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418 - Latin American Tree News

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--Today for you 31 news articles about earth's trees! (418th edition)

--Deane's Daily Treeinspiration can be texted to your phone via:

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In this issue:

 

Latin America

 

Index:

 

--Cayman Islands: 1) Save the Yellow Mastic tree!

--Jamaica: 2) Strengthen the link between agriculture and forests?

--Panama: 3) MTV trashed Boca Del Drago Island

--El Salvador: 4) Long-range environmental planning

--Costa Rica: 5) Measurement of avoided deforestation from protected

areas, 6) 650 acres of forest saved from gold miner-gov. corruption 7)

Altitudinal range of 1000 species is rising,

--Colombia: 8) Indigenous leaders and REDD, 9) The Chocó is a

biodiversity hotspot,

--Ecuador: 10) Save the Harpy Eagle! 11) Huge scandal changes the face

of government, 12) Please 'donate' £350 million or we will let 'em

destroy Yasuni Natinal Park!

--Peru: 13) Amazon logging uncontrolled, 14) Debt for nature agreement

announced, 15) Miner land titles filed in Contumaza were falsified,

16) People of Pacaya-Samiria National Reserve,

--Chile: 17) Latin America's 3rd largest producer of Eucalyptus?

--Uruguay: 18) Yet another billion dollar pulp mill

--Paraguay: 19) Forest Conversion Moratorium

--Amazon: 20) Exelon's $1.5 million bribe

--Brazil: 21) Galloping sense of insecurity replaces swaggering

confidence, 22) Banks to combat global warming in the Juma forest

reserve, 23) Gisele Bündchen of the Future – Seeds forest, 24) We need

advanced radar satellites for monitoring, 25) Increasingly betting on

intelligence and technology to stop deforestation, 26) climate-change

plan is short on specific targets, 27) Protestors shut down Aracruz

Celulose, 28) Large-scale mahogany plantations, 29) Chopped down 3

times as fast as last year, 30) Parliaments' deforestation Limit

previously set at 500 hectares, has been increased to 1,500 hectares,

31) Alta Floresta has one of the highest deforestation rate on the

planet,

 

Articles:

 

Cayman Islands:

 

1) One of our largest native critically endangered trees, the Yellow

Mastic tree, not to be confused with our endemic Black Mastic tree –

which is also critically endangered – is found on the Mastic Trail at

the highest point on Grand Cayman, a towering 60 feet above sea level!

The heartwood is heavy and strong. Mastic was valuable for its timber

in the Bahamas and West Indies and has been used for cabinetwork and

boat timbers. Yellow Mastic trees were heavily logged but are still

found in Cayman. Mastic has the potential to make an excellent shade

tree but not for someone who is impatient. It can take 100 years or

more for mastic to mature to its tallest heights. The Mastic Trail

provides a unique opportunity for the adventurous traveller to see a

different side of this beautiful Caribbean island. The following

excerpt is taken from Wild Trees in the Cayman Islands by Fred Burton,

with illustrations by Penny Clifford. Photographs provided by Ann

Stafford. Yellow Mastic grows as a tall, single–trunked tree emerging

above the surrounding woodland canopy. The straight trunk usually

appears pock–marked from shedding of irregular flakes of bark. Old

bark surfaces are pale grey with lichen growth, while newly exposed

bark beneath shedding flakes is pale reddish brown. On really old,

massive trees the bark sheds in heavy sheets. Yellow Mastic is still

abundant on Cayman Brac's Bluff, but on Grand Cayman the only

significant stand remaining is in an area of North Side appropriately

called " The Mastic, " partly within a reserve protected by the National

Trust. It does not occur on Little Cayman, but is native throughout

the West Indies. This magnificent tree was much more common in times

past, but its wood is extremely useful and has attracted the attention

of loggers everywhere. Sandpapering the seeds helps to speed up the

otherwise slow germination process: the tree is not particularly fast

growing. Protect Cayman trees and encourage Cayman Wildlife! For more

information, to share your knowledge or if you would like to get

involved with the many activities in the National Trust's Know Your

Islands programme, please visit www.nationaltrust.org.ky, or call

949–0121. http://www.caycompass.com/cgi-bin/CFPnews.cgi?ID=1034285

 

Jamaica:

 

2) The Government is moving to strengthen the link between agriculture

and forests, that is necessary for food security and rural

development. This symbiotic relationship is often lost and needs to be

strengthened, according to a study by the Food and Agriculture

Organisation (FAO). The study found that decision makers often

overlook the value of forestry in poverty reduction and its

contribution to Gross Domestic Product (GDP), due to a lack of data on

forest resources and productivity. It further states that linkages

between forestry and the wider national agenda are weak or

non-existent, and that there is need for countries to address this.

The Ministry of Agriculture, in recognising the importance of

Jamaica's forests, with respect to food security, rural development

and poverty alleviation, is changing the status of the Forestry

Department to an Executive Agency, a process which should be completed

within one year. As an Executive Agency, the Forestry Department will

have greater autonomy, be more service oriented and technically adept.

" The Department will be working more with targets, taking new

approaches to data collection, forecasting and planning, as well as

focussing on modernising corporate services and technical support and

improving compliance [with Forestry laws], through increased public

awareness, " says Conservator of Forests, Marilyn Headley, in an

interview with JIS News. She argues that non-compliance is largely the

result of a lack of awareness, not just of the laws, but the dangers

that breaking conservation laws posed to human life. " Hills without

sturdy tree cover cannot sustain agriculture, as top soil, crops and

infrastructure will always be lost in heavy rains, " she says,

emphasising that for food security and rural development, " keeping

trees on our hills is therefore critical, and our theme this year for

National Tree Planting Day, 'Deforested Hillside: Downstream

Disaster', was in keeping with this concept. " Stressing the

inter-connectedness between forests and agriculture, Miss Headley

urges citizens to grow trees especially in the mountains and river

beds, allowing for 20 metres from the river bank, to protect food,

property and life.

http://www.jis.gov.jm/agriculture/html/20081009T100000-0500_16948_JIS_GOV_T__STR\

ENGTHENING_LINK_BETWEEN_AGRICULTURE_AND_FORESTS.

asp

 

Panama:

 

