Brazil Might Lose Its Savannah in 20 Years

Brazil will be celebrating this Saturday National Savannah Day. The date
coincides with the final day of the Savannah Clamor, an act of political
mobilization intended to alert society and the State to the process of
degradation that has been occurring in recent years.

The event is sponsored by the Savannah Network, formed by various organizations that strive to defend the savannah biome.

The Brazilian savannah covers an area of 2 million square kilometers and contains a variety of ecosystems and an extremely rich flora, with over 10 thousand plant species.


Nevertheless, the region has been submitted to an intense process of deforestation and degradation in recent years.

According to Mônica Nogueira, Executive Secretary of the Savannah Network, Brazilian society still needs to become aware of the potential economic and social importance of the biodiversity extant in the savannah.


“Internationally, the biome has already achieved some degree of recognition. But in Brazil the savannah has been viewed exclusively as an area of agricultural frontier expansion. There are estimates that it could vanish in less than 20 years,” she affirms.

The event will also try to sound an alert about the Indian peoples, such as the Xavantes and Timbiras, who have historically inhabited the savannah, as well as what is left of the descendants of runaway slaves (quilombos) and other groups that seek recognition as traditional communities.


According to the director of the Sustainability Foundation (which works in partnership with Unesco), Monica Verissimo, satellite images show that 57% of Brazil’s savannah (cerrado) has been destroyed.


She adds that the situation is worrisome. “Some 25% of Brazilian vegetation is savannah. The area that has been destroyed is an enormous part of our territory,” she said.

Verissimo says there is a need for further study of native vegetation in Brazil.


“We are destroying something we know little about. It is possible that the savannah holds cures for many diseases.”


People who live in the savannah lands know that it is often more profitable to leave land as it is than to exploit it.


“The area is rich in potential, it can be used for research and studies. Exploiting the land, by removing native vegetation, makes it easy prey for pests and erosion,” she declared.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Economy Must Produce Well Being, Says Brazil’s Lula in Paris

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva declared that he would like to see the ...

Brazilian singer Maria Bethânia

Brazil’s Bethí¢nia From Counterculture Diva to Ballads’s Queen

For 15 years Georges Gachot has been making documentaries about classical music. Then in ...

Big City Nightmare

Last year, Brazil registered well over 40,000 assassinations, according to the Ministry of Justice. ...

Brazil: Economic Boom – Political Gloom

I recently went into a big supermarket in a down-market shopping center in São ...

Human Rights Groups Urge Federalization of Rural Crimes in Brazil’s Amazon

With the report, "Violation of Human Rights in the Amazon," the Pastoral Land Commission ...

The Future of Brazil’s Democracy Is in the Hands of the Citinauts

Since 1986, former Planning Minister João Paulo dos Reis Velloso has assembled a group ...

Raising Interest Rates Is Not A Whim, Says Brazil’s Finance Minister

Brazil’s Finance Minister, Antonio Palocci, declared that rising interest rates is not “capricious” and ...

More Jobs for Brazilians in Big Cities

The unemployment rate in Brazil’s six major metropolitan areas in May was 10.2%, less ...

Meet Ms. Vasconcelos, a Brazilian Fashion Broker

The Brazilian businesswoman from Minas Gerais, a state in the southeastern region of the ...

Brazil Passes US$ 256 Billion Budget

Brazil’s National Congress approved December 29 the 2005 Federal Budget, which sets aside resources ...