade, they are much harder to contain. And due to the volume of fires, Brazil does not have the resources to deal with it. Only additional aid will be able to remedy the situation.

------------------

Amazon Forest Fires May Have Already Destroyed Thousands Of Animal Species

August 24, 2019

The Amazon is home to 10 percent of all animal species in the world and some have adapted to niche habitats of the forest like the Milton's Titi monkey and the Toucans. There are fears that the raging forest fire might have led to the extinction of a few species and endangered others.

https://apsari.com/the-amazon-forest-fires-may-have-already-decimated-thousands-of-animal-species

------------------

 Amazon fish species at risk if fires destroy river habitat

2019

The fires burning through the Brazilian Amazon are a threat to the fish that rely on forest flooding to survive, raising fears the fish will be lost.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/2019/09/amazon-fires-brazil-threaten-fish/

------------------


On the brink: 10 South American species endangered by environmental change

https://granthaminstitute.com/2016/03/02/on-the-brink-10-south-american-species-endangered-by-environmental-change/

Amazonian manatee (Trichechus inunguis)
Galapagos giant tortoise (Chelonoidis nigra)
Golden lion tamarin (Leontopithecus rosalia)
Wonderfully-bristled Turks cap cactus (Melocactus deinacanthus)
    Waved albatross (Phoebastria irrorata)
Orinoco crocodile (Crocodylus intermedius)
Panamanian golden frog (Atelopus zeteki)
Apparition orchid (Masdevallia apparitio)
Lemur leaf frog (Agalychnis lemur)
Spix’s macaw (Cyanopsitta spixii)


----------------


The “Big Five” of the Cerrado

2015   

https://www.wwf.org.br/informacoes/english/?50242/The-Big-Five-of-the-Cerrado

The vastness and location of the Cerrado makes it strategically important. Apart from connecting three countries (Brazil, Bolivia and Paraguay), it links four of Brazil’s five biomes - the Amazon, Caatinga, Atlantic Forest, and Pantanal – and shares many plants and animals with these regions. It also harbours many unique species, many of which only exist here, making this region - which occupies one-quarter of the area of Brazil - the world's most biologically rich savannah.

Imagine a place where there are over 11,000 species of plants and the fauna is as diverse as the flora. The Cerrado harbours 837 species of birds, 120 reptiles, 150 amphibians, 1,200 fish, 90,000 insects and 199 mammals. Together, they account for 5% of the world’s species and 30% of Brazil’s biodiversity.

There are 5,487 species of mammals in the world. Brazil is second in the global rankings of total number of mammal species, with 700 species, while one in three of the country’s mammal species can be found in the Cerrado.

More than five thousand of Brazil’s animal species can be found in the Cerrado, mainly in protected areas, where the majority of remnant native vegetation can be found. Less than 10% of the Cerrado is covered by protected areas, and less than 3% of its area is strictly protected, putting various animals at risk of extinction.

Apart from loss of habitat, the main threats to the survival of wildlife in the Cerrado are illegal hunting and forest fires.

The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species confirms that one in four of the world's known mammal species face extinction and the populations of half of the world's mammal species are in decline. If nothing is done, these animals are likely to disappear from the Planet in the near future.

According to Julio César Sampaio, coordinator of WWF-Brasil’s Cerrado/Pantanal Programme, “The Cerrado is disappearing at an alarming rate, giving way to agriculture and extensive cattle ranching. This form of natural resource exploitation has resulted in serious threats to the survival of at least 137 species of fauna (22%), including the Maned Wolf, Jaguar, Giant Anteater and Giant Armadillo, which are flagship species and threatened with extinction”.

Learn more about the “Big Five” of the Cerrado.


The Jaguar (Panthera onca)

The Giant Armadillo (Priodonte Maximus)

The Tapir (Tapirus terrestres)

The Giant Anteater (Myrmecophaga tridactyla)

The Maned Wolf (Chrysocyon brachyurus)

----------------

AN ASSESSMENT OF WILDLIFE POACHING AND TRAFFICKINGIN BOLIVIA AND SURINAME

https://www.iucn.nl/files/publicaties/an_assessment_of_wildlife_poaching_and_trafficking_in_bolivia_and_suriname.pdf

----------------

 Amazon river dolphins now listed as ‘Endangered’ by IUCN

11 December 2018

The update is part of assessments or reassessments of 35 cetacean species, subspecies or populations published on the IUCN Red List in November 2018

https://www.downtoearth.org.in/news/wildlife-biodiversity/amazon-river-dolphins-now-listed-as-endangered-by-iucn-62425

----------------

Hunting, Fishing Cause Dramatic Decline in Amazon River Dolphins

Jun. 16, 2018

https://www.ecowatch.com/amazon-river-dolphin-population-2578034917.html

-----------------

Amazon River Dolphin

2018

https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/10831/50358152

-----------------

What’s Killing the Pink River Dolphin?


In the Brazilian Amazon, two veteran scientists are embroiled in a bitter feud over how to protect the endangered mammal.

https://www.earthisland.org/journal/index.php/magazine/entry/whats-killing-the-pink-river-dolphin-brazil-amazon/

---------------

Mysterious river dolphin helps crack the code of marine mammal communication

Date: April 19, 2019

Source: University of Vermont

Summary: The Araguaian river dolphin of Brazil was thought to be solitary with little social structure that would require communication. But researchers have discovered the dolphins actually are social and can make hundreds of different sounds, a finding that could help uncover how communication evolved in marine mammals.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/04/190419094047.htm

------------------------

Dolphins are the sentinels of pollution in Brazil

9/5/13

In Guanabara Bay in Southeastern Brazil, Guiana dolphins are highly contaminated by PCBs. Tissue samples taken from the cetaceans showed PCB concentrations that are among the highest in the world, according to a study conducted by researchers from Brazil and Liège who were concerned about the health of Guanabara Bay’s 12 millions residents.

http://www.reflexions.uliege.be/cms/c_350727/en/dolphins-are-the-sentinels-of-pollution-in-brazil?portal=j_55&printView=true


---------------

Genotoxicity effects on Geophagus brasiliensis fish exposed to Doce River water after the environmental disaster in the city of Mariana, MG, Brazil

2018

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/329021694_Genotoxicity_effects_on_Geophagus_brasiliensis_fish_exposed_to_Doce_River_water_after_the_environmental_disaster_in_the_city_of_Mariana_MG_Brazil

---------------

Light-stick: A problem of marine pollution in Brazil

Jan 2017

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/313254988_Light-stick_A_problem_of_marine_pollution_in_Brazil

Light-sticks are used as bait in surface long-line fishing, to capture swordfish and other large pelagic predators. When discharged in the ocean, it may reach the beaches. The traditional Brazilian community of Costa dos Coqueiros, Bahia, use light-sticks as a medicine for rheumatism, vitiligo and mycoses. It may affect the marine life when its content leak in the open ocean. This work evaluated and identified the acute and chronic toxicity of the light-stick. A high acute toxicity was observed in the mobility/mortality of Artemia sp.; in the fertilization of sea urchin eggs, and a high chronic toxicity in the development of the pluteus larvae of the same sea urchin. The main compounds that probably caused toxicity were the volatiles such as the fluorescent PAH and oxidants such as the hydrogen peroxide. Its disposal in the open ocean is a potential threat for marine life.

------------------------

Marine Pollution Bulletin

https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/marine-pollution-bulletin/vol/142/suppl/C

------------------------

How Marine Protected Areas Help Fisheries and Ocean Ecosystems

June 3, 2019

https://www.americanprogress.org/issues/green/reports/2019/06/03/470585/marine-protected-areas-help-fisheries-ocean-ecosystems/


---------------

Shark Fishing in Brazil Stirs Controversy

8-3-2010

https://www.americasquarterly.org/node/1757

---------------------

Nearly 2,000 Pounds of Illegal Shark Fins Found in Cargo

7-10-2016

In this week’s crime blotter: fins from Panama, ivory necklaces and bracelets, and 24 illegal logging suspects arrested.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2016/07/wildlife-shark-fins-hong-kong-hammerheads-smuggling-poaching/


---------------------

CSI shark edition: revealing illegal trade with DNA

 5-3-2018

https://academic.oup.com/conphys/article/6/1/coy022/4992167

---------------------

Canada becomes the first G20 country to ban shark fin trade

6-21-2019

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-48714320

---------------------

Asia demand 'spurs Brazilian shark kills'

8-3-2010

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-pacific-10848165

---------------------


The Path towards Endangered Species: Prehistoric Fisheries in Southeastern Brazil

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0154476

Abstract

Brazilian shellmounds are archaeological sites with a high concentration of marine faunal remains. There are more than 2000 sites along the coast of Brazil that range in age from 8,720 to 985 cal BP. Here, we studied the ichthyoarchaeological remains (i.e., cranial/postcranial bones, otoliths, and teeth, among others) at 13 shellmounds on the southern coast of the state of Rio de Janeiro, which are located in coastal landscapes, including a sandy plain with coastal lagoons, rocky islands, islets and rocky bays. We identified patterns of similarity between shellmounds based on fish diversity, the ages of the assemblages, littoral geomorphology and prehistoric fisheries. Our new radiocarbon dating, based on otolith samples, was used for fishery characterization over time. A taxonomical study of the ichthyoarchaeological remains includes a diversity of 97 marine species, representing 37% of all modern species (i.e., 265 spp.) that have been documented along the coast of Rio de Janeiro state. This high fish diversity recovered from the shellmounds is clear evidence of well-developed prehistoric fishery activity that targeted sharks, rays and finfishes in a productive area influenced by coastal marine upwelling. The presence of adult and neonate shark, especially oceanic species, is here interpreted as evidence of prehistoric fisheries capacity for exploitation and possibly overexploitation in nursery areas. Various tools and strategies were used to capture finfish in seasonal fisheries, over rocky reef bottoms and in sandy littoral environments. Massive catches of whitemouth croaker, main target dermersal species of South Atlantic coast, show evidence of a reduction in body size of approximately 28% compared with modern fisheries. Fishery activity involving vulnerable species, especially in nursery areas, could mark the beginning of fish depletion along the southeastern Brazilian coast and the collapse of natural fish populations.