3) While filming and producing " Real World/Road Rules Challenge: The

Island, " MTV trashed Boca del Drago Island, which is located in the

Republic of Panama. According to one eyewitness, MTV made very little

if any attempts to cleanup or remedy their ecological footprint

imposed on the pristine area. Although the piece of land was private,

an eyewitness observed, " I can assure all of you that had this been

done in any urban/suburban neighborhood, almost anywhere else, the

neighbors would have been justified in entering a legal complaint

against the landowner. " From ecorazzi.com: As one would expect, the

real " reality " is much less exciting. In fact, as was recently

reported by Michael Drake on the Tree Climber's Coalition site, not

only is the show basically scripted and shot in and around

civilization, but it also appears to have done a good deal of

environmental damage. Drake, along with others living on Boca del

Drago Island in the Republic of Panama witnessed MTV clear a large

section of rainforest for the set construction. In addition, they also

trashed a pristine beach, disturbed a bird sanctuary island

" off-limits " to human visitations, and left behind an insane amount of

garbage, set debris, and refuse. As Drake wrote, " MTV's behavior in

this situation has been rampantly inconsistent with their

self-proclaimed 'MTV Green Crusade'. I sense a bit of hypocrisy and I

question their commitment toward being 'green'. "

http://conservationreport.com/2008/10/08/deforestation-viacom-owned-mtv-cuts-dow\

n-trees-tramples-an-island-rainforest-and-destroys-a-remote-beach-to-produce-and\

-air-worthless-reality-tv-trash/

 

El Salvador:

 

4) When Susanna Hecht went to El Salvador in 1999 to help the

government with long-range environmental planning, officials at the

Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources told her there were no

forests left in the country. To Hecht, AB'72, a professor of urban

planning at UCLA and an expert on tropical development, the claim came

as no surprise. El Salvador was notorious for population growth and

ecological degradation. The most crowded country in Latin America,

during the 1960s and '70s it had suffered severe deforestation with

the expansion of livestock and sugar-cane farming. In 1999, the same

year Hecht arrived, the tropical ecologist John Terborgh declared that

in El Salvador, " nature has been extinguished. " But as she drove

around the country, Hecht noticed plenty of trees. Some were remnants

of old forests, but she also saw hedgerows, backyard orchards, coffee

groves, trees growing along rivers and streams, cashew and palm

plantations, saplings sprouting in abandoned fields, and heavily

wooded grassland. Almost every village abounded with trees— " like a big

jungle forest, " she said. Rather than no trees, she saw them

everywhere. Nature was far from extinguished; it was thriving. Hecht

called these woodlands El Salvador's " secret forests. " In a country

only recently deforested, trees were coming back. And El Salvador was

not alone. For many reasons, trees were resurgent throughout Latin

America, including Honduras, Puerto Rico, Ecuador, and in parts of the

Amazon. But because scientists and policy-makers were preoccupied with

tropical deforestation, Hecht said, they had been slow to take notice.

In another sense, she said, they didn't see El Salvador's forests

because of an old bias toward so-called " pristine " forests—primitive

and untouched—and against " anthropogenic " forests, those created by

humans or shaped by human activities like burning, grazing, farming,

and logging. It was these anthropogenic landscapes, which Hecht called

" peasant " or " working " forests, that were reclaiming El Salvador. They

were a secret in plain view. But whether you saw them depended on how

you counted. http://dailyduck.blogspot.com/2008/10/whose-side-are-you-on.html

 

Costa Rica:

 

5) Our study examines the measurement of avoided deforestation from

protected areas in Costa Rica. We chose Costa Rica because it has one

of the most widely lauded protected-area systems (9) and is a leader

in the debate to have ''avoided deforestation credits'' recognized by

international climate-change conventions. It also had one of the top

deforestation rates during the 1960s and 1970s (10), driven mainly by

the expansion of cattle grazing and coffee and banana production (11).

In 1960, Costa Rica had 3 million hectares of forest. By 1997, more

than one million hectares had been cleared and 900,000 hectares

assigned to legal protection. We address the question, ''How much more

forest would have been cleared in the absence of these protected

areas?'' Global efforts to reduce tropical deforestation rely heavily

on the establishment of protected areas. Measuring the effectiveness

of these areas is difficult because the amount of deforestation that

would have occurred in the absence of legal protection cannot be

directly observed. Conventional methods of evaluating the

effectiveness of protected areas can be biased because protection is

not randomly assigned and because protection can induce deforestation

spillovers (displacement) to neighboring forests. We demonstrate that

estimates of effectiveness can be substantially improved by

controlling for biases along dimensions that are observable, measuring

spatial spillovers, and testing the sensitivity of estimates to

potential hidden biases. We apply matching methods to evaluate the

impact on deforestation of Costa Rica's renowned protected-area system

between 1960 and 1997. We find that protection reduced deforestation:

approximately 10% of the protected forests would have been deforested

had they not been protected. Conventional approaches to evaluating

conservation impact, which fail to control for observable covariates

correlated with both protection and deforestation, substantially

overestimate avoided deforestation (by over 65%, based on our

estimates). We also find that deforestation spillovers from protected

to unprotected forests are negligible. Our conclusions are robust to

potential hidden bias, as well as to changes in modeling assumptions.

Our results show that, with appropriate empirical methods,

conservation scientists and policy makers can better understand the

relationships between human and natural systems and can use this to

guide their attempts to protect critical ecosystem services. PNAS

October 21, 2008

vol. 105 no. 42 16089 –16094

 

6) The Costa Rica attorney general's office said Tuesday it has opened

an investigation into President Oscar Arias and Environment Minister

Roberto Dobles for abuse of authority over a gold mining exploitation

they claim to be of " national interest. " " Yesterday (Monday), the

national attorney general's office ordered an investigation into the

President of the Republic Oscar Arias Sanchez and the Minister of

Environment, Energy and Telecommunications, Roberto Dobles Mora, for

possibly committing the crime of abuse of authority, " a statement

said. Arias, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1987 for helping end

civil wars in several central American countries, took office as

president in May 2006. He served an earlier term as president from

1986 to 1990. The investigation centered on a decree signed by both

ministers last Friday which said that the Crucitas gold mine project

in the north of the country, by the Industrias Infinito company, was

" of public and national interest, " the statement said. Environmental

groups have slammed the decree which authorizes the company -- a

subsidiary of the Canadian company Vanessa Ventures Incorporation --

to fell 262 hectares (647 acres) of forests, including protected

species, in the region bordering Nicaragua. The Supreme Court on

Monday ordered the immediate suspension of the government decree,

following a citizen's appeal to protect the forests.

http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5hyt3uaFAfo3r4WtCO4gBO-N8nIBQ

 

 

7) Working their way up the forested slopes of a Costa Rican volcano

rising nearly 3000 m (10,000 ft) above the coastal plain, Colwell and

colleagues have collected data on the altitudinal ranges of nearly

2000 species of plants and insects. They report that about half these

species have such narrow altitudinal ranges that a 600 m (2000 ft)

uphill shift would move these species into territory completely new to

them, beyond the upper limits of their current ranges on the

mountainside. But many may be unable to shift— most mountainside

forests in the tropics have been severely fragmented by human land

use. Meanwhile, tropical lowland rainforests, the warmest forests on

Earth, face a challenge that has no parallel at higher latitudes. If

the current occupants of the lowlands shift uphill, tracking their

accustomed climate, there are few replacements waiting in the wings,

currently living in even warmer places. According to Colwell and

colleagues, the threat of lowland attrition from warming climates

faces about half the species they studied in Costa Rica—unless lowland

species retain tolerances to higher temperatures developed millions of

years ago when the world was much warmer. Only further research can

estimate the risk, but Colwell's report indicates that the impact of

global climate change on some tropical rainforest and mountain species

could be significant.

