Dubai Telegraph - Fires in Brazil's Pantanal push wetlands community to limit

EUR -
AED 3.850603
AFN 76.539
ALL 100.077544
AMD 412.777064
ANG 1.887061
AOA 959.889042
ARS 1115.275704
AUD 1.684594
AWG 1.889889
AZN 1.776238
BAM 1.959158
BBD 2.114103
BDT 127.216835
BGN 1.956198
BHD 0.395112
BIF 3053.704086
BMD 1.048482
BND 1.41192
BOB 7.261828
BRL 6.293623
BSD 1.047105
BTN 91.443734
BWP 14.553986
BYN 3.426673
BYR 20550.248957
BZD 2.103205
CAD 1.521017
CDF 3009.144174
CHF 0.940006
CLF 0.025973
CLP 996.690037
CNY 7.638298
CNH 7.657846
COP 4326.037102
CRC 528.010041
CUC 1.048482
CUP 27.784775
CVE 111.925345
CZK 25.016054
DJF 186.33596
DKK 7.45838
DOP 65.372877
DZD 141.232607
EGP 53.089574
ERN 15.727231
ETB 134.934406
FJD 2.405375
FKP 0.833533
GBP 0.82558
GEL 2.920001
GGP 0.833533
GHS 16.261887
GIP 0.833533
GMD 74.96109
GNF 9075.660724
GTQ 8.080773
GYD 219.083268
HKD 8.154202
HNL 26.99845
HRK 7.539702
HTG 137.426859
HUF 399.450283
IDR 17268.342744
ILS 3.771233
IMP 0.833533
INR 91.576889
IQD 1373.511537
IRR 44141.09629
ISK 145.90717
JEP 0.833533
JMD 164.501955
JOD 0.743902
JPY 156.749138
KES 134.732408
KGS 91.690058
KHR 4205.461933
KMF 498.029024
KPW 943.633597
KRW 1531.512496
KWD 0.323499
KYD 0.872658
KZT 524.256071
LAK 22757.303663
LBP 93943.994978
LKR 309.14988
LRD 208.17611
LSL 19.61734
LTL 3.095895
LVL 0.634217
LYD 5.121865
MAD 10.466471
MDL 19.539889
MGA 4954.077761
MKD 61.516934
MMK 2201.363176
MNT 3638.74562
MOP 8.387957
MRU 41.887053
MUR 48.963362
MVR 16.146251
MWK 1819.116489
MXN 21.688555
MYR 4.678849
MZN 67.008594
NAD 19.617096
NGN 1572.502731
NIO 38.53162
NOK 11.732121
NPR 146.313268
NZD 1.86654
OMR 0.40366
PAB 1.047195
PEN 3.887248
PGK 4.208081
PHP 60.538326
PKR 293.313122
PLN 4.160653
PYG 8296.219652
QAR 3.81752
RON 4.977459
RSD 117.130155
RUB 94.043481
RWF 1470.496131
SAR 3.932302
SBD 8.841552
SCR 15.604868
SDG 630.137872
SEK 11.025901
SGD 1.411131
SHP 0.833151
SLE 23.95758
SLL 21986.15109
SOS 599.211593
SRD 37.292396
STD 21701.462379
SVC 9.161834
SYP 13632.245275
SZL 19.617199
THB 35.67944
TJS 11.424508
TMT 3.669687
TND 3.333644
TOP 2.455652
TRY 38.205326
TTD 7.107182
TWD 34.508164
TZS 2725.927417
UAH 43.533038
UGX 3849.70852
USD 1.048482
UYU 44.416765
UZS 14049.659758
VES 67.526747
VND 26835.899084
VUV 130.10272
WST 2.969382
XAF 657.114626
XAG 0.033152
XAU 0.000363
XCD 2.833575
XDR 0.799871
XOF 661.065652
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.818076
ZAR 19.543559
ZMK 9437.59661
ZMW 29.999993
ZWL 337.610805
  • RBGPF