----------------

Conservation efforts for giant South American river turtles have protected 147,000 females

6-25-2019

The paper surveyed 85 conservation projects that protect the 'charapa' in the Amazon and Orinoco river basins

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/06/190625173427.htm

----------------

Vulnerability of Giant South American Turtle (Podocnemis expansa) nesting habitat to climate-change-induced alterations to fluvial cycles

2016

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1940082916667139

----------------

Violence and pollution stain Brazil's shrimp farming boom

2012

https://theecologist.org/2012/feb/17/violence-and-pollution-stain-brazils-shrimp-farming-boom

--------------

Suspicious Shrimp

The Health Risks of Industrialized Shrimp Production

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412018328113

---------------

Mercury in fish and sediment of Purus River, Acre State, Amazon

2016

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1414-462X2016000300294

--------------

Fish, upper Purus River, state of Acre, Brazil

June 2008 

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/40440888_Fish_upper_Purus_River_state_of_Acre_Brazil

Abstract


The ichthyofauna of the headwaters of the main tributaries of the mighty Solimões/Amazonas River hasbeen little studied. Considering the importance of those environments for the overall fish diversity in that river system,we surveyed the composition of the fish fauna of the upper portion of Purus River and two of its tributaries (Caeté andMacapá rivers), state of Acre, Brazil. The collections were done in November 2004, using a seine net and a set ofgillnets of different mesh sizes. A total of 735 specimens belonging to 86 species and 28 families were collected. Eightspecies, Creagrutus occidaneus, Phenacogaster pectinatus, Prionobrama filigera, Moenkhausia cf. lepidura,Leptagoniates pi (Characidade), Henonemus punctatus (Trichomycteridae), Toracocharax stellatus (Gateropelecidae),and Eigenmannia macrops (Sternopygidae) composed nearly half of the specimens collected. This survey adds 48 newrecords to the ichthyofauna of Purus River and elevates to 243 the number of known fish species in that river, but agreater sampling effort is necessary to produce a reasonably complete picture of the fish diversity in the basin.

--------------

Amazon river dolphins threatened by mercury pollution

2019

https://www.france24.com/en/20191024-amazon-river-dolphins-threatened-by-mercury-pollution

--------------

Amazon river dolphins threatened by mercury pollution

2019

https://phys.org/news/2019-10-amazon-river-dolphins-threatened-mercury.html

--------------


Mercury Contamination in Humans Linked to River Chemistry in the Amazon Basin

1999

https://www.jstor.org/stable/4314944?seq=1

--------------

Healthy Rivers Healthy People

Addressing the Mercury Crisis in the Amazon

https://www.wwf.org.uk/sites/default/files/2018-11/WWF%20-%20Healthy%20Rivers%20Healthy%20People.pdf

--------------

Hg and δ15N in juvenile green turtles from southeastern Brazil (~23°S): Inferences about contamination levels and recruitment to coastal waters

2019

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0025326X19302073

--------------

Amazon Turtles Recovering, Thanks to Local Volunteers

2018

Forty years of community engagement has brought the freshwater turtles of Brazil back from the brink—but lack of funding may imperil conservation.

https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/article/amazonian-turtle-comeback-local-conservation/

--------------

Blood plasma levels of heavy metals and trace elements in white sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) and potential health consequences

2019

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0025326X19302024

--------------

 Amazon River, South America

https://www.britannica.com/place/Amazon-River/Soils

--------------

Brazil's troubled waters

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/ng-interactive/2015/jun/25/brazils-gamble-on-deep-water-oil-guanabara-bay

--------------

 What Causes Brazil’s Bizarre "Meeting of the Waters"?


Though it looks like a huge sandbar or rampant pollution, the Meeting of the Waters in Brazil is composed of water from the Rio Negro and Rio Solimões rivers. They meet up to form the Lower Amazon River, but do not mix together initially. This amazing phenomenon stretches for 6 km (3.7 mi) and is caused by irreconcilable differences in the water properties between the two rivers.




https://www.iflscience.com/environment/what-causes-brazil%E2%80%99s-bizarre-meeting-waters/

-------------

The Amazon River’s Ecosystem: Where Land Meets the Sea

https://eos.org/science-updates/the-amazon-rivers-ecosystem-where-land-meets-the-sea

-------------


Brazilian Salamanders: Rare, Beautiful and Endangered

2018

https://blog.nationalgeographic.org/2018/05/05/brazilian-salamanders-rare-beautiful-and-endangered/

-----------------


Copper exposure and seawater acidification interaction: Antagonistic effects on biomarkers in the zooxanthellate scleractinian coral Mussismilia harttii.

2019

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30472481

-----------------------

Taxonomic guide and historical review of starfishes in northeastern Brazil (Echinodermata, Asteroidea)

2014

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4233396/

-----------------------

A new species of Notodiaptomus from the Amazon basin (Crustacea, Copepoda, Calanoida, Diaptomidae)

2017

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5523360/

-----------------------

Seasonal changes in the use of feeding resources by fish in stands of aquatic macrophytes in an Amazonian floodplain, Brazil

2014

https://www.researchgate.net/figure/a-Map-showing-the-position-of-the-Trombetas-River-in-relation-to-Brazil-and-South_fig1_260529977

-----------------------

Biodiversity of freshwater sponges (Porifera: Spongillina) from northeast Brazil: new species and notes on systematics

https://www.biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.3981.2.4


--------------

Along the Rio Negro: Brazilian Children's Environmental Views and Values

1996

https://depts.washington.edu/hints/publications/Along_the_Rio_Negro.pdf

--------------

Lobbying for the new Mining Code and cooptation of indigenous communities along Rio Negro, Amazonas, Brazil

https://ejatlas.org/conflict/indigenous-communities-of-rio-negro-divided-over-mining-regularization-and-affected-by-commercial-cooptation-and-illegal-mining

--------------------------

Differential resilience of Amazonian otters along the Rio Negro in the aftermath of the 20th century international fur trade

2018

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5877832/

---------------------------


A Contribution to the Chemical Characterization of Rivers in the Rio Negro Basin, Brazil

2000

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/26363562_A_Contribution_to_the_Chemical_Characterization_of_Rivers_in_the_Rio_Negro_Basin_Brazil

---------------------------

Energy at the Junction of the Rivers Negro and Solimões, Contributors of the Amazon River, in the Brazilian Amazon

2014

https://www.hindawi.com/journals/isrn/2014/794583/

---------------------------

Chronology of the Atmospheric Mercury in Lagoa da Pata Basin, Upper Rio Negro Region of Brazilian Amazon

2001

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/radiocarbon/article/chronology-of-the-atmospheric-mercury-in-lagoa-da-pata-basin-upper-rio-negro-region-of-brazilian-amazon/83DB453EFC25A4E2F29FCBB0B6D05768

---------------------------

Banned from the beach for pollution, these Brazilians brought beach culture to a lake

2016

https://www.pri.org/stories/2016-03-01/banned-beach-pollution-these-brazilians-brought-beach-culture-lake

----------------------------

Why be red listed? Threatened Myriapoda species in Brazil with implications for their conservation

2018

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5904424/

----------------

Endangered Species In The Amazon

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QFk6GG8w-Ak

----------------


In Search of Lost Frogs: The Quest to Find the World's Rarest Amphibians

2014

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/21563969-in-search-of-lost-frogs

----------------

In Search of Lost Frogs: The Quest to Find the World’s Rarest Amphibians – book review

10-24-2014

https://blog.mongabay.com/2014/10/24/in-search-of-lost-frogs-the-quest-to-find-the-worlds-rarest-amphibians-book-review/

----------------

In Search of Lost Frogs

2014

https://wild.com.au/gear/reviews/lost-frogs-robin-moore/

----------------

Seven new species of miniature frogs discovered in cloud forests of Brazil

2015

Tiny frogs smaller in size than bumblebees have evolved with fewer fingers and toes to reduce their size to adapt to life on isolated mountaintops

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/jun/04/seven-new-species-of-miniature-frogs-discovered-in-cloud-forests-of-brazil

----------------------

Lost frogs: finding the world's rarest amphibians – in pictures

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/gallery/2014/sep/11/lost-frogs-finding-the-worlds-rarest-amphibians-in-pictures

-----------------

Climate change may drive 10% of amphibian species in Brazil's Atlantic Rainforest to extinction

9-12-2018

http://agencia.fapesp.br/climate-change-may-drive-10-of-amphibian-species-in-brazils-atlantic-rainforest-to-extinction/28689/

----------------

Two new endangered species of Anomaloglossus (Anura: Aromobatidae) from Roraima State, northern Brazil.

2015

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25781778

----------------

Can Frogs Return From the Dead?

http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20140911-quest-for-the-worlds-lost-frogs

----------------

Assessment of water pollution in the Brazilian Pampa biome by means of stress biomarkers in tadpoles of the leaf frog Phyllomedusa iheringii (Anura: Hylidae)

6-4-2015

https://peerj.com/articles/1016/

Abstract


The Brazilian Pampa biome is currently under constant threat due to increase of agriculture and improper management of urban effluents. Studies with a focus on the assessment of impacts caused by human activities in this biome are scarce. In the present study, we measured stress-related biomarkers in tadpoles of the leaf frog Phyllomedusa iheringii, an endemic species to the Pampa biome, and tested its suitability as a bioindicator for the assessment of potential aquatic contamination in selected ponds (S1 and S2) nearby agricultural areas in comparison to a reference site. A significant decrease in acetylcholinesterase activity was observed in S2 when compared to S1 and reference. The levels of total-hydroperoxides were increased in S2 site. In parallel, increased activity of the antioxidant enzymes catalase, superoxide dismutase and glutathione S-transferase were observed in S2 when compared to S1 and reference. Further studies are necessary in order to correlate the changes observed here with different chemical stressors in water, as well as to elucidate mechanisms of toxicity induced by pesticides in amphibian species endemic to the Pampa biome. Nevertheless, our study validates Phyllomedusa iheringii as a valuable bioindicator in environmental studies.

----------------


Conservation Status of Brachycephalus Toadlets (Anura: Brachycephalidae) from the Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest

2019

https://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/11/9/150/htm

----------------

7 Awesome Frog Species of the Tropics

https://www.britannica.com/list/7-awesome-frog-species-of-the-tropics

----------------

Chemical that castrates frogs among new pesticides approved by Bolsonaro in Brazil despite being banned elsewhere

2019

Three weedkillers approved this year contain Atrazine, which chemically castrates frogs




Bolsonaro has undone a number of key environmental standards in the country as he believes they hinder Brazil’s economic potential. Pictured is deforestation in the Amazon

https://www.independent.co.uk/environment/pesticides-brazil-jair-bolsonaro-amazon-deforestation-agribusiness-a8957261.html

----------------

Worldwide Amphibian Declines:

3-3-2017

What is the scope of the problem, what are the causes, and what can be done?

https://amphibiaweb.org/declines/declines.html

----------------


Climate change sensitivity of threatened, and largely unprotected, Amazonian fishes

2016

https://depts.washington.edu/oldenlab/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/AquaticConservation_2016.pdf


----------------


WSB: Which animals are hunted in the eastern Amazon?