http://esciencenews.com/articles/2008/10/09/tropical.rainforest.and.mountain.spe\

cies.may.be.threatened.global.warming

 

Colombia:

 

8) " We need to solve the topic of property and the issue of autonomy, "

added Jorge Furagaro of the Witoto people in Colombia. Indigenous

leaders " have no real authority to negotiate, so too often we lose

out. " Discussions laying the groundwork for proposed forest

conservation financing schemes like REDD (Reducing Emissions from

Deforestation and Degradation) have largely excluded indigenous

leaders, despite plenty of lip-service paid to their cause by

environmental NGOs. As a result, while such mechanisms could

ultimately benefit forest-dwellers, many indigenous groups strongly

oppose measures to use forests as giant carbon offsets. Their

opposition will likely continue until they play a greater part in

determining policy. Chief among their concerns is the potential for a

" land grab " whereby governments, carbon traders, and speculators

secure rights of the ecosystem services provided by forests without

the consent of the people who live within the forests. In places where

indigenous land rights are poorly defined, such claims could be used

to evict forest people from lands upon which they have been living for

generations. Therefore the development of policy mechanisms like REDD

will involve thorny issues like traditional land rights as well as

broader questions on how compensation will be structured and what

measures will effectively conserve forests without driving more people

into poverty. In the end, there is little doubt that support from

forest people will be critical in making " avoided deforestation "

schemes a reality.

http://news.mongabay.com/2008/1008-indigenous_redd.html

 

 

9) The Chocó, a region of humid tropical forest in western Colombia

and northwestern Ecuador, is one of the world's biodiversity hotspots

with high levels of endemic species but large-scale habitat loss. The

situation is particularly dire in Ecuador where more than 90 percent

of the Chocó has been cleared for agriculture. But hope is not lost. A

dedicated team of researchers is working with local communities to

ensure that Chocó will be around for future generations. The Center

for Tropical Research (CTR), a research and conservation group based

at UCLA's Institute of the Environment, runs a program that combines

research, training, education and grassroots sustainable development

to conserve and expand Ecuador's endangered Chocó forests. The

project, headed by Dr. Jordan Karubian, is improving rural

livelihoods, preserving biodiversity and helping slow the country's

deforestation rate, which is one of the highest in Latin America. In

an October 2008 interview with mongabay.com, Karubian discussed the

project and its implications for conservation in Ecuador. A 5-minute

overview of the project is also available in English and Spanish

Mongabay: What is the Chocó and why is it a global priority for

conservation? Jordan Karubian: The Chocó Biogeographical Region spans

100,000 square kilometers of humid forest in western Colombia and

northwestern Ecuador. It is one of Conservation International's

original 17 'Conservation Hotspots' and is among the 5% top areas in

the world in terms of biodiversity, endemism (when species which occur

in only one habitat type – in this case, the Chocó -- and nowhere else

in the world) and threat. For example, the Chocó is home to over 60

endemic species of bird, the highest number in the Americas (and over

500 species of bird total), yet only 5-10% of Ecuador's original Chocó

forest remains. Worryingly deforestation continues at a steady pace.

In Ecuador, deforestation is driven mostly by an impoverished local

populace that lacks alternatives and depends on exploitation of

natural resources through activities such as slash-and-burn

agriculture, timber extraction, and hunting. Without active

conservation efforts remaining Chocó forests will be lost in the near

future, with a huge loss to biodiversity and to the well being of

local residents. Mongabay: What is the Center for Tropical Research

(CTR) and what is its role in the Chocó? Jordan Karubian: The Center

for Tropical Research (CTR) is a research and conservation group based

at UCLA's Institute of the Environment. Our over-arching goal is to

understand the biotic processes that underlie and maintain the

diversity of life and to advance conservation efforts that protect

these processes. A focal point for CTR's work is Latin America,

especially the mega-diverse country of Ecuador.

http://news.mongabay.com/2008/1009-interview_karubian.html

 

Ecuador:

 

10) When we finally walked out onto the platform, we suddenly had a

breathtaking view from horizon to horizon out across the top of the

Amazon rainforest, a vast expanse of billowing green clouds. First

instinct of a birdwatcher: Raise binoculars to eyes and scan! I did.

Just thirty yards away, a spectacular Blue-throated Piping-Guan was

perched on the very topmost branch of a tree. I shifted the binoculars

to the far horizon and instantly saw something which looked like two

large blankets flapping furiously on a very thick washing line.

Dangling from below this vision was a monkey, writhing desperately

like a murderer at the end of a hangman's rope. I shouted to Oscar and

pointed to the horizon and, after a split second's glance, he shouted

back to us - Harpy Eagle! We watched as Harpy, with monkey, flapped

slowly away and was lost in the greens of the canopy. Oscar, on our

relatively brief acquaintance with him, had seemed phlegmatic in the

extreme. But now, suddenly, he erupted into a whooping war dance round

and round the platform, shaking our hands, grinning from ear to ear

and finally telling us that this was only the second ever sighting of

a Harpy Eagle from the La Selva canopy tower. It is one of the world's

largest and most powerful eagles, vying only with the Philippine Eagle

for the top spot. But, of course, the bigger they are the more room

they need and a pair of Harpies needs up to 20 square miles of,

preferably, pristine virgin lowland rainforest to survive and raise a

family. They are found from South-eastern Mexico to Northern Argentina

and Southern Brazil, a huge area taking in the whole of the Amazon

basin but with this forest now being ferociously fragmented they are

endangered birds indeed. The Harpy stands over three feet tall, with

massively thick legs and toes covered by wrinkled, pinkish yellow

skin. It grips tree branches (and its hapless prey!) with wickedly

curved grey talons up to the size of a grizzly bear's claws. Its huge

round owl-like face, a circular rosette of pale grey feathers is

topped by a few long grey feathers sticking out at odd angles like an

Indian brave's headdress. It's built like a huge sparrowhawk -

relatively short wings (but still spanning over six feet) and a

relatively long tail - and like the sparrowhawk is adapted for hunting

fast and large prey inside the canopy. Our monkey was a typical meal,

along with sloths (not actually fast, of course, - there's an

exception to every rule), opossums, reptiles and birds. For such a big

bird, Harpies are highly maneuverable fliers and strike their

(terrified!) prey after a (normally) rapid pursuit through the trees.

