Latest News

Brazil's Pantanal wetlands face worst fires

Fatima Brandao goes looking for her chickens in the backyard in the middle of a veil of smoke from the spreading out fires that are swallowing up the world's largest tropical wetland much faster than ever before.

There never used to be smoke here. The sun shone clearly and the sky was always blue. Now the whole hill is on fire and smoke has actually clouded the entire area, she stated.

The Pantanal wetlands in central-western Brazil are home to a wide array of animals, consisting of jaguars, anacondas and giant anteaters.

A shortfall of rain this year has triggered the wildfire season to start earlier and become more intense than in previous years, threatening to surpass the worst blazes on record that in 2020 annihilated a third of the wetlands and eliminated 17 million vertebrates.

This year, the fires have currently incinerated monkeys, caimans and snakes.

Satellite information from Brazil's National Institute for Space Research (INPE) showed that the Pantanal fires have risen practically significantly so far this year. The figures have raised alarms as the area heads into the riskiest season for wildfires, which usually starts in July and peaks in August and September.

Brandao who was born and raised here stated she has actually never seen anything like it.

The inhabitants of the Pantanal are mainly farmers, hunters, and fishermen, and they are progressively turning to ecotourism to tap the rich biodiversity of the wetlands.

Environment change has threatened that income by increasing the incidence of fires that damage the area, killing the flora and fauna.

We are breathing in this smoke. Who is going to go out to operate in these conditions, Brandao stated, grumbling that the smell was acrid and there was dust all over in her home.

Weak rains have actually interfered with the seasonal flooding of the Pantanal wetlands, which have to do with 10 times the size of the Florida everglades, leaving them more susceptible to fire.

(source: Reuters)