Latest News

Fires damage Brazil wetlands, incinerating snakes and monkeys

The burnt carcasses of monkeys, snakes and caimans dot the charred expanses of the oncegreen Brazilian Pantanal, the world's. largest tropical wetlands.

As night falls, an amber tower of smoke lights the sky. There is no rest for the fire or the animals attempting to leave.

The fire is on a very large scale, there is no time for. them to get away, stated Delcio Rodrigues, head of the ClimaInfo. Institute. Often they do not even have anywhere to escape.

The El Nino weather condition pattern, supercharged by climate modification,. has actually dried the location's rivers and interrupted its typical seasonal. flooding, leaving the environment vulnerable to fires.

This year is threatening to overtake 2020 as the Pantanal's. worst year for wildfires on record, when the blazes eliminated an. approximated 17 million vertebrates, according to a study published. in Scientific Reports.

The UNESCO World Heritage Site, which covers an area more. than twice the size of Portugal, is home to the world's largest. jaguar species in addition to types like the endangered tapir and. huge anteaters.

Experts are alerting of risks those populations as the region. heads into the riskiest season for wildfires, normally peaking in. September.

Environment change plus the fires, they wind up totally. altering the environment. In the long term, there's a reduction. of biodiversity and loss of habitat, said Rodrigues.

Wild animals have no place to go..

(source: Reuters)