They can fly with prey weighing up to about half of their own (10 -

20lb) body weight. As with the sparrowhawk tribe generally, the female

can be as much as twice as heavy as her mate.

http://www.tropical-forests.com/2008/10/the-harpy-eagle-king-of-the-canopy/

 

 

11) The scandal emerged last week when a Peruvian TV station played

audio recordings it had obtained from an anonymous source. The

conversations involved high ranking members of Peru's government

discussing bribes they would receive from the Norwegian Oil Company,

Discover. The company had won 4 exploration contracts after " bidding "

for them in an auction last month. These contracts would have allowed

Discover to explore for oil in places such as Peru's famous Madre de

Dios rainforest region. However, after word of hidden bribery became

public, Peru's president, Alan Garcia, was immediately pressured by

opposition leaders to fire his cabinet of ministers. On Friday a

confusing chain of events transpired, where Garcia's ministers

resigned immediately prior to Peru's Congress voting to force them out

of office–a classic performance of political theater. Details about

what truly happened are sparse beyond what we know from the audio

tapes. An investigation has been ordered by Congress of all of the oil

concessions that have been granted since Garcia came into office in

2006. Jorge Del Castillo, Peru's prime minister, was implicated in the

recordings as someone who could have helped to facilitate the oil

bidding process in Discover's favor. So far, Del Castillo, Discover,

and all other parties involved have denied the accusations of

corruption and bribery. Del Castillo and Garcia's ministers can now

mount his defense from the sidelines (save several who were recently

appointed and who were thus spared). Perhaps the biggest loss is that

of Antonio Brack, Peru's Minister of the Environment. Having been

recently appointed in the earlier part of this year, he was charged

with helping Peru to combat problems associated with climate change

and the environment. He recently announced the creation of a 3,000

person " Environment Police " that would help stop illegal deforestation

in the Amazon Rainforest region of Peru. It's unclear now if that plan

and others will be put on hold.

http://ecoworldly.com/2008/10/13/perus-entire-presidential-cabinet-fired-over-oi\

l-scandal-is-president-next/

 

 

12) Ecuador's proposal to protect one of the world's most biodiverse

rainforests from oil development has failed to secure any funding

ahead at its December deadline, reports the Guardian Unlimited. The

plan, set forth by president Rafael Correa in April 2007, calls for

$350 million in donor funds per year for a decade to leave the oil —

which lies near Yasuni National Park in the Ecuadorian Amazon — in the

ground. The proposal would avoid the release of around 108 million

tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and safeguard from

development a region that is home to some of the world's highest

concentrations of biodiversity as well as indigenous groups still

living in traditional ways. Previous drilling in the region — known as

the Oriente — caused extensive environmental damage. Chevron is

currently facing a $16 billion liability for damages caused by Texaco,

which operated in the area from 1964-1992. The Guardian reports that

while there has been political interest from Germany, Spain, and

Norway in the plan, no one has offered much in the way of cash. Norway

recently said it would contribute up to $1 billion to Brazil's fund to

protect the Amazon rainforest. " The first option is to leave that oil

in the ground, but the international community would have to

compensate us for immense sacrifice that a poor country like Ecuador

would have to make, " President Correa said in a radio address when he

first put forth the proposal. " Ecuador doesn't ask for charity, but

does ask that the international community share in the sacrifice and

compensates us with at least half of what our country would receive,

in recognition of the environmental benefits that would be generated

by keeping this oil underground. " Ecuador has shown particular

interest in the environment of late. Last week the country passed a

constitution that established a " Bill of Rights " for the environment

that effectively grants its ecosystems legal rights akin to those

afforded to people and businesses. The government has also clamped

down on illegal migration to the Galapagos islands, a chain famed for

its wildlife, although it has controversially not restricted tourists.

http://news.mongabay.com/2008/1009-ecuador.html

 

Peru:

 

13) Peruvian and Brazilian authorities are trading accusations that

uncontrolled logging on the Peruvian side of the Amazon Forest is

uprooting isolated Indian tribesmen forcing them to flee across the

border into Brazil in search of untampered land and food. Indigenous

rights groups and Indian tribes researchers in Brazil now believe the

uprooting may be a recipe for renewed inter-tribal conflicts over the

resource that may suck governments of both nations into a row over the

other's responsibility in the affair, Reuters reports. Jose Meirelles,

a researcher with Funai, Brazil's Indian affairs agency, is quoted as

claiming Peru is allowing the loggers to kill and expel isolated

tribes people from within their boarders while clearing forest cover

for oil and gas exploration. As a Brazilian government official,

Meirelles, together with a colleague, have been attacked by Peruvian

Indians crossing into his country who used arrows of a different type

from those used by Brazilian tribes, reinforcing his evidence. But

Peruvian officials denied the allegations, and even further questioned

the existence of uncontacted Indian tribes still inhabiting the Amazon

if any, a stance that draws the ire of indigenous rights groups. A

couple of the rights organizations working in the area, Survival

International and CIPIACI accuse the Peruvian authorities of doing

little to protect the tribes and avert the emerging conflicts,

particularly in the Ucayali region. Already, an area measuring 2,000

hectares (4,900 acres) in the Kaxinawa Igarape reserve has recently

been deforested, translating into a 16% loss of its total area.

http://ecoworldly.com/2008/10/20/amazon-forest-logging-sucks-peru-and-brazil-int\

o-fight-over-uprooted-indian-tribes/

 

 

14) The Governments of the United States of America and the Republic

of Peru today announced an agreement to reduce Peru's debt payments in

exchange for protecting the country's tropical forests. Under the

agreement more than $25 million will be put towards conserving Peru's

rainforests. This agreement with Peru was made possible by the

Tropical Forest Conservation Act (TFCA) of 1998. It will complement an

existing TFCA debt-for-nature program in Peru dating from 2002, a 1997

debt swap under the Enterprise for the Americas Initiative, and the

United States-Peru Trade Promotion Agreement, which includes a number

of forest protection provisions. With this agreement, Peru will be the

largest beneficiary under the Tropical Forest Conservation Act, with

more than $35 million generated for conservation. Peru is one of the

most biologically rich countries on earth. Funds generated by the

debt-for-nature program will help Peru protect tropical rainforests of

the southwestern Amazon Basin and dry forests of the central Andes.

