Amazonia at the heart of the global ecological crisis




Zuquim Gabriela, Pérez Chaves Pablo, Sääksjärvi Ilari, Tuomisto Hanna

Soledad Garcia Ferrari, Hans Egil Offerdal, Marta Alicja Kania

Edinburgh

2021

Why Latin America Metters. A Collection of Essays

152

165

978-1-912669-28-8

https://www.ed.ac.uk/contemporary-latin-american-studies/science-and-environment/why-latin-america-matters



Latin America harbours the world’s largest and most species-rich tropical
rainforest: Amazonia. Larger than the European Union, Amazonia stores
20% of global vegetation carbon, has around 400 billion trees, is the world’s
largest freshwater system and provides the home for people speaking 300
different languages. The future of Amazonia is of paramount importance
for regulating global climate, maintaining biodiversity and providing other
ecosystem services, but it is threatened by human activities. More sustainable
management practices are needed to mitigate the threats and avoid global
tragedies. Involving both local people and the global scientific community is
important to achieve these goals.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 14:38