    0.2200

    65.07

    +0.34%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    23.43

    +0.17%

  • SCS

    -0.3100

    11.85

    -2.62%

  • AZN

    -0.1100

    76.1

    -0.14%

  • BTI

    0.8400

    39.77

    +2.11%

  • NGG

    -0.4100

    61.72

    -0.66%

  • RIO

    0.4900

    61.05

    +0.8%

  • GSK

    0.3600

    37.95

    +0.95%

  • BP

    -1.3100

    31.81

    -4.12%

  • RYCEF

    0.7400

    10.15

    +7.29%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    23.6

    +0.17%

  • BCC

    -1.5000

    102.16

    -1.47%

  • RELX

    0.1400

    48.51

    +0.29%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    8.9

    +1.01%

  • JRI

    0.1200

    13.14

    +0.91%

  • BCE

    0.2900

    23.41

    +1.24%

Fires in Brazil's Pantanal push wetlands community to limit
Fires in Brazil's Pantanal push wetlands community to limit / Photo: Pablo PORCIUNCULA - AFP

Fires in Brazil's Pantanal push wetlands community to limit

A riverside community in Brazil's Pantanal wetlands narrowly escaped raging wildfires last month, but some say the record-setting blazes -- still burning nearby -- are compounding threats to their way of life.

Text size:

"The river was the only thing separating us from the flames. On the other side, the fire devastated everything," said Virginia Paes, a local leader in the Baia Negra Environmental Protection Area (APA), where 28 families live.

Four years ago, similar fires blazed through the 5,400-hectare (13,300-acre) preserve along the Paraguay River, in southwest Brazil's Mato Grosso do Sul state.

"We were just trying to recover from the 2020 fire, which devastated our Pantanal. We had not fully recovered and now we are facing this again," Paes, a volunteer firefighter and president of the APA's Association of Women Producers, told AFP.

Though homes and lives were spared, the 53-year-old said, dense smoke from the fires made breathing and daily routines difficult.

This year's fires set January-June records in the Pantanal, a massive area of tropical wetlands that is home to millions of caimans, parrots, giant otters and the world's highest density of jaguars.

The Baia Negra APA, just outside the border city of Corumba and neighboring Ladario, is the first created in the biodiversity-rich Pantanal allowing for sustainable resource exploitation.

The population there lives off fishing, craft-making, and a robust eco-tourism industry, among other jobs.

- 'Guardians' under threat –

According to the Corumba social assistance office and the NGO Ecoa, in 2020, 651 families lived in the riverside city and Ladario.

These "traditional communities of the Pantanal are the true guardians of the ecosystems they manage," said Andre Luiz Siqueira, Director of Programs and Projects at the NGO Ecoa.

"They are the ones that suffer the most impacts from the fires," he warned.

"I am concerned that in a few years we could have climate displaced people in the biome."

On the shore of Bracinho Island, which was burned in fires last month, three fishermen try their luck.

According to them, fishing has become more difficult due to fires poisoning the fish and make the activity difficult.

A heavy drought, which scientists say has exacerbated this year's fires, has also dropped the water-level in the river.

"Everything disappeared: the fish, the bait," 33-year-old Marcelo Henrique told AFP.

He said he used to live off fishing, but has now taken a job in a steel mill in Ladario.

"The bays dried up... Before there were 30, 40 boats circulating here. Now you barely see any."

- Evening curfew –

In his cabin off the MS 428 state highway, Renato Andrade remembers better days when hunting and fishing were abundant -- and threats from jaguars more rare.

The 52-year-old told AFP that after the 2020 fire, capybaras -- the natural prey of jaguars -- became "scarce."

"Before, there was no talk of jaguar attacks nearby. Now, I hear roars around the house. I can't have dogs, we've lost count of how many were eaten by jaguars," he said.

Fearing for his own life, he said he has changed his daily routine.

"At night, now you have to stay inside the house. After 6:30 pm, no one wants to be outside" over fears of attacks.

He said he has also stopped fishing alone at night, like he used to do.

"I can't or I will end up a jaguar's dinner."

A.Ansari--DT