2018

https://wildlife.org/wsb-which-animals-are-hunted-in-the-eastern-amazon/

----------------

Sloths, manatee, other wildlife rescued from Amazon tourism trade

2018

Authorities have rescued 22 wild animals illegally being used as tourist photo props in a Peruvian town on the Amazon river

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/2018/12/22-wild-animals-rescued-from-tourism-trade-on-amazon-river/

----------------

Wild animal trafficking

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k3dTCjzKX8Q

----------------

Illegal and Legal Parrot Trade Shows a Long-Term, Cross-Cultural Preference for the Most Attractive Species Increasing Their Risk of Extinction

2014

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0107546

----------------

DNA Barcoding Identifies Illegal Parrot Trade

https://academic.oup.com/jhered/article/106/S1/560/2961831

----------------

Understanding the Illegal Parrot Trade

https://lafeber.com/vet/understanding-the-illegal-parrot-trade/

----------------

Endangered plant-parrot mutualisms: seed tolerance to predation makes parrots pervasive dispersers of the Parana pine

2016

https://www.nature.com/articles/srep31709

------------------

Illegal wildlife trade in the Amazon

https://wwf.panda.org/knowledge_hub/where_we_work/amazon/amazon_threats/other_threats/illegal_wildlife_trade_amazon/

----------------

Illegal wildlife trade: A case study report on the illegal wildlife trade in the United Kingdom, Norway, Colombia and Brazil

https://efface.eu/illegal-wildlife-trade-case-study-report-illegal-wildlife-trade-united-kingdom-norway-colombia-and

-----------------

Spotlight on threatened birds

http://datazone.birdlife.org/sowb/spotthreatbirds

-----------------

Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Reclassifying the Golden Conure From Endangered to Threatened With a Section 4(d) Rule

09/05/2018

https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2018/09/05/2018-19153/endangered-and-threatened-wildlife-and-plants-reclassifying-the-golden-conure-from-endangered-to

---------------

The Harpy Eagle and the Amazon rainforest in Brazilian federal law - thoughts on environmental law and the conservation of birds of prey and their habitat

2017

http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2225-71602017000200002

----------------

The jaguar's struggle for survival

11.06.2019

https://www.dw.com/en/the-jaguars-struggle-for-survival/g-49104882

-----------------

 Suspect said to boast he killed over 1,000 jaguars

2019







https://www.ecoamericas.com/issues/article/2019/7/1E847D80-3EB8-4169-9FB5-BAE62C71EC48

-----------------

 Brazil’s Operation Jaguar: Busting a Poaching Ring

3 October 2010






https://news.mongabay.com/2010/10/brazils-operation-jaguar-busting-a-poaching-ring/

-----------------


The Illegal wildlife trade

A case study report on the illegal wildlife trade intheUnited Kingdom,Norway, Colombia and Brazil

https://www.ecologic.eu/sites/files/publication/2015/efface_illegal_wildlife_trade_in_united_kingdom_norway_colombia_and_brazil_0.pdf

----------------

The illegal parrot trade remains a problem in Latin America

http://datazone.birdlife.org/sowb/casestudy/the-illegal-parrot-trade-remains-a-problem-in-latin-america

In Latin America thousands of wild parrots are illegally caught and traded every year despite national laws and international trade agreements. High levels of exploitation are causing local population declines in the most sought-after species and are contributing to the declines of already globally threatened species.

----------------

This Amazon bird’s eggs are black-market gold. Here’s why.

June 5, 2019

In a sophisticated laundering scheme, traffickers fly the eggs to Europe, incubate them, and pass the live birds off as captive-bred.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/2019/06/hyacinth-macaw-egg-laundering-for-pet-trade/

----------------

Bird's Eye View

1-16-2019

50 years of bird trade regulation & conservation in Amazon countries

https://www.traffic.org/publications/reports/birds-eye-view/

----------------

Trends in Illegal Trade of Wild Birds in Amazonas State, Brazil

2015

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/194008291500800416

----------------

Is Brazil’s threatened bird situation Latin America’s future?

2016

https://news.mongabay.com/2016/06/is-brazils-threatened-bird-situation-latin-americas-future/

----------------

Threats and Promises in Brazil’s Lawless Amazon

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/06/video/amazon-rainforest-fires-burning.html

-----------------

Commercialization of a critically endangered species (largetooth sawfish, Pristis perotteti) in fish markets of northern Brazil: Authenticity by DNA analysis

2013

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0956713513002016

-----------------

Sawfish (Pristidae) records along the Eastern Amazon coast

https://www.int-res.com/articles/esr2017/34/n034p229.pdf

-----------------

Meet the World’s 10 Most Endangered Sharks

2018

https://blog.nature.org/science/2018/07/23/meet-the-worlds-10-most-endangered-sharks/

-----------------

Amazon river dolphins threatened with extinction

Jul 2010

The pink dolphins of the Amazon are being threatened with extinction as fishermen kill them to use their flesh as bait.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/southamerica/brazil/7908246/Amazon-river-dolphins-threatened-with-extinction.html

-----------------

Fishermen in Amazon See a Rival in Dolphins

4-16-2011

https://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/17/world/americas/17dolphins.html

-----------------

Found: An Elusive Shark In A South America Freshwater Lake For The First Time

2019

https://www.forbes.com/sites/melissacristinamarquez/2019/11/04/found-an-elusive-shark-in-a-south-america-freshwater-lake-for-the-first-time/#f40e1a319d86

-----------------

Extinct Animals in the Amazon Rainforest

https://sciencing.com/extinct-animals-amazon-rainforest-6456928.html

Giant Boas
Extinct Amazon Reptile
Phoberomys

----------------

Extinct Animals of the Rainforest

 2019

https://owlcation.com/stem/Extinct-Animals-of-the-Rainforest

Titanoboa
Great Boa
Aukland Island Merganser
Photos of Extinct Birds
Piopio: Extinct Birds
Huias
Huia
Laughing Owl

----------------

Endangered Animals of the Amazon

https://www.aquaexpeditions.com/blog/wildlife/endangered-animals-amazon/

Giant otter
South American Tapir
The red-faced Uakari (Cacajao calvus)

----------------

30 Amazon rain forest animals that may go extinct

https://www.science101.com/30-animals-amazon-rainforest-extinct/

Ocelot
Howler monkey
Capybara
Glass frog
King vulture
Squirrel monkey
Giant river otter
Toco toucan
Poison dart frog
Hyacinth macaw
Brazilian three-toed sloth
Bullet ant
Giant armadillo
Green anaconda
Jaguar
Jumping stick
Spectacled owl
Red uakari
Jaguarundi
Amazon river dolphin
Jocotoco antpitta
Yasuni bat
Black spider monkey
Hoatzin
Harpy eagle
Black caiman
South American tapir
Pygmy marmoset
South American river turtle
Leaf-mimic katydid


----------------

These Amazon Animals Would Still Go Extinct Even if Deforestation Stopped Tomorrow

2012

https://www.treehugger.com/natural-sciences/these-amazon-animals-would-still-go-extinct-even-if-deforestation-stopped-tomorrow.html

White-cheeked spider monkey
Rio Branco antbird
Tree ocelot
Hoary-throated spinetail
Brazilian tapir
Yellow-headed poison frog

----------------

These species went extinct in 2018. More may be doomed to follow in 2019

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2018/12/31/extinct-species-these-animals-were-lost-forever-2018/2450121002/

-----------------

Nearly 600 suspects arrested in largest anti-wildlife-trafficking operation ever

2019

https://www.treehugger.com/endangered-species/600-suspects-arrested-largest-anti-wildlife-trafficking-operation-ever.html

Operation Thunderball (which I like to picture as being orchestrated by an angry Zeus) made 1,828 seizures, including:

    23 live primates
    30 big cats and large quantities of animal parts
    440 pieces of elephant tusks and an additional 1200 pounds of ivory
    Five rhino horns
    More than 4,300 birds
    Just under 1,500 reptiles and nearly 10,000 turtles and tortoises
    Almost 7,700 wildlife parts from all species
    2,550 cubic meters of timber (equivalent to 74 truckloads)
    More than 2,600 plants
    Almost 10,000 marine wildlife items

Among the wildlife parts were seven packages of pangolin parts weighing 1200 pounds bound for Asia seized in Nigeria.

“It’s landmark. It’s the first time such a large joint network has been mobilized — across 109 countries,” INTERPOL's wildlife expert Henri Fournel told The Associated Press.

----------------

20 Extinct Animals We've Lost in the Past 150 Years

https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/animals/g201/recently-extinct-animals-list-470209/?slide=20

 The Spix Macaw {Native to Brazil}

Thought to be extinct in the wild, the Spix Macaw currently exists in captivity with their numbers in the dismally low 60-80 range. The bird is also referred to as Little Blue Macaw because they're known for their vibrant blue feathers.


The Golden Toad

The golden toad is not the only species to disappear in the past 40 years, but it just might be the brightest.

The small toad was last seen in 1989 in a Costa Rican rainforest before being declared extinct in 1994. It is believed that Chytridiomycosis, a fatal skin disease, decimated this toad population that was already vulnerable thanks to what Science is calling a "limited habitat and small population."

Cause of Extinction: pollution, global warming, and chytrid skin infections led to the extinction of this species.


Pinta Island Tortoise

The Pinta Island tortoise was around when Darwin visited the Galapagos in 1835. Sadly, a male named Lonesome George (pictured), was the last purebred of this subspecies and passed in 2015.

Cause of Extinction: goats that humans introduced to Pinta Island who destroyed their habitats, rats (also introduced by humans) who preyed on young tortoises, and humans killing the tortoises for their meat.


----------------

The endangered maned sloth Bradypus torquatus of the Brazilian Atlantic forest: a review and update of geographical distribution and habitat preferences

https://slothconservation.com/scientific-resource/endangered-maned-sloth-bradypus-torquatus-brazilian-atlantic-forest-review-update-geographical-distribution-habitat-preferences/

----------------

Extinction of Rainforest Species Slows Future Growth

https://www.rainforestmaker.org/extinction-of-rainforest-species-slows-future-growth.html

----------------

New Amazonian species discovered every two days while the rainforest is trashed by 'relentless deforestation'

2017

‘There is a real risk that at the rate at which the Amazon is changing many species may become extinct before we have had a chance to find them’

https://www.independent.co.uk/environment/amazon-new-species-discover-rainforest-south-america-deforestation-jungle-a7921641.html


----------------

Wait, Have We Really Wiped Out 60 Percent of Animals?

The findings of a major report have been widely mischaracterized—although the actual news is still grim.

https://getpocket.com/explore/item/wait-have-we-really-wiped-out-60-percent-of-animals?utm_source=pocket-newtab

----------------

24 Amazing Animals That Are Almost Extinct

2019

It's not too late, but the future looks bleak for these species.

https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/animals/g20955197/animals-almost-extinct/

----------------

Endangered Species of the Amazon Rainforest

https://study.com/academy/lesson/endangered-species-of-the-amazon-rainforest.html

----------------

 Amazon's doomed species set to pay deforestation's 'extinction debt'

2012

Ending forest clearance would not save some species from the effects of decades of destruction, scientists find


https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2012/jul/12/amazon-deforestation-species-extinction-debt


---------------

These are the animals that went extinct in 2018

 2018

https://mashable.com/article/animals-that-went-extinct-2018/

---------------

1 million species of plants and animals at risk of extinction, U.N. report warns

2019

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/report-1-million-animals-plant-species-face-extinction-due-climate-change-human-activity-population/

---------------

A million plant and animal species are going extinct—and capitalism is to blame


5-6-2019


https://qz.com/1612943/un-biodiversity-report-says-a-million-species-face-extinction/

---------------


1 million species are under threat. Here are 5 ways we speed up extinctions

5-8-2019

A report that analyzed 15,000 studies conducted in the last 50 years presents a stark view


https://www.sciencenews.org/article/1-million-species-under-threat-humans-speed-extinction

---------------

Species Are Going Extinct At An Unprecedented Rate — Here’s Why You Should Care

5-6-2019

Saving plants and animals from extinction isn’t just our duty, it’s our salvation.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/biodiversity-ipbes-crisis-nature_n_5ccd2fcce4b0e4d75732c371

----------------


These 8 Bird Species Have Disappeared This Decade

2018

The pace of bird extinction is picking up as their habitats vanish.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/2018/09/news-macaw-extinct-bird-species-deforestation/

--------------

Distribution of birds along an elevational gradient in the Atlantic forest of Brazil: implications for the conservation of endemic and endangered species

2010

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/bird-conservation-international/article/distribution-of-birds-along-an-elevational-gradient-in-the-atlantic-forest-of-brazil-implications-for-the-conservation-of-endemic-and-endangered-species/DEFB3D28FA51E33A2A967321B7DC5AE1

--------------

11 Animals That Are Now Extinct ... And It’s Our Fault

2013

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/11-extinct-animals_n_4078988

Major extinction events are nothing new for the planet, but species are now dying out at an alarming rate thanks to humans.