These areas are home to dense concentrations of endemic birds such as

the Andean Condor and Andean Parakeet; primates including the Peruvian

Yellow-tailed Woolly Monkey and Howler Monkey; other mammals such as

the Jaguar, Amazonian Manatee, Giant Otter, Spectacled Bear and Amazon

River Dolphin; as well as many unique plants. Rivers supplying water

to downstream settlements originate in many of these forests, and

people living in and around the forests depend on them for their

livelihood and survival. The new Peru agreement marks the 14th

Tropical Forest Conservation Act pact, following agreements with

Bangladesh, Belize, Botswana, Colombia, Costa Rica, El Salvador,

Guatemala, Jamaica, Panama (two agreements), Paraguay and the

Philippines, as well as an earlier agreement with Peru. These

debt-for-nature programs will together generate more than $188 million

to protect tropical forests.

http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2008/oct/111051.htm

 

 

15) In July of 2008 The Company Jesus 2008 was formed in Contumaza,

Peru with the stated intention to explore mining in various regions

throughout Contumaza and Cascas. In late July land titles to the

Cachil Forest, Palo Seco (another forest near Cachil) and much of the

upper areas of the Cachil valley were filed in Contumaza with the

mining company stated as the owner. In the beginning of August

residents began to and increase in activity in the valley: along the

border of the forest and even inside it holes appeared, minerals

extracted, makeshift houses constructed and traffic along the highway

increased substantially. These activities are obvious precursors to

mining activity. However there is a serious problem to this seemingly

routine start up mine: the land titles filed in Contumaza were

falsified. The true owners have never sold their land, never entered

talks to sell and in fact only became aware of the situation when

local villagers alerted Puentes to the activity in September of 2008.

Illegal appropriation of land is all too common in Peru. Like in many

regions of the Andes the true owners of the land do not live in the

Cachil Valley but in the city of Trujillo, five hours away and Cascas,

two hours away. The owners hold the titles as a remnant of the

hacienda culture of generations ago. As the moderately wealthy family

is no longer living on their land it appears to the uninformed

observer that the land is abandoned. As is normally the case local

residents live and work on the land typically with the blessing of the

land owner. Residents are often too poor and too isolated to change

the ownership status. In addition owners rarely wish to sell.

http://chapolan-cachil.blogspot.com/2008/10/urgent-threat-to-cachil-forest.html

 

 

16) In the rain forests of Peru's remote Pacaya-Samiria National

Reserve, mothers don't make kids eat their carrots. Instead, kids

munch on aguaje, a crisp, neon yellow palm fruit covered in maroon

scales. It tastes a bit like a carrot, but packs three times the

vitamin A punch. Aguaje is just one of more than a hundred wild and

domesticated fruits available to people each year in this

8,000-square-mile chunk of protected Amazon wetland at the confluence

of two rivers in northeastern Peru. (See more photos of Amazon

fruits.) And with so much variety and abundance, it's not surprising

that these fruits form the centerpiece of the local diet. The

reserve's 100,000 residents depend on them for many nutrients—like

vitamins, protein, and oils—that the rest of us normally get from a

variety of other foods, including vegetables and nuts. Fruits also

serve as an important source of income for the residents—especially

aguaje. It generates $4.6 million every year in the markets of

Iquitos, the nearest city—more than any other indigenous fruit from

the Peruvian Amazon. While U.S. farmers markets might sell a dozen or

two different kinds of fruit in any given week, the Iquitos market

boasts nearly 200, with varied tastes, colors, shapes, and textures:

spiky yellow rinds, crunchy seeds, and orange pulp. But outside the

Amazon region, their popularity is limited. Although the Amazon has

occasionally yielded commercially valuable fruits, such as the

antioxidant-rich açaí added to gourmet juices and the caffeine-charged

guarana used in energy drinks, international markets have yet to plumb

most of the bounty of indigenous fruits growing in lush forests along

rivers. Beyond Peru and parts of Brazil, the aguaje's supercarrot

possibilities remain largely unknown. Could that change? One expert

thinks it's possible. Outside the Amazon, few know more about this

region's wild and cultivated fruits than Nigel Smith. The

Venezuelan-born geographer, a professor at the University of Florida,

has devoted much of his four-decade career to the Amazon region. The

past three decades have seen unprecedented human migration into the

Pacaya- Samiria reserve, part of an area Smith calls the " epicenter of

wild-fruit consumption in the Amazon. " Other pressures, like hunting,

logging, and unsustainable fishing, are on the rise as well. As these

pressures grow, Smith believes small farmers hold a key to managing

and protecting the region. With support from the National Geographic

Society's Committee for Research and Exploration, the MacArthur

Foundation and the Moore Foundation, he and his team, including

Peruvian botanist Rodolfo Vazquez, spent six months in Pacaya-Samiria

over several years documenting 148 different fruit species.

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/10/081014-amazon-fruit-missions.htm\

l

 

 

Chile:

 

17) La Libertad's Regional Center for Strategic Planning (Cerplan)

manager, Ángel Polo Campos, emphasized that this department has been

the country's first producer of eucalyptus for several years thanks to

its lands, which still have more potential to be exploited. He

indicated that the Peruvian company Tableros Peruanos, manufacturer of

fibreboards, uses 90 percent of the eucalyptus of this department. " As

this (quantity of eucalyptus) is not enough, the company has to resort

to other zones. The potential of eucalyptus is not only used for wood

but also for paper pulp " , he expressed. The forest potential of La

Libertad includes the production of tara, exporting plant for

industrial and medicinal purposes. " In Peru, the region ranks third

place in exports of this product " , he added. Both products, the

eucalyptus and the tara grow in different zones of La Libertad's

highland. " That's why we are interested in planting more areas " , he

said. In addition, he mentioned that there is not only interest to

supply the economic demand but also to contribute with the maintenance

of basins, rivers and, in general, with the preservation of the

environment. http://www.andina.com.pe/Ingles/Noticia.aspx?id=XwjU9Z6dVQU=

 

Uruguay:

 

18) The Portugal-based Portucel Soporcel group is investing $4 billion

here to build a pulp plant and deep-water port. " President Tabaré

Vázquez says the investment from Portucel Soporcel Group will stem

contagion from the world financial crisis, " the Associated Press has

reported. The plant will probably be built by the Laguna Merín near

the border with Brazil, Radio Espectador reported on its Web site

yesterday. (The enormous lagoon is supposed to be quite beautiful, and

I only hope construction does not start before I get the chance to

head out there for a trip I have planned to nearby Melo.) The

projected $4 billion investment is no small change in a country this

size. The controversial Botnia pulp mill, for example, cost only $1.2

billion to build along the River Uruguay and it has been credited as

the engine behind Uruguay's 13.1 percent growth in the first half of

this year. Given that performance, and the country's otherwise

dangerous dependency on beef and rice exports, it is no surprise that

Uruguay is pushing to expand its pulp mill industry. In May, Finland's

minister for migration and European affairs said more pulp mills are

headed to Uruguay, and a during a recent trip through the interior, my

view of the country's famous pastureland was interrupted several times

by planted Eucalyptus groves.

http://benjamingedan.blogspot.com/2008/10/protucel-pulp-plant-good-news-for.html

 

 

Paraguay:

 

19) The Paraguayan and Indonesian announcements follow commitments

made at the Convention on Biological Diversity's Conference of Parties

in Bonn in May to achieve zero net deforestation by 2020. The new

measures will contribute to safeguarding biodiversity in some of the

world's most biologically diverse eco-regions, protect local

livelihoods and are significant elements of climate change action by

the three countries. Deforestation, particularly in the tropics, is

the third largest source of greenhouse gas emissions, generating

between 15-20 per cent of global carbon emissions. Paraguay announced

it will implement a policy to achieve and maintain zero net carbon

emissions from land use changes by 2020. As part of this policy, it

will extend the country's Forest Conversion Moratorium, or Zero

Deforestation Law, by another five years when it expires in December.

