Amazon forest area in acres

  1. Amazon Rainforest
  2. Cattle boom in Brazil’s Acre spells doom for Amazon rainforest, activists warn
  3. What Jair Bolsonaro did to the Amazon rainforest, in 2 charts
  4. More droughts are coming, and the Amazon can’t keep up: Study
  5. Deforestation of the Amazon rainforest
  6. Arizona wildfire updates: Crews gain edge on Bullet Fire, containment increases
  7. What Jair Bolsonaro did to the Amazon rainforest, in 2 charts
  8. Amazon Rainforest
  9. More droughts are coming, and the Amazon can’t keep up: Study
  10. Cattle boom in Brazil’s Acre spells doom for Amazon rainforest, activists warn


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Amazon Rainforest

Four Indigenous children have survived an Amazon plane crash that killed three adults and then braved the jungle for 40 days before being found alive by Colombian soldiers, bringing a happy ending to a search-and-rescue saga that captivated a nation and forced the usually opposing military and Native people to work together

Cattle boom in Brazil’s Acre spells doom for Amazon rainforest, activists warn

• Government data show the number of cattle in Acre, a state in the Brazilian Amazon, increased by 8.3% in 2020, putting the state’s herd size at more than 3.8 million, or four times its human population. • The cattle industry is a key driver of Acre’s economy, and aligns with the state’s aims of promoting and expanding agricultural development within the region. • However, activists say they’re concerned the increase will lead to further environmental damage in the state, which this year recorded its highest deforestation rate in 18 years. • Experts say Acre’s cattle growth is currently not sustainable and will lead to further deforestation in the Amazon unless sustainable solutions are encouraged and implemented. With about 80% of its forests still untouched, Acre is one of Brazil’s least-deforested Amazonian states. Bordered by Peru on the west, it represents just 1.7% of Brazil’s huge land mass but is of great ecological importance as it’s mostly covered in both dense and open Amazon rainforest, home to giant anteaters, sloths, and harpy eagles, among hundreds of endemic species. But in the past three decades, the thriving cattle industry has become a major threat to Acre’s forests, with livestock now outnumbering the state’s human population by a factor of four. In 1990, Acre’s human population was 400,000, with an almost identical number of cattle, according to data from the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE). By 2020, the number of people had gro...

What Jair Bolsonaro did to the Amazon rainforest, in 2 charts

Cookie banner We use cookies and other tracking technologies to improve your browsing experience on our site, show personalized content and targeted ads, analyze site traffic, and understand where our audiences come from. To learn more or opt-out, read our By choosing I Accept, you consent to our use of cookies and other tracking technologies. The Amazon rainforest is nearing a crossroads. Down one path, deforestation will likely continue to accelerate, pushing the iconic forest closer to a dangerous, self-destructing A runoff election later this month will help decide which direction the forest takes. Following the presidential election Sunday, in which Under President Bolsonaro, deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon has surged. Meanwhile, Lula, as he’s widely known, has promised to crack down on illegal mining and help bring forest loss under control, as he did a decade ago when he was president. An Amanda Northrop/Vox “Everything that Lula has said, and even his track record, would indicate that he’s going to undo the brutal regressions of the Bolsonaro regime,” Christian Poirier, program director at the nonprofit advocacy group Amazon Watch, told Vox. Few political issues have higher global stakes than the conservation of the Amazon. Felling the rainforest not only erodes a critical carbon sink, which helps suck planet-warming gases out of the atmosphere, but it also fuels climate change. Ongoing deforestation could also What Bolsonaro did to the Amazon rainforest, bri...

More droughts are coming, and the Amazon can’t keep up: Study

• Up to 50% of rainfall in the Amazon comes from the forest itself, as moisture is recycled from the trees to the atmosphere. • In severe droughts, when the forest loses more water to evaporation than it receives from rain, the trees begin to die. For every three trees that die due to drought in the Amazon rainforest, a fourth tree, even if not directly affected by drought, will also die, according to a new study. • As trees are lost and the forest dries up, parts of the Amazon will rapidly approach a tipping point, where they will transition into a degraded savanna-like ecosystem with few to no trees. • The southern and southeastern Amazon are the most vulnerable regions to tipping. Here, deforestation and fires are at their most extreme, driven largely by cattle ranching and soy farming. The world’s largest rainforest makes its own weather. Up to half of all the rainfall in the Amazon comes from the forest itself, as moisture is recycled from the trees to the atmosphere and back again. So, what happens as droughts grow more severe and less rain enters the system? For every three trees that die due to drought in the Amazon rainforest, a fourth tree, even if it’s not directly affected by drought, will also die, according to a Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Every part of the forest is interlinked, meaning damage in one area can affect neighboring areas, increasing negative effects by one-third. “We’re investigating what would actually happen to the Amazon ...

Deforestation of the Amazon rainforest

The 2 (1,200,000sqmi). It represents over half of the planet's rainforests and comprises the largest and most More than one-third of the Amazon rainforest belongs to more than 3,344 formally acknowledged According to 2018 satellite data compiled by a deforestation monitoring program called Prods, deforestation had reached its highest rate in a decade. 2 (3,100sqmi) of the rainforest was destroyed between August 2017 and July 2018, with most of the deforestation occurring in the states of In the Prior to the 1970s, access to the forest's largely roadless interior was difficult, and aside from partial clearing along rivers, the forest remained intact. In parts of the Amazon, poor soil made plantation-based agriculture unprofitable. The key turning point in deforestation of the Brazilian Amazon was when colonists began to establish farms within the forest during the 1960s. Their farming system was based on crop cultivation and the In indigenous areas of the In 2015, illegal deforestation in the Amazon was on the rise again for the first time in decades; this was largely a result of consumer demand for products like As of January 2019, the president of Brazil – Causes of deforestation [ ] Deforestation of the Amazon rainforest can be attributed to many different factors at local, national, and international levels. The rainforest is seen as a resource for cattle pasture, valuable Cattle ranching [ ] A 2004 Soy bean [ ] Deforestation in the Amazon has resulted from farmers clea...