We are presently losing dozens of species every day, according to the Center for Biological Diversity. Nearly 20,000 species of plants and animals are at a high risk of extinction and if trends continue, Earth could see another mass extinction event within a few centuries.

--------------

Why extinct species seem to be returning from the dead

2019

https://theconversation.com/why-extinct-species-seem-to-be-returning-from-the-dead-113067

--------------

Here's All The Incredible Species That Went Extinct In 2018

2019

https://www.tyla.com/news/real-life-the-list-of-incredible-species-that-went-extinct-in-2018-20190104

--------------

Larger species are more at risk of extinction than smaller ones - here's why

17 Jun 2019

https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2019/06/humans-are-causing-larger-species-to-go-extinct-faster/

--------------

Meet the Scientists Bringing Extinct Species Back From the Dead

2018

New gene-editing technology could revive everything from the passenger pigeon to the woolly mammoth. But should scientists be playing God?

https://www.wsj.com/articles/meet-the-scientists-bringing-extinct-species-back-from-the-dead-1539093600

--------------

Eastern Amazonian - Brazil

https://www.worldwildlife.org/ecoregions/nt0180

Types and Severity of Threats
Extensive deforestation and intense land degradation follow the roads though this region. Commercial logging operations also provide inroads to the interior where cattle ranches and agricultural projects are then established. Anthropogenic fire is a major threat to the environment with regard to both habitat loss and degradation of water and air quality. Large-scale mining operations of the rich stores of mineral deposits near the city of Marabá and elsewhere have disrupted the natural vegetation. To run the smelters alone in Marabá requires the wood from 2,000 km2 of forest each year.

--------------

Is Amazon industrial hub the latest 'endangered species' in Brazil?

https://www.csmonitor.com/World/Americas/2014/0512/Is-Amazon-industrial-hub-the-latest-endangered-species-in-Brazil

--------------

Brazil's Critically Endangered Mammals

Brazil's primates are at especially great risk, as they continue to be killed, captured, and subjected to habitat losses.

https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/brazil-s-critically-endangered-mammals.html

---------------

List of threatened mammals of Brazil

https://www.wikiwand.com/en/List_of_threatened_mammals_of_Brazil

Caluromysiops irrupta (Black-shouldered opossum)
Marmosops paulensis (Brazilian slender opossum)
Thylamys macrurus (Paraguayan fat-tailed mouse opossum)
Thylamys velutinus (Dwarf fat-tailed mouse opossum)
Bradypus torquatus (Maned sloth)
Myrmecophaga tridactyla (Giant anteater)
    Priodontes maximus (Giant armadillo) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Tolypeutes tricinctus (Brazilian three-banded armadillo) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

Order Chiroptera (bats)

Family Furipteridae (Smoky bats)

    Furipterus horrens (Thumbless bat) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU

Family Natalidae (funnel-eared bats)

    Natalus macrourus (Brazilian funnel-eared bat) NE - ICMBio status VU

Family Phyllostomidae (New World leaf-nosed bats)

    Glyphonycteris behnii (Behn's bat) DD IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Lonchophylla aurita (NR) - ICMBio status VU
    Lonchophylla dekeyseri (Dekeyser's nectar bat) NT IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Xeronycteris vieirai (Vieira's long-tongued bat) DD IUCN - ICMBio status VU

Family Vespertilionidae (Vesper bats)

    Eptesicus taddeii NE - ICMBio status VU


Order Primates (monkeys, marmosets, tamarins)

Family Atelidae (howlers, spider and woolly monkeys, muriquis)

    Alouatta belzebul (Red-handed howler) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Alouatta discolor (Spix's red-handed howler) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Alouatta guariba clamitans (Southern brown howler) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Alouatta guariba guariba (Northern brown howler) CR IUCN - ICMBio status CR
    Alouatta ululata (Maranhão red-handed howler) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Ateles belzebuth (White-bellied spider monkey) EN IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Ateles chamek (Peruvian spider monkey) EN IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Ateles marginatus (White-cheeked spider monkey) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Brachyteles arachnoides (Southern muriqui) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Brachyteles hypoxanthus (Northern muriqui) CR IUCN - ICMBio status CR
    Lagothrix cana cana (Gray woolly monkey) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Lagothrix lagothricha (Brown woolly monkey) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Lagothrix poeppigii (Silvery woolly monkey) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

Famlily Callitrichidae (tamarins and marmosets)

    Callithrix aurita (Buffy-tufted marmoset) VU IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Callithrix flaviceps (Buffy-headed marmoset) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Leontopithecus caissara (Superagui lion tamarin) CR IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Leontopithecus chrysomelas (Golden-headed lion tamarin) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Leontopithecus chrysopygus (Black lion tamarin) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Leontopithecus rosalia (Golden lion tamarin) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Mico rondoni (Rondon's marmoset) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Saguinus bicolor (Pied tamarin) EN IUCN - ICMBio status CR
    Saguinus niger (Black tamarin) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

Family Cebidae (capuchins and squirrel monkeys)

    Cebus kaapori (Kaapori capuchin) CR IUCN - ICMBio status CR
    Saimiri vanzolinii (Black squirrel monkey) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Sapajus cay (Azaras's capuchin) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Sapajus flavius (Blond capuchin) CR IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Sapajus robustus (Crested capuchin) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Sapajus xanthosternos (Golden-bellied capuchin) CR IUCN - ICMBio status EN

Family Pitheciidae (titis, saki monkeys and uakaris)

    Cacajao hosomi (Neblina uakari) VU IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Callicebus barbarabrownae (Barbara Brown's titi) CR IUCN - ICMBio status CR
    Callicebus coimbrai (Coimbra Filho's titi) EN IUCN - ICMBio status CR
    Callicebus melanochir (Coastal black-handed titi) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Callicebus personatus (Atlantic titi) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Chiropotes satanas (Black bearded saki) CR IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Chiropotes utahicki (Uta Hick's bearded saki) EN IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Order Carnivora (cats, dogs and relatives)
Family Canidae (dogs)


    Atelocynus microtis (Short-eared dog) NT IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Chrysocyon brachyurus (Maned wolf) NT IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Lycalopex vetulus (Hoary fox) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Speothos venaticus (Bush dog) NT IUCN - ICMBio status VU

Family Mustelidae (otters)

    Pteronura brasiliensis (Giant otter) EN IUCN - ICMBio status VU

Family Felidae (cats)

    Leopardus colocolo (Colocolo) NT IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Leopardus geoffroyi (Geoffroy's cat) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Leopardus guttulus (Southern tigrina) NE - ICMBio status VU
    Leopardus tigrinus (Oncilla) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Leopardus wiedii (Margay) NT IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Puma concolor (Cougar) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Puma yagouaroundi (Jaguarundi) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Panthera onca (Jaguar) NT IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Order Cetacea (whales and dolphins)


Family Balaenidae (whales)

    Eubalaena australis (Southern right whale) LC IUCN - ICMBio status EN

Family Balaenopteridae (rorquals)

    Balaenoptera musculus (Blue whale) EN IUCN - ICMBio status CR
    Balaenoptera physalus (Fin whale) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Balaenoptera borealis (Sei whale) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

Family Delphinidae (dolphins)

    Sotalia guianensis (Guiana dolphin) DD IUCN - ICMBio status VU

Family Iniidae (river dolphins)

    Inia geoffrensis (Amazon river dolphin) DD IUCN - ICMBio status EN

Family Physeteridae (sperm whales)

    Physeter macrocephalus (Sperm whale) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU

Family Pontoporiidae (river dolphins)

    Pontoporia blainvillei (La Plata dolphin) VU IUCN - ICMBio status CR

Order Sirenia (manatees)

Family Trichechidae

    Trichechus inunguis (Amazonian manatee) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Trichechus manatus (West Indian manatee) VU IUCN - ICMBio status CR

Order Perissodactyla (odd-toed ungulates)

Family Tapiridae (tapirs)

    Tapirus terrestris (Brazilian tapir) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Order Artiodactyla (even-toed ungulates)


Family Cervidae (deers)

    Blastocerus dichotomus (Marsh deer) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Mazama bororo (Small red brocket) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Mazama nana (Pygmy brocket) VU IUCN - ICMBio status CR
    Ozotoceros bezoarticus bezoarticus (Pampas deer) NE - ICMBio status VU
    Ozotoceros bezoarticus leucogaster (Pampas deer) NE - ICMBio status VU

Family Tayassuidae (peccaries)

    Tayassu pecari (White-lipped peccary) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU


Order Rodentia (rodents)

Family Caviidae (cavies)

    Cavia intermedia (Santa Catarina's guinea pig) CR IUCN - ICMBio status CR
    Kerodon acrobata (Acrobatic cavy) DD IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Kerodon rupestris (Rock cavy) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU

Family Cricetidae (New World rats and mice)

    Akodon mystax (Caparaó grass mouse) DD IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Cerradomys goytaca NE - ICMBio status EN
    Euryoryzomys lamia (Buffy-sided oryzomys) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Gyldenstolpia planaltensis NE - ICMBio status EN
    Juscelinomys candango (Candango mouse) EX IUCN - ICMBio status CRPEx
    Microakodontomys transitorius (Transitional colilargo) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Noronhomys vespuccii (Vespucci's rodent) EX IUCN - ICMBio status EX
    Oligoryzomys rupestris DD IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Rhipidomys cariri (Cariri climbing mouse) DD IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Rhipidomys tribei (Yellow-bellied Climbing Mouse) NE - ICMBio status EN
    Thalpomys cerradensis (Cerrado mouse) LC IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Thalpomys lasiotis (Hairy-eared cerrado mouse) LC IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Wilfredomys oenax (Greater Wilfred's mouse) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

Family Ctenomyidae (tuco-tucos)

    Ctenomys bicolorNE - ICMBio status EN
    Ctenomys flamarioni (Flamarion's tuco-tuco) EN IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Ctenomys lami (Lami tuco-tuco) VU IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Ctenomys minutus (Tiny tuco-tuco) DD IUCN - ICMBio status VU