Enacted in December 2004 and renewed in 2006 for another two years,

the law prohibits the transformation and conversion of forested areas

in Paraguay's eastern region. Implementation of the law has led to

massive cuts in deforestation rates in the Upper Parana Atlantic

Forest, one of the world's richest forests, from between

88,000-170,000 hectares annually before the law came into force, to a

current level of approximately 16,700 hectares annually, a reduction

of more than 85 per cent. " We will extend the moratorium on

deforestation until each state has created a land-use plan showing how

they will contribute to achieve zero net greenhouse gas emissions at a

national scale by 2020, " said Dr José Luis Casaccia, Paraguay's

Minister of Environment. Other initiatives announced by Dr Casaccia

include establishing credible and transparent systems to measure,

report and verify how much carbon is stored under different land uses,

and promoting mechanisms that complement the country's Payment for

Environmental Services Law, integrating them in the national poverty

alleviation strategy. The Indonesian government announced it will no

longer tolerate conversion of forests for establishing crop

plantations such as oil palm. The government will also forge ahead

with its forest-carbon initiative, aimed at conserving biodiversity,

reducing carbon emissions from land-use changes, restoring ecosystem

services and generating innovative incentives for sustainable

development. " New crop plantations such as oil palm will have to use

idle lands, " said Mrs. Hermin Roosita, Indonesia's Deputy Minister of

Environment. " Also, starting with Sumatra, Indonesia will adopt a

sustainable development model that uses ecosystem-based spatial

planning. " http://www.panda.org/index.cfm?uNewsID=147348

 

Amazon:

 

20) Exelon Corporation, an American energy giant, has agreed to

finance Amazon forest conservation in Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador,

reports the Field Museum, its partner in the project. Exelon will

donate $1.5 million towards the Field Museum's biological inventories

and assessment of forest carbon stocks of the region, which is

believed to be one of the most biodiverse in the world. The

partnership will seek to cut net greenhouse emissions by reducing

deforestation through the establishment of new protected areas.

Deforestation and land use change accounts for roughly one fifth of

global greenhouse gas emissions. " Exelon's support will help the

museum maintain its expert team of biologists and anthropologists,

which conducts inventories of threatened, scientifically unknown

landscapes with high conservation potential, " said John McCarter,

president of The Field Museum. " This will lead to the protection of

intact ecosystems and species that are vulnerable, have very small

ranges or are not known to occur anywhere else. " John W. Rowe,

chairman and CEO of Exelon, said the partnership will boost the

potential for protecting forests as a means to help mitigate emissions

and slow climate change. " By partnering with The Field Museum, we can

identify forests and habitats for long-term protection to prevent the

emission of significant quantities of carbon " he said. " As a

corollary, Exelon will gain valuable experience in developing carbon

offset projects... our partnership will have strategic benefits to our

business. Cordillera Azul National Park [a park in Peru that will be

surveyed under the initiative] may serve as a model for the accurate

measurement of carbon offsets from avoided deforestation. It is our

hope that this voluntary protocol will be approved for use by others

to meet legislative and regulatory requirements to reduce greenhouse

gas emissions. " In making the announcement, Exelon joins a growing

list of companies pushing for official U.S. government support of

avoided deforestation in future climate negotiations.

http://news.mongabay.com/2008/1013-exelon.html

 

 

Brazil:

 

21) A galloping sense of insecurity has replaced the swaggering former

confidence that insatiable demand would maintain high prices for

products as varied as soybeans, copper, wheat and coffee. Commodities

have tumbled in value in the wake of the financial meltdown. Some

observers even fear that Latin America's most prolonged growth spurt

in years could be over, ushering in an era of renewed austerity.

" We're sailing without a compass, " said Nilson Wirth Monteiro, a

consultant with Link Investments in São Paulo, Brazil, the epicenter

of Latin America's largest economy. " There's no compass to indicate

how commodities and global markets will behave. " Leaders such as

Brazil's Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva initially boasted that their

nations would be inoculated against the " jazz effect " — as Argentine

President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner mockingly dubbed the

spreading crisis in an address before the United Nations. But that

early sense of insouciance largely has vanished. Credit has become

extremely tight and earnings from commodity exports are tanking.

Plummeting regional stock markets have followed Wall Street's nose

dive. Central banks from Mexico City to Santiago, Chile, have

disbursed cash to bolster suddenly shaky currencies. Many governments,

including Brazil, might have to rethink ambitious spending plans meant

to improve infrastructure and reduce poverty. " Latin American leaders

have in a few days gone from preoccupation with the phenomenon

happening elsewhere in the world to abject fear, " noted officials at

the Washington, D.C.-based Council on Hemispheric Affairs, in a report

released Friday.

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2008286565_latinamerica20.html

 

22) Conservationists are set to receive money from a Brazilian bank

and a global hotel chain in an effort to protect trees and combat

global warming in the Juma forest reserve deep in Brazil's Amazon. For

other potential donors, mostly in rich countries, who want to help

preserve tropical forests as a way to reduce their carbon footprints,

this test case will hopefully shed any doubts about accountability and

measuring success. The Foundation for a Sustainable Amazon, which runs

the project, will receive a $2 million donation over four years from

the Washington, D.C., area-based Marriott hotel chain. The money is to

compensate for the carbon emissions of its guests worldwide and will

help the foundation protect 34 forest reserves totaling 41 million

acres (16.4 million hectares), which it already manages. Arne

Sorenson, executive vice president of Marriott, said the Amazon plays

a huge role in combating global warming. The foundation said hotel

guests would also be asked to donate $1 to the project. Brazil's

Bradesco bank and the Amazonas state government each donated 20

million reais ($9.4 million) to the foundation. Because of the 2.9

million acres (1.2 million hectares) of Amazon forest that are

destroyed each year, mostly by illegal loggers, poor settlers, cattle

ranchers and farmers, Brazil is one of the world's largest carbon

emitters. Brazil and several other developing countries are proposing

that the United Nations Kyoto climate treaty be revised so that

polluters can buy carbon credits for the protection of forests. " Our

message to the world is that obstacles to include forests in the Kyoto

Protocol can be overcome, " said Virgilio Viana, head of the

foundation. But some potential donors are concerned about

transparency, accountability, and the difficulty of measuring carbon

sequestration in tropical forest projects.

