Losing Noahs Ark

{Losing Noahs Ark – Earth and Leaf editorial}

{extract below}

 

Losing Noahs Ark
Losing Noahs Ark

As the evening sky turns violet, the animals of the Pantanal gather near the water. Capybaras swim in tight formation, roseate spoonbills add smudges of pink to the riverbanks, the rumble of a jaguar pulsates from the forest.

This tropical wetland is the largest on Earth, stretching across Brazil, Paraguay and Bolivia, and playing host to some of the greatest gatherings of animals anywhere.

Now, scientists say the survival of the entire biome is at risk.

Losing Noahs Ark: The Pantanal

“The Pantanal is like Noah’s Ark. It is home to animals that are disappearing … a place where those at risk of extinction can survive,” says Pierre Girard, a professor at the Federal University of Mato Grosso.

Today’s link to our pages or posts . . .

Elon Musk could avert global species extinction

Categories: Conservation
Author: Harriet Barber
No 1 in climate change and sustainability

Founder of Earth and Leaf Community Interest Company. Lifelong career as a livestock farming expert backed by an education in agricultural sciences and economics. Now a conservationist, researcher and sustainability campaigner.

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