Family Echimyidae

    Callistomys pictus (Painted tree-rat) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Phyllomys lundi (Lund's Atlantic tree-rat) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Phyllomys unicolor (Short-furred Atlantic tree-rat) CR IUCN - ICMBio status CR
    Phyllomys brasiliensis (Orange-brown Atlantic tree-rat) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Phyllomys thomasi (Giant Atlantic tree-rat) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Trinomys eliasi (Elias' Atlantic spiny rat) EN IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Trinomys moojeni (Moojen's Atlantic spiny rat) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Trinomys mirapitanga (Dark-caped Atlantic spiny rat) DD IUCN - ICMBio status EN
    Trinomys yonenagae (Yonenaga's Atlantic spiny rat) EN IUCN - ICMBio status EN

Family Erethizontidae (New World porcupine)

    Chaetomys subspinosus (Bristle-spined rat) VU IUCN - ICMBio status VU
    Coendou speratus NE - ICMBio status EN

----------------

Endangered species

https://www.lonelyplanet.com/brazil/wildlife/endangered-species

---------------

Refuges of Endangered Species Mapped, Providing Opportunity to Prevent Global Species Extinctions

2018

https://abcbirds.org/article/refuges-of-endangered-species-mapped-providing-opportunity-to-prevent-global-species-extinctions/

---------------

Endangered Species Search by Area Selection

http://earthsendangered.com/search-regions3.asp?search=1&sgroup=allgroups&ID=44

---------------

Chile's Most Endangered Mammals

Darwin's Foxes, Short-Tailed Chinchillas, Long-Tailed Chinchillas, and Pacific Degus are Critically Endangered in Chile

https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/chile-s-most-endangered-mammals.html

---------------

We are killing species at 1000 times the natural rate

29 May 2014

https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn25645-we-are-killing-species-at-1000-times-the-natural-rate/

----------------


A New Brazilian Red List is published

2015

https://www.nationalredlist.org/a-new-brazilian-red-list-is-published/

Habitat loss or disturbance, mainly resulting from the expansion of agriculture and cattle ranching, urbanisation, and large constructions like hydroelectric power plants, ports, and mining plants are the main threat to mainland species. For marine species, the main threat is overfishing, either direct or accidental.

The assessment found that 1,182 species (9.6% of all species assessed) are threatened, nine of which are still to be described (five snakes, two birds, one mammal and one fish). The undescribed species were not included in the official red lists published on 18 December 2014. The official red list (threatened species only), containing 1,173 taxa, included 110 mammals (15% of all mammals assessed), 234 birds (12%), 80 reptiles (11%), 41 amphibians (4%), 353 bony fishes (8%), 55 elasmobranchs (32%), one myxine (20%) and 299 invertebrates (9%). Among these species, one is Extinct in the Wild, 318 are Critically Endangered, 406 are Endangered and 448 are Vulnerable. Furthermore, five species are Extinct and an additional five are extinct in Brazil (Regionally Extinct). Finally, 314 (2.5%) species were assessed as Near Threatened and 1,669 (13.6%) were regarded as Data Deficient.

ICMBio is now focusing on determining conservation strategies and preparing action plans aiming to combat the main threats and reduce the risk of extinction of threatened taxa in order to remove them from the threatened categories of the Red List (in line with the CBD’s Target 12: “By 2020, the extinction of known threatened species has been prevented and their conservation status, particularly of those most in decline, has been improved and sustained”), to avoid Near Threatened species becoming threatened and to enhance knowledge on Data Deficient taxa.

--------------

Last refuges of endangered species mapped, showing nearly half lack protection

Nov 2018

https://www.iucn.org/news/species/201811/last-refuges-endangered-species-mapped-showing-nearly-half-lack-protection

A major assessment by the international Alliance for Zero Extinction – the global conservation partnership that works to identify, map and safeguard sites holding the only known locations of highly threatened species – finds that nearly half of these irreplaceable sites are currently unprotected, but that with concerted action, hundreds of extinctions can be prevented.

--------------

Brazil's agriculture minister wants to scrap endangered marine species list

April 24, 2019

https://www.treehugger.com/endangered-species/brazils-agriculture-minister-wants-scrap-list-endangered-marine-species.html

--------------

Nearly half of endangered species’ last refuges unprotected

2018

https://www.birdlife.org/worldwide/news/nearly-half-endangered-species-last-refuges-unprotected


--------------


Brazil's endangered species list triples in size

Deforestation and illegal animal trade have done enormous damage to Brazil's wildlife


https://www.mnn.com/earth-matters/wilderness-resources/stories/brazils-endangered-species-list-triples-in-size


---------------


2018 Global Alliance for Zero Extinction (AZE) map





https://zeroextinction.org/site-identification/2018-global-aze-map/

---------------

10 MOST DANGEROUS ANIMALS OF AMAZON RAINFORESTS!

2019

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-SX0NqoGAlY

--------------

List of endangered insects

https://wikivisually.com/wiki/List_of_endangered_insects

--------------

Scientists discover 20 new gnat species in Brazil

9-21-2018

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/09/180921113427.htm

--------------

 The beasts from Brazil: country aims to clone endangered species

2012

Scientists set to clone species including jaguars, anteaters and wolves for zoos, but project is likely to concern conservationists

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/nov/14/brazil-aims-clone-endangered-species


---------------


Brazil will release billions of lab-grown mosquitoes to combat infectious disease. Will it work?

2016

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2016/10/brazil-will-release-billions-lab-grown-mosquitoes-combat-infectious-disease-will-it


------------------------

The real infectious disease problem in Brazil isn’t actually Zika, it’s syphilis

2016

https://qz.com/763105/brazil-zika-syphilis-infant-mortality/

---------------


10 Ways the Earth Changed Forever in 2019

Dec 2019

https://www.livescience.com/earth-changed-forever-in-2019.html

----------------

Connecting Habitats to Prevent Species Extinctions

https://www.americanscientist.org/article/connecting-habitats-to-prevent-species-extinctions

----------------

DNA-based identification reveals illegal trade of threatened shark species in a global elasmobranch conservation hotspot

2018

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-21683-5

---------------

A new endangered species of Polygala (Polygalaceae) from Niquêlandia, Goiás, Brazil

https://www.biotaxa.org/Phytotaxa/article/view/phytotaxa.288.1.11

---------------


Half of the Amazon's Tree Species Are Threatened


Even the ones we don't have names for.

    Jun 14, 2017

https://psmag.com/environment/half-of-the-amazons-tree-species-are-threatened


-----------------


Half of Amazon Rainforests on the verge of extinction


2015


Up to 57 per cent of all tree species in the Amazon Rainforest are on the verge of extinction, shows new research.


https://sciencenordic.com/biodiversity-denmark-earth/half-of-amazon-rainforests-on-the-verge-of-extinction/1426062


------------------


Nearly 400 New Species Found in Amazon Rainforest


Aug. 31, 2017


Researchers say humans are putting the newly discovered plants and animals at risk.


https://www.usnews.com/news/best-countries/articles/2017-08-31/nearly-400-new-species-discovered-in-the-amazon-rainforest


------------------


Endangered species of South America: Plants and flowers


2018


https://blogpatagonia.australis.com/endangered-south-america-plants-and-flowers/


In South America plants and flowers are abundant. Currently, scientists estimate that about 80% of the planet’s flowering plant species are in the Amazon rainforest – which covers about 5.5 square kilometers of the continent. These plants and flowers are some of the most weird and wonderful you’ll ever see, with bright colors and bizarre shapes. However, much of the plant life in the Amazon is under threat.


Due to logging, ranching, and commercial development, many of these beautiful plants face extinction. For example, environmental activists estimate that almost half of the Amazon’s tree species are endangered. Overall, logging, mining, and farming have cleared nearly 12% of the Amazon’s total area. If deforestation continues at this pace, then 57% of the rainforest tree species could be endangered. Here, we list a few of the Amazon’s endangered species and some simple ways we can help slow deforestation.

-----------------


Extinction risks of Amazonian plant species


2009


https://www.pnas.org/content/106/30/12382


----------------

List of endangered flora of Brazil


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_endangered_flora_of_Brazil


----------------

Coastal Forest Plant Diversity in Northeastern Brazil


https://www.nybg.org/science-project/coastal-forest-plant-diversity-in-northeastern-brazil/

----------------------


Which species are globally invasive, but threatened in their native range?

2014


Monterey pine (Pinus radiata) currently a rare species with three small California coastal populations and two Mexican island populations. Each population is suffering significant declines from human threats.


But it is invasive in the South America and other southern hemisphere regions.


https://www.researchgate.net/post/Which_species_are_globally_invasive_but_threatened_in_their_native_range


----------------------


New Brazilian Floristic List Highlights Conservation Challenges


2012


https://academic.oup.com/bioscience/article/62/1/39/295209

----------------------


Seed Dispersal of Threatened Tree Species by a Critically Endangered Primate in a Brazilian Hotspot

2016

https://www.karger.com/Article/Fulltext/447712


----------------------


Brazil's Rare Native Plants Face Mass Extinction

2009

http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/jul2009/2009-07-13-01.html

-----------------------

Naming Potentially Endangered Parasites: Foliicolous Mycobiota of Dimorphandra wilsonii, a Highly Threatened Brazilian Tree Species.


 2016


https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26910334


----------------------


Why be red listed? Threatened Myriapoda species in Brazil with implications for their conservation


Abstract


The biodiversity crisis we live in, marked by high extinction rates, requires well-planned conservation efforts. To overcome this issue, red lists of threatened species are recognized as the main objective approach for evaluating the conservation status of species and therefore guiding conservation priorities. This work focuses on the Myriapoda (Chilopoda and Diplopoda) species listed in the Brazilian red list of fauna to enable discussion of the practical implications of red lists for conservation. Almost all myriapods assessed are endemic to Brazil (99 %) and 73 % are known from subterranean habitats only. Despite of 33 % being recorded from protected areas (PAs), downgrading, degazettement or downsizing of PAs and intense and unregulated ecotourism represent great threats.


https://zookeys.pensoft.net/article/21971/

----------------

Rediscovery of Ruellia reitzii (Acanthaceae), a narrowly endemic critically endangered species from Santa Catarina, southern Brazil, and notes on R. squarrosa

Mar 2019

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00837792.2019.1607997

---------------------


Endophytic and mycorrhizal fungi associated with roots of endangered native orchids from the Atlantic Forest, Brazil

2013

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00572-013-0512-0


----------------------


Three new cercosporoid fungi from the Brazilian Atlantic Forest

2013

https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/mtax/mt/2013/00000123/00000001/art00046?crawler=true


----------------------


Going extinct before being discovered? New lichen fungi from a small fragment of the vanishing Atlantic Rainforest in Brazil

2018

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1676-06032018000100212


----------------------


Brazil: Much more flora in danger of extinction than originally thought

2014

https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/feature/2014/11/14/brasil-flora-peligro-extincion-biodiversidad-amazonia


----------------------

 

Plants Humans Don't Need Are Heading for Extinction, Study Finds

March 11, 2022

https://news.slashdot.org/story/22/03/11/1549218/plants-humans-dont-need-are-heading-for-extinction-study-finds

 

----------------------

 

Scientists estimate 9,000 tree species are still unknown to them

2022

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/scientists-estimate-9-000-tree-species-are-still-unknown-to-them/ar-AATl4Fm

----------------------

Mass plant extinction: A rising alarm for all species

11 Jun 2019

Human activity is the main cause of the disappearance of some 600 plant species, a first-of-its-kind study warns.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/6/11/mass-plant-extinction-a-rising-alarm-for-all-species

 

----------------------


Begonia ciliatifolia (Begoniaceae), a rare, critically endangered new species endemic from Santa Catarina, southern Brazil


https://www.biotaxa.org/Phytotaxa/article/view/phytotaxa.407.1.7


----------------------


Alterations in the lignicolous myxomycete   biota   over   two   decades  at  the  Dois  Irmãos  Ecologic  State  Reserve,  Recife,  Pernambuco, Brazil


http://www.fungaldiversity.org/fdp/sfdp/24-7.pdf


---------------------


 Composition of the ichthyofauna in Brazilian semiarid reservoirs.


http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?pid=S1676-06032017000300203&script=sci_abstract


----------------------


Brazil's Atlantic forests lose key species


Survey reveals that local extinctions of large mammals are far worse than predicted.