Arizona wildfire updates: Crews gain edge on Bullet Fire, containment increases

After receiving an exceptional amount of snow and rain last winter, Arizona's wildfire season appears to have finally gotten underway in June as multiple wildfires burn across the state. Here is a roundup of Arizona wildfires: Volunteer Fire (Last updated June 6) Location: 16 miles west of Flagstaff, south of Garland Prairie. What we know: A lightning-caused wildfire reported on May 23, The Volunteer Fire started in the burn footprint of the 2021 Rafael Fire and is burning near Volunteer Canyon, according to government website Inciweb. Fire crews will patrol and secure existing containment lines and extinguish remaining heat sources, Inciweb stated. No structures were threatened by the fire, and light to moderate smoke will be visible to those residents in Sycamore Canyon and the Garland Prairie area, according to Inciweb. The fire is being managed for forest health, and fire officials are allowing it to safely burn debris across the forest floor. Evacuations and closures: None Acreage: 2,675 acres Containment: 0% Fire start date: May 23 Bullet Fire (Last updated June 6) Location: The Lower Sycamore area in Tonto National Forest What we know: The Bullet Fire, burning in Tonto National Forest, caused evacuations in Sugar Loaf and initially closed State Route 87, also known as the Beeline Highway, in both directions on June 4, according to the Arizona Department of Transportation. On June 6, officials said the southbound right lane of State Route 87 was closed near the fire....

What Jair Bolsonaro did to the Amazon rainforest, in 2 charts

Cookie banner We use cookies and other tracking technologies to improve your browsing experience on our site, show personalized content and targeted ads, analyze site traffic, and understand where our audiences come from. To learn more or opt-out, read our By choosing I Accept, you consent to our use of cookies and other tracking technologies. The Amazon rainforest is nearing a crossroads. Down one path, deforestation will likely continue to accelerate, pushing the iconic forest closer to a dangerous, self-destructing A runoff election later this month will help decide which direction the forest takes. Following the presidential election Sunday, in which Under President Bolsonaro, deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon has surged. Meanwhile, Lula, as he’s widely known, has promised to crack down on illegal mining and help bring forest loss under control, as he did a decade ago when he was president. An Amanda Northrop/Vox “Everything that Lula has said, and even his track record, would indicate that he’s going to undo the brutal regressions of the Bolsonaro regime,” Christian Poirier, program director at the nonprofit advocacy group Amazon Watch, told Vox. Few political issues have higher global stakes than the conservation of the Amazon. Felling the rainforest not only erodes a critical carbon sink, which helps suck planet-warming gases out of the atmosphere, but it also fuels climate change. Ongoing deforestation could also What Bolsonaro did to the Amazon rainforest, bri...

Amazon Rainforest

Four Indigenous children have survived an Amazon plane crash that killed three adults and then braved the jungle for 40 days before being found alive by Colombian soldiers, bringing a happy ending to a search-and-rescue saga that captivated a nation and forced the usually opposing military and Native people to work together

More droughts are coming, and the Amazon can’t keep up: Study

• Up to 50% of rainfall in the Amazon comes from the forest itself, as moisture is recycled from the trees to the atmosphere. • In severe droughts, when the forest loses more water to evaporation than it receives from rain, the trees begin to die. For every three trees that die due to drought in the Amazon rainforest, a fourth tree, even if not directly affected by drought, will also die, according to a new study. • As trees are lost and the forest dries up, parts of the Amazon will rapidly approach a tipping point, where they will transition into a degraded savanna-like ecosystem with few to no trees. • The southern and southeastern Amazon are the most vulnerable regions to tipping. Here, deforestation and fires are at their most extreme, driven largely by cattle ranching and soy farming. The world’s largest rainforest makes its own weather. Up to half of all the rainfall in the Amazon comes from the forest itself, as moisture is recycled from the trees to the atmosphere and back again. So, what happens as droughts grow more severe and less rain enters the system? For every three trees that die due to drought in the Amazon rainforest, a fourth tree, even if it’s not directly affected by drought, will also die, according to a Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Every part of the forest is interlinked, meaning damage in one area can affect neighboring areas, increasing negative effects by one-third. “We’re investigating what would actually happen to the Amazon ...

Cattle boom in Brazil’s Acre spells doom for Amazon rainforest, activists warn

• Government data show the number of cattle in Acre, a state in the Brazilian Amazon, increased by 8.3% in 2020, putting the state’s herd size at more than 3.8 million, or four times its human population. • The cattle industry is a key driver of Acre’s economy, and aligns with the state’s aims of promoting and expanding agricultural development within the region. • However, activists say they’re concerned the increase will lead to further environmental damage in the state, which this year recorded its highest deforestation rate in 18 years. • Experts say Acre’s cattle growth is currently not sustainable and will lead to further deforestation in the Amazon unless sustainable solutions are encouraged and implemented. With about 80% of its forests still untouched, Acre is one of Brazil’s least-deforested Amazonian states. Bordered by Peru on the west, it represents just 1.7% of Brazil’s huge land mass but is of great ecological importance as it’s mostly covered in both dense and open Amazon rainforest, home to giant anteaters, sloths, and harpy eagles, among hundreds of endemic species. But in the past three decades, the thriving cattle industry has become a major threat to Acre’s forests, with livestock now outnumbering the state’s human population by a factor of four. In 1990, Acre’s human population was 400,000, with an almost identical number of cattle, according to data from the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE). By 2020, the number of people had gro...