Feb. 6, 2009 -- News out of the Brazilian Amazon has been up and down in recent years. After a steep rise in deforestation followed by a sharp drop in recent years, the rate of forest loss was back up slightly last year, according to new figures. Brazil's National Space Research Institute, called INPE, recently released the numbers. For 20 years, the organization has been mapping forest loss through a program called the Legal Amazon Deforestation Monitoring Project. Every year, INPE scientists analyze dozens of satellite images to see what has changed. The most recent images showed a loss of 11,968 square kilometers (4,600 square miles) of forest from Brazil's Amazonian states between Aug. 2007 and July 2008. That was up nearly 4 percent from the year before, but still nearly 20 percent below the rate of loss two years earlier. Related Content:
Reasons for the ebb and flow of forest chopping in Brazil are economic, political -- and complex. In large part, the number of trees getting slashed in the Brazilian jungle at any given time depends on what's happening in the rest of the world, said William Laurance, a tropical ecologist at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama City. For example, Laurance has documented a direct link between deforestation in the Amazon and prices of soy around the world. In the last few years, biofuel-promoting corn subsidies have pushed many American farmers to switch from growing soy to growing corn. As a result, there has been a 20 percent drop in soy production in the United States, a doubling of global soy prices, and a huge spike in deforestation in Brazil's soy-producing areas, Laurance wrote in a 2007 letter published in the journal Science. Beef, timber, and other commodity prices also influence the race to cut trees and clear land, as does the strength of the Brazilian currency. "There are interesting international connections with a lot of this stuff," Laurance said. "It illustrates the impact of globalization and the unintended consequences of what we do." The Brazilian government has been working in recent years to curb the loss of its precious forests, said Claudio Maretti, Director of Conservation at WWF Brazil in Brasilia. Get More NewsSpiders, Scorpions Among World's Oldest CreaturesMany creepy crawlies have been on Earth much longer than previously believed.Blood-Sucking Vampire Bats Sing DuetsWhite-winged vampire bats "harmonize" with separated roost mates.Oldest Hebrew Writing Possibly FoundAncient inscriptions on a 3,000-year-old pottery shard could make history.Rare, Prehistoric-Age Reptile Found in N.Z.A tuatara has been spotted on the New Zealand mainland for the first time in 200 years.Iceman Has No Living RelativesOetzi, the 5,300 year-old frozen mummy, left no living genetic legacy.SLIDE SHOW: Landscapes of TerrorWhat makes a place feel scary? There are scientific explanations.It's Official: People Are Warming the PolesHumans are conclusively to blame for polar warming, say scientists.Eight-Armed Animal Preceded DinosaursWhat may be one of Earth's first animals was no bigger than a coaster and had eight arms.Phoenicians Live on in People's GenesOne in 17 Mediterranean men may be descended from ancient Phoenicians.Pesticides, Fertilizers Linked to Frog DeclineA pesticide is found to promote parasites among amphibians.Hubble Telescope Taking Photos AgainThe Hubble Space Telescope is once again snapping stunning photos of the universe.Andean Mummy Hairs Show Hallucinogen UseScientists find direct evidence of hallucinogenic drug use among ancient Andeans.Opals on Mars Reveal Planet's Long Wet PastOpals found on Mars suggest the planet has been wet for much longer. |
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