    Claudio Angelo


8-15-2012


https://www.nature.com/news/brazil-s-atlantic-forests-lose-key-species-1.11175

-----------------------

As Amazon burns, 135 animal species win protections at global CITES wildlife conference where nations closed in on reckless trade and commercial exploitation of flora and fauna


8-28-2019


https://www.hsi.org/news-media/cites-cop18-wrap-up/


-----------------


Amazon rainforest fires threaten 265 endangered species, WWF warns


9 SEP 2019


The WWF has revealed that the Amazon rainforest fires have increased threats to 265 endangered species of plants and animals


https://www.mirror.co.uk/science/amazon-rainforest-fires-threaten-265-19911335


------------------

Brazil set to cut forest protection


2012


https://www.nature.com/articles/485019a


-----------------


Deforestation May Threaten Majority of Amazon Tree Species, Study Finds


https://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/21/science/deforestation-may-threaten-majority-of-amazon-tree-species-study-finds.html


-----------------

 

Tree DNA to fight illegal logging

20 August 09

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/mobile/business/8209645.stm

 

-----------------

Checklist of the ichthyofauna of the Rio Negro basin in the Brazilian Amazon

https://zookeys.pensoft.net/article/32055/

------------------


Brazilian Companies Illegally Degrading the Amazon Continue to Operate With Impunity

  May 6, 2019

Although producers of soy, cattle, and timber were charged with environmental crimes, their products continue to flow into international markets.


https://psmag.com/environment/brazilian-companies-continue-to-degrade-amazon-with-impunity


----------------


Palm Heart Harvesting in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest: Changes in Industry Structure and the Illegal Trade


1998


https://www.jstor.org/stable/2405128?seq=1


-----------------


The 29 Most Fascinating Plants in the Amazon Rainforest


2019


https://tourthetropics.com/guides/most-fascinating-plants-in-the-amazon-rainforest/


--------------


Restricted and Endangered Wood Species


https://www.wood-database.com/wood-articles/restricted-and-endangered-wood-species/


--------------


Rhynchosia mineira (Leguminosae: Papilionoideae), a new and critically endangered species from Minas Gerais, Brazil



December 2019


https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12225-019-9852-z


--------------


Couple Plants 2.7 Million Trees To Restore Brazilian Forest Home To Endangered Species


2019


https://www.intelligentliving.co/couple-brazilian-forest/

-----------------------

Brazil Plans to Clone Its Endangered Species

11-14-2012

https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/extinction-countdown/brazil-plans-to-clone-its-endangered-species/


-----------------------


Bioresources and "Biopiracy" in Brazil

1998

https://science.sciencemag.org/content/280/5364/655.4

----------------------

Recognition of biopiracy in Brazil a good step, but much still to be done, EJOLT reports

https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/recognition-of-biopiracy-in-brazil-a-good-step-but-much-still-to-be-done-ejolt-reports

----------------------

Biopiracy crackdown results in $59M in fines for Brazilian companies, receives mixed reviews


2010

https://news.mongabay.com/2010/12/biopiracy-crackdown-results-in-59m-in-fines-for-brazilian-companies-receives-mixed-reviews/

----------------------

Brazil fines 35 firms US$44 million for biopiracy

20/07/12

https://www.scidev.net/global/biodiversity/news/brazil-fines-35-firms-us-44-million-for-biopiracy.html


----------------------


Why Does This Prominent Amazon Researcher Face 14 Years in Prison for Biopiracy?

05.19.08

https://www.wired.com/2008/05/mf-monkeybusiness/

----------------------

Biopiracy: When corporations steal indigenous practices and patent them for profit | The World Weekly

https://www.theworldweekly.com/reader/view/2464/biopiracy-when-corporations-steal-indigenous-practices-and-patent-them-for-profit

----------------------

Biopirates loot the Amazon

Feb 24, 2001

https://www.irishtimes.com/news/biopirates-loot-the-amazon-1.284575

----------------------


The Rubber Thief of Brazil

2015

Because the earliest biopiracy stretched from the Amazon to your car tires.

https://www.ozy.com/flashback/the-rubber-thief-of-brazil/60424/


----------------------


 The war for the Amazon's most valuable trees

Nov 22, 2019

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e1_4JseKlO4


----------------------

Brazil probes California firm for 'biopiracy' of tropical fruit açaí

2018

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-brazil-biopiracy/brazil-probes-california-firm-for-biopiracy-of-tropical-fruit-aa-idUSKBN1J82SJ

----------------------

The Indigenous Tribes Fighting to Reclaim Stevia From Coca-Cola

July 12, 2019


Guaraní have long cultivated the plant, which they introduced to a world hungry for natural sweeteners.

https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/where-is-stevia-from


----------------------

There's No Such Thing as Biopiracy...and It's a Good Thing Too

https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2889&context=mlr

-----------------------

 Countries debate plan to equate digitized DNA data to biological material

2018

Controversial Nagoya protocol proposal aims to share benefits from genetic sequence information to conserve biodiversity

https://cen.acs.org/policy/intellectual-property/Countries-debate-plan-equate-digitized/96/i46

-----------------------

Scientists Say It's Time To End 'Parachute Research'

4-2-2016

https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2016/04/02/472686809/scientists-say-its-time-to-end-parachute-research

Critics call them "parachute researchers": Scientists from wealthy nations who swoop in when a puzzling disease breaks out in a developing country. They collect specimens, then head straight back home to analyze them. They don't coordinate with people fighting the epidemic on the ground — don't even share their discoveries for months, if ever.

Sometimes it's because they want to publish their results – and medical journals prefer exclusives. And sometimes it's because they can make a lot of money by coming up with copyrighted treatments for the disease.


------------------------

Blowing In The Wind

Seeds & Fruits Dispersed By Wind

https://www2.palomar.edu/users/warmstrong/plfeb99.htm


--------------------------

These Tree-Planting Drones Are About To Start An Entire Forest From The Sky

2017

https://www.fastcompany.com/40450262/these-tree-planting-drones-are-about-to-fire-a-million-seeds-to-re-grow-a-forest

----------------


Hacking photosynthesis, researchers might almost double crop yields

1-11-2019

Researchers writing in the journal Science describe a groundbreaking new way of genetically engineering plants, that could almost double yields in the world’s most important crops.

The technique, which was tested on tobacco plants as a proxy for crops, works by increasing the efficiency of photosynthesis. This enables plants to grow faster and bigger–and ultimately increases their yields by 40%, the study showed.

https://www.anthropocenemagazine.org/2019/01/hacking-photosynthesis-researchers-might-almost-double-crop-yields/

---------------------------


Tobacco plant 'stickiness' aids helpful insects, plant health

8-8-2019

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/08/190808115111.htm


---------------------------

Tobacco plant thwarts caterpillar onslaught by opening flowers in the morning

1-25-2010

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/01/100121135659.htm


---------------------------


THE POISON GARDEN website

http://www.thepoisongarden.co.uk/atoz/nicotiana_sylvestris.htm


---------------------------

Tobacco Mosaic Virus - How To Protect Your Cannabis Plants

Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) is a virus that was first identified in tobacco crops, but can impact other plants, including cannabis. While it cannot hurt the grower, it can significantly deform plants and lower yields. There is no cure. Here is how to spot it and what to do if you have infected crops.

https://www.royalqueenseeds.com/blog-tobacco-mosaic-virus-how-to-protect-your-cannabis-plants-n736

---------------------------

Making new species without sex: Plants can transfer their entire genetic material to a partner in an asexual manner

2014

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/06/140611102201.htm

Summary: Plants can transfer their entire genetic material to a partner in an asexual manner, researchers report. Occasionally, two different plant species interbreed with each other in nature. This usually causes problems since the genetic information of both parents does not match. But sometimes, instead of passing on only half of each parent's genetic material, both plants transmit the complete information to the next generation. This means that the chromosome sets are totted up. The chromosomes are then able to find their suitable partner during meiosis, allowing the plants to stay fertile and a new species is generated.

The researchers introduced resistance genes against two different antibiotics into nuclear genomes of the tobacco species Nicotiana tabacum and Nicotiana glauca, which usually cannot be crossed. Afterwards, Nicotiana glauca was grafted onto Nicotiana tabacum or the other way round. After fusion had occurred, the scientists excised tissue at the contact zone and cultivated it on a growth medium containing both antibiotics, so that only cells containing both resistance genes and thus, DNA from both species, should survive. Surprisingly, the scientists succeeded in growing up numerous doubly resistant plantlets.

---------------------------

 
 

---------------------------------------------------


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Section 22: Medicine

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--------------------
----------------------
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-----------------------------------------------------


Medicinal Plants at Risk


https://www.biologicaldiversity.org/publications/papers/Medicinal_Plants_042008_lores.pdf

------------------

Plant Hallucinogen Holds Hope for Diabetes Treatment

2018

A potent molecular cocktail containing a compound from ayahuasca spurs rapid growth of insulin-producing cells

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/plant-hallucinogen-holds-hope-for-diabetes-treatment/

-------------------------

The Vanishing Vine

What's Up with Ayahuasca's Rumored Extinction?

https://www.ayahuascawisdom.com/the-vanishing-vine/

-------------------------

What the people of the Amazon know that you don't

https://www.ted.com/talks/mark_plotkin_what_the_people_of_the_amazon_know_that_you_don_t?language=en



------------------------

 

What's Hidden In The Amazon?

