Article 58Y6Q 'Total destruction': why fires are tearing across South America

'Total destruction': why fires are tearing across South America

by
Uki Goñi in Rosario, Sam Cowie in Santarém and W
from World news | The Guardian on (#58Y6Q)

Wildfires, mostly caused by land clearing for cattle grazing and soya production, have set four nations ablaze

Primatologist Martin Kowalewski is measuring the scale of the fires raging across Latin America not in satellite images, but in the number of caraya monkeys (black-and-gold howlers) that have succumbed to the flames.

Of the 20 family groups that we used to trace in the wild, each group consisting of seven or eight monkeys, at least five groups were burned alive," he tells the Guardian. Other animals have also perished at San Cayetano, a nature reserve in Argentina's northeastern province of Corrientes. Carpinchos (giant South American rodents), otters, two species of fox, guazu deer, yacare caimans, turtles, snakes. Birds are better at escaping the fire, but that was before all the deforestation. Now they have nowhere to go because there is nowhere else. The forest is so fragmented that they have nowhere to nest."

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