Magnificent Mexico

By Mildred Boyd

Our Vanishing Rainforests

 

No matter where they are, all rainforests are in danger of destruction, and with them thousands and thousands of plants, animals, birds and insects will disappear. Mexico’s forests are home to some of the most endangered mammals in America. The tapir, the manatee, as well as wild cats such as jaguars, pumas, ocelots and jaguarundis live in the Sian Ka’an, an area made up of sea, tropical forests, flood jungles, marshlands, mangroves, lagoons, shallow ocean areas and a coral reef.

There are spider monkeys, white-tailed deers and 300 species of birds such as the rare quetzal, stork, harpy eagle, humming bird, white ibis, the almost extinct jabiru, toucans and the Yucatan parrot. Reptiles like crocodiles and sea turtles also inhabit the area and many varieties of snake and, of course, a large variety of spiders and insects (including the leaf-cutter ant and the praying mantis). The 1,700,000 acre Calakmul rainforest in Chiapas, just north of the Guatemala border, is home to many of the same species and is one of the few places on earth where jaguars still run free.

Crocodylus acutus mexico

The plight of the Lacandona rainforest is particularly dire. A century ago, the jungle stretched out over 1.3 million hectares and was inhabited by around 2,000 people. Today, although shrunken to 500,000 hectares and home to some 300,000 people, this fragile and heavily pressured environment still constitutes 50 percent of North America’s tropical rain forests. Most of Mexico’s tropical trees are found there along with 14 percent of the country’s species of mammals, 33 percent of reptiles, 80 percent of butterfly species and 32 percent of bird species.

Today, it suffers not only the usual woes of overpopulation, illegal hunting and clear-cut logging but, since 1994, has been the site of a small scale war between the EZLN (Zapatista National Liberation Army) and the Federal troops trying to contain them. The Lacandon Indians, who have been living in the area for hundreds of years, are not guilty. They have always respected their environment and are bitterly vociferous in their protests against current abuses, and with good cause. A spokesman for the international environmental watchdog, Greenpeace, warns that the Lacandona jungle is being destroyed faster than South America’s Amazon jungle and, if nothing is done to stop the abuses, will not survive another twenty years. The Lacandons also denounced mistreatment of local peasants by army troops, and growing alcoholism and prostitution arising from the military presence.

Jaguar

Though actual hostilities have been minimal, the impact of having soldiers driving tanks, building roads, establishing new outposts, overflying the jungle and cutting firewood has been devastating. They also indiscriminately hunt lizards, monkeys and other species to sell the skins. Due to the conflict, authorities had no access to many parts of the jungle, making it impossible to implement conservation programs and prevent illegal logging. Furthermore, park rangers and inspectors were threatened and prevented from carrying out their conservation work in Chiapas.

So we are losing our rainforests. So what? What’s so important about a bunch of dumb trees? And wouldn’t all that land be put to better use growing food crops for a hungry world? You’d be surprised.

puma

Rainforests once covered 14% of the earth’s surface; now they cover only 6% and every minute another 150 acres are disappearing. An estimated 137 plant, animal and insect species are lost each day. The biodiversity of the rainforests is astounding. One hectare can support 750 types of trees and twice that many higher plants, That equals the plant diversity of all North America.

Only about one percent of those plants have been investigated for their medicinal possibilities. A conservative estimate puts the number of useful, but undiscovered, drugs at 300 in the Amazon rainforests alone.

manatee

Considering that some 7,000, or about 25 percent, of all pharmaceuticals prescribed today are derived from only 95 of the 250,000 known plant species and that the most promising cures for AIDS and cancer come from rainforest ingredients, the potential loss to medical science alone is staggering. Two drugs derived from one small plant, now extinct, reduced the fatalities from childhood leukemia from 80 to 20 percent. What if....?

It has been estimated that 50 to 90 percent of all species on earth make their homes in the rainforests. The figures are inexact because the various layers of such forests provide ecological niches for so many birds, animals, insects and reptiles that an exact census is virtually impossible. Biologists are reasonably certain that in the highest reaches of the canopy, hundreds of feet above the ground, whole communities exist that have never even been sighted, much less identified and studied.

tapir

Contrary to popular belief, rainforests are not hot, soggy hellholes. Their only requirement is 200 cm. (about 80 inches) of annual precipitation and, like those of the Pacific Northwest, they flourish in relatively cold climates. Even in tropical areas where temperatures rarely get below 80 degrees Fahrenheit, they seldom get much higher either. In fact, the yearly temperature variation is so minimal there can be a wider spread in one day than over the course of the year. Loss of trees can, and does, affect the world’s climate. Satellite pictures show dramatic alterations in temperature and rainfall patterns over wide areas far beyond the actual sites of deforestation.

Despite all that rain, forest floors remain relatively dry. Almost all the moisture is impounded within the plant tissues themselves and the same is true for most of the nutrients so that the soil of a forest floor is thin and poor. Even though the slash and burn agricultural techniques used by jungle dwellers are bad enough, they do return some of those nutrients to the soil in the form of ash. Still, yields are so poor after a year or two that new plots must be prepared while the old recover. Cutting down and hauling away the trees puts nothing back while allowing heavy rains to leach out what little is left so that no trees will ever grow there again. Neither will anything else. Left alone, the rainforests provide an astouding 80 percent of the world’s diet. So much for cutting down the trees to feed the hungry.

tortugas

Still not convinced? Think about this. Every school child knows the cycle; how animals inhale air, using the oxygen in order to live and exhaling carbon dioxide, while plants utilize that carbon dioxide in their growth and produce oxygen in return. Our vanishing rainforests currently produce 50 percent of the earth’s oxygen supply. What happens when all the trees are gone?

 

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