Jun 18, 2021

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HR-cYbBJ17w

 

------------------------



The vital links between the Amazon rainforest, global warming and you



The Amazon rainforest has long been recognized as a repository of ecological services not only for local tribes and communities, but also for the rest of the world. It is also the only rainforest that we have left in terms of size and diversity.

https://wwf.panda.org/knowledge_hub/where_we_work/amazon/about_the_amazon/why_amazon_important/

The Amazon rainforest could cure you

What is the connection between the blue-green pills in your bathroom cupboard and the Amazon wildlife? The natural roots of medicine. For millennia, humans have used insects, plants and other organisms in the region for a variety of uses; and that includes agriculture, clothing and, of course, cures for diseases.

Indigenous people such as the Yanomamo and other groups of mixed ancestry (e.g. the mestizos of Peru or the caboclos of Brazil) have perfected the use of chemical compounds found in plants and animals. Knowledge of using these plants is usually held by a medicine man (shaman), who passes on this tradition to an apprentice, a process which has been ongoing for centuries and that forms an integral part of people’s identity.

With rainforests going fast, the continuity of this knowledge for the benefit of future generations is under threat.

-----------------


A New Book Argues That Generic Drugs Are Poisoning Us

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/13/books/review/bottle-of-lies-katherine-eban.html


------------------

Pharmaceutical Exploitation of the Rainforests:  Where Do We Draw the Line?

By Meredith McGrath

3/6/99

 https://web.stanford.edu/class/e297c/trade_environment/children/hline.html

Bio-prospecting--searcWng the rairlforest for useful species, has arrived.  Biodiversity prospecting includes the exploration, extraction, and screening of biological diversity and indigenous knowledge for commercially valuable genetic and biochemical resources.  With the renewed interest in the potential found in the rainforests, pharmaceutical companies in particular have crossed an ethical line with regards to the indigenous peoples.

There is an immediate need for a renewed effort to control the destruction of natural forests in the tropics, which are disappearing at an alarming rate of 12.9 million hectares per year.  It is widely agreed upon among biologists that in SO- I 00 years, without intervention, most remaining tropical forests will be destroyed.  However, many self-serving groups exist with questionable motives for preserving the forests.

The "rainforest harvest", as it is often referred, is perhaps a misleading marketing campaign.  The idea links the exotic and environmental credentials of the rainforest to the reassurance of fertility and abundance.  The theory behind the slogan is that if it can be proven that forests are more valuable left standing, then their preservation is more apt to be considered.  No mention is made of preserving biodiversity for its own sake.

Since the philosophy of a free-market economy encourages individuals and corporations to utilize the environment to their maximum benefit, without considering environmental effects, it has contributed to the present situation.  Northern-based institutions seek access to tropical biodiversity for the primary purpose of developing patented and profitable products.  No matter

how convincing the rhetoric, conservation and equity are secondary issues.  The Rural Advancement Foundation International estimates that medicinal plants and microbials from the South contribute at least $30 billion per year to the North's pharmaceutical industry.  It is conservatively estimated that the market for research samples or extracts of biological materials within the U.S. pharmaceutical industry alone is $30-60 million per year.

For decades, plant collectors from industrialized countries have ventured to the tropical forests in search of valuable genetic material for agricultural plant breeding.  No money changed hands in the process.  In 1980, none of the U.S. pharmaceutical industry research budget was spent on research into higher plants.  Today, it is estimated that over 200 companies and research organizations worldwide are screening plant and animal compounds for medicinal properties.

It is generally acknowledged that about one in 10,000 chemicals derived from the mass screening of plants, animals, and microbes eventually results in a potentially profitable drug.  As recently as 199 1, Monsanto Inc. was recruiting company employees traveling to exotic destinations, to dig up a few soil samples.  Claiming it was for the sake of science, a spokesman for Monsanto declared nothing off limits.

The Convention on Biological Diversity of 1993 addressed the issues of conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity.  However, rather than suggesting multilateral implementation, the Convention promoted bilateral deals-commercial contracts and other agreements for access to biodiversity. The Convention's language on intellectual property rights is subject to varying interpretations.  As it stands, the Convention offers passive support that pits indigenous communities and countries against one another.

The first and perhaps most well-publicized example of a bilateral contract for bioprospecting occurred in 1992 between pharmaceutical giant Merck and Co. and InBio, a Costa Rican non-profit research center committed to cataloging the country's half-million insects and plants.  InBio agreed to provide Merck's drug-screening programs with chemical extracts from wild plants, insects, and microorganisms.  In return, Merck agreed to give InBio a two-year research budget of $1.135 million, undisclosed royalties on any resulting commercial products, and technical assistance and training for in country research.  The agreement stipulates that Merck receives the exclusive rights to screen InBio's samples for medicinal properties.  If a drug is developed from one of the samples, theoretically InBio (and ultimately Costa Rica) would receive royalties from drug sales.  Although the Merck/InBio agreement was hailed by many as a "model" agreement for bio-prospecting, others think it is a questionable way of protecting biodiversity.

Bilateral prospecting agreements are sanctioned by the multilateral Convention on Biological Diversity.  In the majority of cases, however, commercial agreements cannot be effectively monitored or enforced.  Unfortunately the reality is that when indigenous peoples share information or genetic materials, they in essence lose control over such resources, regardless of whether or not they are compensated.

Two examples of such exploitation resulted from actions taken by Eli Lilly and Co. and again by Merck Pharmaceuticals.  Eli Lilly removed specimens of the rosy periwinkle plant from the forest of Madagascar.  Extracts from the plant led to the development of two anti-cancer drugs, which have since earned Eli Lilly approximately $ 1 00 million per year.  Madagascar received nothing.  In a related example, a photographer on assignment in the forests of Brazil for National Geographic Magazine recognized the potential applications for Western medicine of a tribal remedy.  He sent bark and sap specimens from the tiki uba tree to Merck, which proceeded to research and develop a drug for use by Western physicians.  The Brazilian tribe received neither credit nor payments from the drug.

Costa Rica's rainforests are estimated to hold 5-7% of the world's remaining biodiversity.  If similar agreements were widely duplicated, the biodiversity of the South could be auctioned off for roughly $10 million per year.  Merck's sales in 1992 were $8.6 billion, while Costa Rica's GNP that year was $5.2 billion.  For Merck, the contract with InBio provided extremely cheap labor, access to unidentified species, and good public relations.



------------------


The Evils of Big Pharma Exposed

18 January 2015

https://www.globalresearch.ca/the-evils-of-big-pharma-exposed/5425382

Originally published on Global Research in January 2015

What’s wrong with America is what’s wrong with Big Pharma. And what’s wrong with Big Pharma is what’s wrong with America. This circular reality is aimed to be thoroughly covered in this presentation. This is the story of how Big Pharma seeks enormous profits over the health and well-being of the humans it serves, and how drug companies invasively corrupted the way that the healthcare industry delivers its vital services. This is neither a new nor unique story. In fact, the story of Big Pharma is the exact same story of how Big Government, Big Oil, Big Agri-Chem Giants like Monsanto have come to power. The controlling shareholders of all these major industries are one and the same. Big Money belonging to the global central banking cabal own and operate all the Fortune 500 companies in addition to virtually all national governments on this earth. The Rockefellers privatized healthcare in the United States back in the 1930’s and has financed and largely influenced both healthcare and Big Pharma ever since.

The history of the last several centuries is one in which a handful of these oligarch families, primarily from Europe and the United States, have been controlling governments and wars to ruthlessly consolidate and maximize both power and control over the earth’s most precious resources to promote a New World Order of one totalitarian fascist government exercising absolute power and control over the entire global population. This group of oligarch families have systematically and effectively eliminated competition under the deceptive misnomer of a free enterprise system. Modernization is synonymous with globalization, privatization and militarization. Subsequently, an extremely small number of humans representing a privileged ruling elite has imposed a global caste system that’s hatched its long term diabolical plan to actualize its one world government. Sadly at this tumultuous moment in our human history, it’s never been closer to materialization.

------------------

Deforestation impacting pharmaceutical industry

    June 29, 2015

https://globalriskinsights.com/2015/06/deforestation-impacting-pharmaceutical-industry/

------------------

4 medicines with roots in the rainforest

Oct. 27, 2015

https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/4-medicines-with-roots-in-the-rainforest/

------------------


Opinion: Deforestation isn't just changing our climate, it could be destroying life-saving medicines

Sep 4th 2014

https://www.thejournal.ie/readme/deforestation-medical-research-1652815-Sep2014/

Promising results

To highlight the potential of Amazonian plants, we must turn to a small group of researchers in Universidade Paulista in São Paulo, Brazil. Headed by Dr Drauzio Varella, the team have spent over 10 years collecting plant extracts from the Brazilian Amazon, and have built up a catalogue of over 1,220 extracts during the course of their work. #

These extracts have been tested for their ability to combat disease, and the results were very promising. Over 70 extracts have been shown to have cytotoxic (cell-killing) ability, and the team have published their findings of cytotoxic activity against a strain of breast cancer, prostate cancer, as well as lung, colon, CNS cancer and leukaemia. Of four strains of bacteria that have shown drug resistance in the past, the team in Brazil have also shown positive effects of plant extracts against two of them. Their findings highlight the importance of continued research into the hundreds of thousands of plants found within the ‘lungs of the earth’.

------------------

Tropical Rainforests Are Nature's Medicine Cabinet

February 18, 2019

https://www.thoughtco.com/tropical-rainforests-natures-medicine-cabinet-1204030


-------------------

This Amazonian tree frog's poison has become part of the latest supercleanse trend

2017

https://abcnews.go.com/International/amazonian-tree-frogs-poison-part-latest-super-cleanse/story?id=46431345

Native tribes have used them for their supposedly powerful healing properties.


-------------------

Owed to Nature: Medicines from Tropical Forests

2013

https://www.rainforesttrust.org/owed-to-nature-medicines-from-tropical-forests/

-------------------

Owed to Nature: Medicines from Tropical Forests

January 26, 2013

https://www.rainforesttrust.org/owed-to-nature-medicines-from-tropical-forests/

Do We Know What We Are Losing?

The answer is NO!

Every day, some 80,000 acres of tropical rainforests are cleared, and another equivalent amount is degraded.  Unknown numbers of species undergo extinction or are threatened with extinction.  Mostly all of these occur without human knowledge, but there are some examples on record.

The U.S. National Cancer Institute funded a 1987 plant collection expedition on the island of Borneo in the Malaysian State of Sarawak. Among the samples obtained were those from the tree Calophyllum lanigerum var austrocoriaceum, an incredibly rare species.  When extracts of this plant were discovered to show good antiviral activity toward the AIDS-causing human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), researchers returned to the site of the original collection to find that the tree was gone, cut down for firewood or building purposes. No more C. lanigerum could be located. Fortunately, however, an intense search finally led to additional samples of C. lanigerum  in the Singapore Botanic Garden. Over a century ago, the British had planted several collected specimens.

Calanolide A, a complex natural product, is obtained from the bark and latex of Calophyllum lanigerum var austrocoriaceum, and it is now undergoing clinical trials for the treatment of HIV infection. Medical research narrowly escaped a major scientific loss.