http://www.redorbit.com/news/science/1589723/brazil_sponsors_carbon_reduction_in\

_amazon_forest/

 

23) When you are a supermodel, you can have a whole forest named after

you! In collaboration with Gisele Bündchen and Grendene (the owner of

the Ipanema brand), SOS Mata Atlantica is set to recover 15 hectares

of Atlantic forest in the Brazilian regions of Campinas and Bahia. The

" Gisele Bündchen of the Future - Seeds " forest will be the product of

planting 25,500 saplings of 100 different species. After wearing a

water dress in the first ads of her Ipanema flip flop to draw

attention to this vital resource, Brazilian supermodel Gisele Bündchen

strikes a pose wearing nothing but flip flops and strategically placed

leaves in the new second ad campaign for her supermodel sandals. The

new campaign supports an environmental program called Forests of the

Future. The program aims to recover and protect gallery forest, the

vegetation that surrounds rivers and streams participating in the

protection of water. If you do not understand the language of the TV

ad, it says something like, " I love Trend Hunter. But I love one Trend

Hunter in particular. Ayman. "

http://www.trendhunter.com/trends/gisele-bundchen-nature-flip-flops

 

 

24) Professor Heiko Balzter told 200 scientists and foresters in

Brazil " We need advanced radar satellites for monitoring tropical

deforestation and forest biomass " . The researchers from South America,

the US, Canada and Europe had come together for the 8th Seminar on

Remote Sensing and Geographical Information Systems Applications in

Forest Engineering in the city of Curitiba, Brazil. Professor Balzter,

who is Professor of Physical Geography at the University of Leicester,

had been invited by the Brazilian Space Research Institute (INPE) to

speak at the conference about his work on monitoring forest biomass

using remote sensing. According to a recent FAO report (the Forest

Resources Assessment 2005), Brazil had the world's largest deforested

area between 1990 and 2005. The country lost over 42 million hectares

of forest, which is more than one and a half times the size of the

United Kingdom. " With modern radar technology and knowledge of tree

structures we can produce spatial carbon maps " , said Professor

Balzter, whose research has been published in the journal Remote

Sensing of Environment in 2007. Trees take up carbon from the air when

they grow. This helps slow down the greenhouse effect and global

warming. When the trees are felled, this important function is lost.

" Radar uses microwaves to penetrate through the forest canopy. They

measure how much wet plant matter and indirectly how much carbon is

there in the forest. " Our case studies in the UK have shown that using

two radar antennas with different wavelengths can provide maps of the

top of the forest canopy and the forest floor. The managed forests in

Britain and the rainforest of Brazil are of course very different.

Nevertheless, similar results were found by scientists in Brazil " .

Conference participants came from Brazil, Chile, Argentina, Paraguay,

Bolivia, Canada, the US, Finland and other countries.

http://www.alphagalileo.org/index.cfm?_rss=1 & fuseaction=readrelease & releaseid=53\

3101

 

 

25) In the face of growing international pressure to better preserve

the Amazon, Brazil is increasingly betting on intelligence and

technology in its uphill battle to tackle illegal activities. " We

can't be everywhere, the region is huge. So we need intelligence to

focus our resources, " Marcelo de Carvalho Lopes, head of the Amazon

Protection System, or Sipam, said in an interview this week. At Sipam,

which was launched in 2003 at a cost of $1.4 billion, authorities

battle deforestation, forest fires and drug trafficking by analyzing

satellite images and aerial photography. Hundreds of climate sensors,

satellite telephones and broadband Internet connections are now spread

over the 5.2 million square kilometers (2 million sq miles) of forest,

an area larger than the European Union. " The state needed more

presence there, " said Lopes. On the walls of one large conference room

at Sipam's flying saucer-like headquarters in Brasilia, are the latest

images of the areas worst affected by logging, taken with infrared

cameras from Air Force planes. The images will be used as evidence in

court against hundreds of illegal loggers. Currently, only 8 percent

of all fines for illegal logging are collected, according to the

environment ministry. The high-resolution images also show paths where

loggers plan to chop trees, giving authorities a chance to prevent

deforestation before it happens. " Sending people in by foot to take

these pictures is costly, timely and dangerous -- these images are a

potential breakthrough, " said Wougran Soares Galvao, Sipam Operations. By the end of the year, Brazil will have scanned 86 percent

of the Amazon. With the high-resolution images it will gain an edge in

law enforcement and conservation, analysts said. Improved air traffic

control and a law implemented in 2004 that permits the air force to

shoot down suspect planes, have reduced drug trafficking by air, said

Ricardo Augusto Silverio dos Santos of Brazil's secret service agency,

Abin. The problem is that drug gangs smuggling cocaine to sell in

Brazil or en route to markets in Europe now enter from Colombia by

boat instead of plane. " They've switched their modus operandi, " said

Silveiro. Sipam is now installing new surveillance equipment along

major waterways and preparing counter-narcotics operations, said

Silveiro.

http://www.reuters.com/article/environmentNews/idUSTRE49E7GU20081015?pageNumber=\

2 & virtualBrandChannel=0

 

 

26) It took one year, endless consultations and 13 government

ministries to put together, yet Brazil's national climate-change plan

is short on specific targets and looks very much like a work in

progress. The publication of the draft strategy in late September, now

up for public consultation until the end of October, was briefly

delayed, prompting speculation that government advisers judged its

initiatives unsatisfactory. The 157-page plan, which contains more

than 100 recommendations and also received input from the

non-governmental Brazilian Climate Change Forum, covers mitigation,

adaptation, deforestation, and research and development. Most

noticeably, the proposals lack specific carbon-emission targets,

deadlines and policies. Environmentalists are blaming industry leaders

for lobbying against mandatory targets. In response, business leaders

argue that such a step would render Brazil's energy-intensive

companies uncompetitive. According to the latest figures provided to

the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, Brazil

creates an estimated 1.47 billion tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions

per year – making the country the world's fifth highest GHG emitter.

Figures from the UN Development Programme show the ratio of Brazil's

gross domestic product to its carbon emissions growing by almost 10%

between 1990 and 2004. However, as a developing economy, it has no

obligations under the Kyoto Protocol to establish targets to reduce

this figure. As a halfway measure, the national strategy proposes to

set a reduction target for emissions per unit of production, although

there is no indication of what that target should be. In fact, a

general lack of timelines and policy instruments pervades the plan.

