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Turning off the Tap
The Amazon River Basin is one of the most critical pieces of the Earth's climate system, generating rainfall, lowering land surface temperatures, and influencing global weather patterns. It is known for its unique and irreplaceable biodiversity in plant and animal life. But the rainforests that formed over millions of years have experienced dramatic changes in the last few decades.
The loss of this valuable resource prompted a historic scientific consortium in late 2021 at the 26th United Nations Climate Change Conference, or COP26, in Glasgow, United Kingdom. The Science Panel for the Amazon, or SPA, was a group of over 200 prominent scientists including Dr. Sandra B. Correa, assistant professor in the Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Aquaculture and FWRC scientist.
Their objective was to create a comprehensive report assessing the state and future of the region's ecosystems in response to climate change and human activity.
In 2019, representatives from the eight countries in the Amazonian region convened to discuss the need for creating a path for sustainable development.
Jeffrey Sachs, an economist at Columbia University, Director of the Center for Sustainable Development, and senior UN advisor, led the initiative for producing the report. Correa, who is from Colombia and spent two decades conducting research in the Amazon, contributed to two chapters of the report: one describing how the Amazon's ecosystems function and the other focusing on present and future effects of climate change on these ecosystems.
The report presents a comprehensive view of the current literature on Amazonian ecosystems and highlights patterns and trends. The two main trends Correa and her team discussed were an overall reduction in precipitation and increasing temperatures.
"From my own experience and research, one of the patterns that strikes me most is how erratic the changes in river flow patterns have become in recent years," she said. "In the last 20 years, we have seen seasonal flooding and drought patterns become more extreme. And what were once called 'century floods' have happened multiple times within a decade."
Extreme drought, Correa explained, causes temporal fragmentation when river tributaries stay dry, and sediments cannot reach floodplains to fertilize plants. On the other end, massive floods threaten both terrestrial and aquatic animals.
Large-scale famine and drowning of wildlife, as was seen in the Mississippi flood of 2019, has become more frequent. Moreover, these severe fluctuations have affected human livelihood, from hunting, fishing, and farming to transportation, as many locations in the Amazon are accessible only by boat.
"We need to achieve a plan for sustainable development that doesn't leave behind the rich indigenous and rural communities. The number of groups and ethnicities in the region is incredibly diverse," Correa said.
Although the impacts of climate change on the Amazon alone are important, the report stresses the interdependence of the rest of the world on the Amazon's climate.
What happens there affects every ecosystem and every person on the planet, Correa pointed out.
"The Amazon's forests are the lungs of the planet — the rainforest acts as a water-pumping system to perpetuate the rainfall cycle and growth of trees, which capture
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Department of Sustainable Bioproducts
Prepare for a career where you’ll create new products while protecting our natural resources. Bioproducts are products made from wood and other renewable materials. You’ll find them in building and construction materials, furniture and architectural design, household and industrial chemicals, and bioenergy.