How many undocumented losses have occurred? We can glean a sense from the experiences of two botanists working with the Missouri Botanical Garden. In 1978, Alwyn Gentry and Calaway Dodson surveyed a small ridge called Centinela in in the Ecuadorean rainforest and discovered about 90 previously unknown plant species that were endemic–that occurred nowhere else. They returned to find in 1986 that the ridge had been completely cleared of forest.  There was no trace of the 90 endemic species, and they have been presumed to now be extinct. We can also reasonably expect that unknown numbers of associated insects and other species winked out with the demise of these plants.

How many times this catastrophe has been repeated in the human-dominated biosphere is unknown, but odds are that valuable biological and medical knowledge has disappeared at human hands into oblivion along with wonderful life-forms that evolved over untold ages of evolutionary struggle. Indeed, we have not a rudimentary knowledge what we are losing. There can be no more obligatory challenge than preserving life–all life–on Earth.

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Scientists Put Shamanic Medicine Under The Microscope

2015

In an unlikely collaboration with Amazonian shamans, medical researchers seek a cure for autoimmune disease.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/shaman-medicine-autoimmune-disease_n_55f8737be4b0d6492d633c23

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Healing With Tobacco: Rapé Tribal Snuff

 Oct 4, 2017

https://psychedelictimes.com/healing-tobacco-rape-tribal-snuff/

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Wildly Magical Treasures of the Amazon Rainforest

http://www.zoehelene.com/wildly-magical-treasures-amazon-rainforest-wildlife

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15 Facts About the Amazon River That’ll Blow Your Mind

https://www.chimuadventures.com/blog/2016/07/amazon-river/

1. The Amazon River originates in Peru

4. The Amazon River provides 20% of the ocean’s fresh-water supply

5. Researchers discovered an entire coral reef system at the Amazon River Delta in 2016

6. The Amazon River used to flow backwards

The creation of the Andes Mountains some 15 million years ago can be regarded as the most defining moment in the evolution of the Amazon River. Up until the rise of this incredible mountainous border, the river flowed out into the Pacific Coast of South America. Remaining landlocked for nearly five million years, the relentless river finally found its ocean outlet once again, only this time, in the opposite direction – straight into the Atlantic.

9. The Amazon River has a hidden twin-river flowing below it




The Amazon River made headline news back in 2011 when scientists finally confirmed the existence of an ‘underground Amazon River’, which mirrors its above-ground twin in length and flow. The Hamza River (named after the Indian scientist leading the research group) flows some 4km underground and although it’s believed to be up to four times wider than the Amazon River itself, it boasts only 1/34th of its water volume.

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The potential impact of new Andean dams on Amazon fluvial ecosystems

2017

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0182254

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Fragmentation of Andes-to-Amazon connectivity by hydropower dams

2018

https://advances.sciencemag.org/content/4/1/eaao1642

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Andean Influences on the Biogeochemistry and Ecology of the Amazon River

2008

https://academic.oup.com/bioscience/article/58/4/325/310279

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10 Things You Need to Know About the Fires in the Amazon

September 15, 2019

https://truthout.org/articles/10-things-you-need-to-know-about-the-fires-in-the-amazon/

1. Deforestation Fires Have Burned the Amazon for Decades

2. Fires Have Increased by 85% Under Bolsonaro’s Government

3. Previous Governments Also Let Agribusiness Interfere in the Amazon Basin

4. A Handful of Multinational Companies Are Helping to Destroy the Amazon

Bolsonaro and the agricultural bourgeoisie of Brazil are not the only ones who want to destroy the jungle for their capitalist enterprises. Important imperialist companies are behind the deforestation as well: Credit Agricole and BNP Paribas (France), financial groups like Blackrock and Capital Group (United States), and pharmaceutical companies like Johnson & Johnson also have business in the area. Other multinational companies responsible for doing business with this devastation are grain producers; Cargill, Bunge and Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) control 60% of the soybean industry in Brazil and directly benefit from the forest fires, as do agrochemical companies such as Monsanto and Bayer. France and Germany also have direct interests in mining in the region. The involvement of these companies reveals the hypocrisy of the apparent opposition to Bolsonaro’s policies by governments such as that of Emmanuel Macron in France. Imperialist capital gains millions by setting the Amazon on fire.

5. “Green Capitalism” Won’t Save the Rainforests

6. More Than a Million Indigenous Lives Are in Danger

7. The Fires Have Disastrous Environmental Consequences

8. The Fires Put Working People’s Health At Risk

9. The Amazon Isn’t the Only Region Being Destroyed for Agribusiness

10. Demonstrations Around the World Are Calling for the Protection of the Amazon


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Section 23: BRICS


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----------------------------------------------------



Look at how BRICS alliance just ruined the planet.




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China is plundering the planet’s seas—and it’s doing it 12 times more than it’s telling anybody

April 30, 2013

https://qz.com/78803/china-fishing-more-than-its-telling-anybody/

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Systematic GPS Manipulation Occuring at Chinese Oil Terminals and Government Installations

2019

https://skytruth.org/2019/12/systematic-gps-manipulation-occuring-at-chinese-oil-terminals-and-government-installations/

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 China’s Influence on Deforestation in Brazilian Amazonia: A Growing Force in the State of Mato Grosso

2015

http://www.bu.edu/pardeeschool/files/2014/12/Brazil1.pdf

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Ecuador’s China-backed hydropower revolution

2019

https://www.chinadialogue.net/article/show/single/en/11464-Ecuador-s-China-backed-hydropower-revolution

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Morococha: the Peruvian town the Chinese relocated

15.04.2013

https://www.chinadialogue.net/article/show/single/en/5898-Morococha-the-Peruvian-town-the-Chinese-relocated

The movement of a town and its population to make way for a mining project in Peru could signal a new Chinese approach to community relations overseas


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China’s Brazilian beef demand linked to Amazon deforestation risk

Analyses of Brazil's beef exports show 22,700 hectares of Amazon deforestation in 2017 that may be connected to Chinese demand

https://dialogochino.net/31057-chinas-brazilian-beef-demand-linked-to-amazon-deforestation-risk/


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 Brazil's forests could fall victim to the US-China trade war

18 May 2018

https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2018/05/brazil-forests-could-be-casualties-in-u-s-china-trade-war

----------------------

Niobium’s silent impact in Brazil

2019

https://dialogochino.net/25605-niobiums-silent-impact-in-brazil/

Chinese steelmakers boost metal production in Goiás and Minas Gerais as accusations of pollution mount

Quiet, enduring impacts

While the industry has grown quickly and quietly in Brazil, it has a toxic legacy. Complaints from nearby communities about air and water pollution – and resulting sickness – have endured for decades.

“The day-to-day reality of mining in Brazil is ‘silent’ contamination that has been dragging on for years,” says Brother Rodrigo Péret, a member of a regional environmental council that has reported mining problems in Araxá, home to Brazil’s oldest niobium mine at more than 50 years old.

In 2018, the state prosecution service and CBMM agreed to rectify damage caused by niobium mines dating back to 1982. Then, the process CBMM used to extract niobium from the ore produced a chemical reaction that created barium chloride, a toxic compound that was then dumped in the mine’s waste dams.

Barium began to infiltrate wells supplying water to the Complexo do Barreiro district near the mine, as well as watercourses below the dam. The substance can cause serious health problems if ingested.

A 2015 technical report on the incident by the State Foundation for the Environment and the Minas Gerais Institute for Water Management read:

“The contamination mainly occurred because waste and effluents exhibited high concentrations of barium chloride, which is soluble and spread underground at levels higher than normal, even for this region”.

The company said the incident did not affect the popular Barreiro tourist resort and spa, whose mud and waters are famous for their supposed healing qualities. CBMM claimed remediation of the wells has shown positive results.

517 cases relating to the 1982 pollution incident were dismissed

CBMM’s rectification agreement was signed less than a month after Minas Gerais state courts dismissed 517 other cases relating to the1982 contamination. Those cases were filed by current and ex-residents of Barreiro against former owner Bunge, who they held responsible for damaging their health.

-------------------

Brazil’s biggest coal-producing state eyes Chinese investment

2018

Rio Grande do Sul coal project creates jobs but conflicts with Chinese domestic plans and CO2 cuts

https://dialogochino.net/15659-brazils-biggest-coal-producing-state-eyes-chinese-investment/

--------------

Bioethanol and Biodiesel as Vehicular Fuels in Brazil — Assessment of Atmospheric Impacts from the Long Period of Biofuels Use

https://www.intechopen.com/books/biofuels-status-and-perspective/bioethanol-and-biodiesel-as-vehicular-fuels-in-brazil-assessment-of-atmospheric-impacts-from-the-lon

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 Illegal timber from the Brazilian Amazon sold all over the world

2014

https://www.greenpeace.org/usa/new-greenpeace-investigation-illegal-timber-brazilian-amazon-sold-world-legal-paperwork/

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Section 24: Extra


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To continue to part II of this book view the following link.

Race Dysgenics Brazil | Eugenics in Brazil

https://eugenicsbrazil.blogspot.com

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Pollution Science 101 - Mexico

https://pollutionscience101mexico.blogspot.com

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Pollution Science 101- Russia

https://pollutionscience101russia.blogspot.com

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Pollution Science 101 - Iran
 
September 20, 2020
 

 

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Pollution Science 101 - India

https://pollutionscience101india.blogspot.com

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Pollution Science 101 - China

https://pollutionscience101china.blogspot.com

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Pollution Science 101 - Cancer Investigated (California)

https://pollutionscience101cancerinvestigated.blogspot.com

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 6/1/2020 - Pollution Science 101 - Egypt

 https://pollutionscience101egypt.blogspot.com


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Pollution Science 101 - Israel

https://pollutionscience101israel.blogspot.com

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Pollution Science 101 - Texas

https://pollutionscience101texasvsbpoil.blogspot.com


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Pollution Science 101 - Solutions

https://pollutionscience101solutions.blogspot.com/2016/08/pollution-science-101-solutions-by.html


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The DuPont Investigation

https://dupontinvestigation.blogspot.com


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TheInvestigations@email.com


PollutionScience@Protonmail.com

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This report was released in an emergency, if you see some things that were unfinished, it is because I had to release this report in an emergency.

 I received a message from a friend today stating that the FBI was looking for me, the reason is for something I posted. My friend told me the FBI said they just wanted to talk to me and not arrest me. My friend said that the FBI just wanted to talk to me about a post online and for me to knock it off. If I were to guess this would most likely be a post about my Fight Book or about the corruption going on in Laguna Beach, California. We did a pollution report in Laguna Beach, California and the authorities continued to harass my media agency and we called for the arrest of these government officials in our books and on our website, these officials have yet to face arrest.

The reason I want to release this information is I believe as soon as I walk out the door I might be detained by the authorities. Please do not let the authorities destroy my research on the Amazon rainforest and arrest me. My California Driver's License is D8434627, please do not let the authorities wrongfully detain me.

I wanted to release this report on January 12, 2020, instead I must release this report on January 7th, 2020.

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1/15/2020 - Michael Ross gets illegally abducted by the Laguna Beach, California Police (Help) - Laguna Beach Police Brutality - Scientific Research Being Destroyed

https://archive.org/details/michaelrosslagunabeachpolicebrutality


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