Cogeneration is a case in point. At present, only 0.5% of Brazil's

domestic energy derives from capturing heat given off during

industrial processes. Through a programme of " integration and

permanent management " , the government believes this could increase to

one-fifth of all domestic energy, although it does not specify

incentives or deadlines.

http://www.climatechangecorp.com/content.asp?contentid=5709

 

 

27) Last Friday, 10 October 2008, more than 100 fishermen/-women of

the Association of Fishermen/-women of Barra do Riacho and Barra do

Sahy, - ASPEBR, closed the access by land to the private harbor of

Aracruz Celulose S.A. (ARCEL), called Portocel for the entire day,

impeding the entrance of cellulose, destined to exportation. The

fishermen/-women presented a long list of demands to ARCEL and to the

municipality of Aracruz. The most important demand was the immediate

opening of four floodgates constructed (by ARCEL) in the river

(Riacho) to increase its water quantity, because the locking of the

river has diminished the water volume, causing the increase of

sediments inside the river and the closing of the mouth of the river.

The closing of the mouth of the river creates a desperate situation

for the fishermen/-women families because it impedes them to leave

their harbor to go to sea (and return), making it each time more

difficult for the people who depend on fishery to guarantee their

subsistence. On the other hand, the ships which use the sea (which

carry cellulose to produce disposable papers in Europe, USA and Asia)

always leave the Portocel without any problem. The problem of the

closing of the Riacho river to the sea is being caused by ARCEL who

diverted, besides the Riacho river, another four rivers in the region

in order to guarantee sufficient water for its reservoir for the pulp

mills. The water needed for the pulp mills and cellulose production is

enormous: a water demand equal to the what a city with two million

inhabitants consumes. Therefore, the Riacho river totally lost its

force, causing the sedimentation of sandy particles. The

fishermen/-women demanded the presence of the mayor of the

municipality, Ademar Devens, who appeared in the beginning of the

afternoon and observed the situation of the mouth of the river,

decided to take the demands of the people to the direction of ARCEL.

At about 16:00hs, company representatives came to inform to the

fishermen/-women that the company was willing to open the four

floodgates in the Riacho river, when the tide is low, supposing that

this could facilitate the process of (re-)opening the mouth of the

river. Aracruz also asked for compensation‚ from the fishermen/-women

for the difficult time that the company is passing through: firstly,

the lack of water in the pulp mills because of the long dry period in

the region- a situation for which the company has a lot of

responsibility; secondly, the difficult financial situation of the

company because of the high price of the dollar. (It is publicly known

that ARCEL realized financial operations with a speculative character

that resulted in a loss of around $2 billion.)

info

 

 

28) Brazilian researchers are closer to developing a way to establish

large-scale mahogany plantations, reports the ITTO in its bi-monthly

update. Scientists at the Federal Rural University of Amazonia (UFRA)

have found that planting a matrix of mahogany with cedar reduces the

incidence of the Hypsipyla grandella caterpillar, a chief pest of

mahogany that has doomed previous attempts to reforest with the

valuable hardwood species. Should the technique prove viable, it could

reduce pressure on wild mahogany, a species which is highly sought on

timber markets. The pursuit of mahogany has been a major driver of

illegal logging throughout Latin America. The technique could also

allow the reforestation of degraded lands using mahogany seedlings.

http://news.mongabay.com/2008/1016-mahogany.html

 

 

29) Minc clarified that Incra is the formal owner of the six parcels

of land at issue, which in fact were deforested by the settlers. But

legally, he said, the problem falls again on Incra because the

Institute cannot pass ownership of land to the agriculturists until it

has been settled for 10 years. " They are small deforestations, of 20

or 30 hectares, per person. On the other hand, a small one deforests

little but thousands deforest a great deal, " said Minc. " Therefore, we

have that to improve, and as well we have to improve the incidents of

deforestation on conservation units and on aboriginal lands. " In

total, 223,000 hectares of the rainforest were logged on those six

properties. The Amazon rainforest is being chopped down more than

three times as fast as last year, Brazilian officials said Monday,

after three years of declines in the deforestation rate. Minc blamed

upcoming nationwide elections, saying that mayors in the Amazon region

are ignoring illegal logging in hopes of gaining advantage at the

polls. He said all illegal loggers on the list, public and private,

will have to answer to the Department of Justice, replant what was

deforested and change their attitude. " Most important is a change of

attitude, to stop logging illegally with impunity and to reconstitute

what it was deforested by the crimes, " declared Minc. According to

minister, most of the deforestation has taken place in the states of

Pará, Mato Grosso and Rondônia.

http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/sep2008/2008-09-30-02.asp

 

 

30) The deforestation rate in Brazil has taken on a whole new sense of

emergency. The Brazilian Parliament has just adopted a provision into

law providing for an increase in the area of the Amazon that may be

granted for rural use with no need to call for bids. The limit,

previously set at 500 hectares, has been increased to 1,500 hectares,

allowing deforestation of up to 20 percent of the area granted. This

law will allow an increase of soybean plantations and cattle ranches

in their need to exploit more land for destruction. Recently, a report

by the National Space Research Institute showed that the Brazilian

Amazon lost 1,096 square kilometers of forests during May.

http://blog.adreamforabetterworld.com/2008/10/10/brazil-enacts-law-for-access-to\

-more-rainforest-destruction/

 

 

31) Alta Floresta, a region in the Brazilian Amazon state of Mato

Grosso, has experienced one of the highest deforestation rates on the

planet since the mid-1980s due to the influx of colonists and ranchers

who converted nearly half the region's forest land to pasture and

agricultural plots. The change has had significant ecological impacts,

including reducing the availability of water, increasing the incidence

of forest fires, fragmenting remaining forest cover, and diminishing

the quality of habitat for wildlife. with the University of São Paulo

and Próo-Carnívoros, a Brazilian wildlife NGO, is studying the impact

of this transformation on mammals in Alta Florest in order to

determine how to best maintain the region's remaining biodiversity.

Consistent with other regions, Michalski has found that fragment size

is a key determinant of biodiversity: larger fragments support more

wildlife species. But smaller fragments can still play an important

role in wildlife conservation, especially when connected to other

fragments via riverine forest corridors. Michalski has amassed

evidence to show that corridors are critical for allowing movement of

animals between forest fragments in an otherwise " hostile " landscape

for wildlife. However other factors also affect the survival of

wildlife, particularly carnivores which are often perceived — usually

unjustly — as a major cause of livestock mortality. Michalski is

working with ranchers to show that not only are puma, jaguars, and

other predators blamed for an unfair share of livestock loss, but that

reducing livestock predation is neither costly, nor difficult.

Michalski is also examining the broader trends for remaining forests

in Alta Floresta. Her outlook is not good. In a recent paper Michalski

and colleagues forecast a further 50 percent loss of forest cover

within the next 8 years, suggests that Alta Floresta's forest cover

will fall to 21 percent by 2016, down from 91 percent in 1984. She

says the impacts of forest loss extend well beyond the region, the

Brazilian Amazon, and even Brazil. " Millions of people depend on farm

land that was once Amazon forest for their food and livelihoods, but

billions depend on the Amazon for the maintenance of global carbon and

hydrologic systems, " she told mongabay.com.

http://news.mongabay.com/2008/1007-michalski_interview.html

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