The Amazon River Basin is home to
the largest rainforest on Earth. The basin -- roughly the size of the
forty-eight contiguous United States -- covers some 40% of the South American
continent and includes parts of eight South American countries: Brazil, Bolivia,
Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana, and Suriname, as well as French
Guiana, a department of France.
Reflecting environmental conditions
as well as past human influence, the Amazon is made up of a mosaic of
ecosystems and vegetation types including rainforests, seasonal forests,
deciduous forests, flooded forests, and savannas. The basin is drained by the
Amazon River, the world's largest river in terms of discharge, and the second
longest river in the world after the Nile. The river is made up of over 1,100
tributaries, 17 of which are longer than 1000 miles, and two of which (the
Negro and the Madeira) are larger, in terms of volume, than the Congo (formerly
the Zaire) river. The river system is the lifeline of the forest and its
history plays an important part in the development of its rainforests.
HISTORY
At one time Amazon River flowed
westward, perhaps as part of a proto-Congo (Zaire) river system from the
interior of present day Africa when the continents were joined as part of
Gondwana. Fifteen million years ago, the Andes were formed by the collision of
the South American plate with the Nazca plate. The rise of the Andes and the
linkage of the Brazilian and Guyana bedrock shields, blocked the river and
caused the Amazon to become a vast inland sea. Gradually this inland sea became
a massive swampy, freshwater lake and the marine inhabitants adapted to life in
freshwater. For example, over 20 species of stingray, most closely related to
those found in the Pacific Ocean, can be found today in the freshwaters of the
Amazon.
About ten million years ago, waters
worked through the sandstone to the west and the Amazon began to flow eastward.
At this time the Amazon rainforest was born. During the Ice Age, sea levels
dropped and the great Amazon lake rapidly drained and became a river. Three
million years later, the ocean level receded enough to expose the Central
American isthmus and allow mass migration of mammal species between the
Americas.
The Ice Ages caused tropical
rainforest around the world to retreat. Although debated, it is believed that
much of the Amazon reverted to savanna and montane forest (see chapter 3-Ice
Ages and Glaciation). Savanna divided patches of rainforest into
"islands" and separated existing species for periods long enough to
allow genetic differentiation (a similar rainforest retreat took place in
Africa. Delta core samples suggest that even the mighty Congo watershed was
void of rainforest at this time). When the ice ages ended, the forest was again
joined and the species that were once one had diverged significantly enough to
be constitute designation as separate species, adding to the tremendous
diversity of the region. About 6000 years ago, sea levels rose about 130
meters, once again causing the river to be inundated like a long, giant
freshwater lake.
THE AMAZON
RIVER TODAY
Today the Amazon River is the most
voluminous river on Earth, eleven times the volume of the Mississippi, and
drains an area equivalent in size to the United States. During the high water
season, the river's mouth may be 300 miles wide and every day up to 500 billion
cubic feet of water (5,787,037 cubic feet/sec) flow into the Atlantic. For
reference, the Amazon's daily freshwater discharge into the Atlantic is enough
to supply New York City's freshwater needs for nine years. The force of the
current -- from sheer water volume alone -- causes Amazon River water to
continue flowing 125 miles out to sea before mixing with Atlantic salt water.
Early sailors could drink freshwater out of the ocean before sighting the South
American continent.
The river current carries tons of
suspended sediment all the way from the Andes and gives the river a
characteristic muddy whitewater appearance. It is calculated that 106 million
cubic feet of suspended sediment are swept into the ocean each day. The result
from the silt deposited at the mouth of the Amazon is Majaro island, a river
island about the size of Switzerland.
THE AMAZON
RAINFOREST
While the Amazon Basin is home to
the world's largest tropical rainforest, the region consists of a number of
ecosystems ranging from natural savanna to swamps. Even the rainforest itself
is highly variable, tree diversity and structure varying depending on soil
type, history, drainage, elevation, and other factors. This is discussed at
greater length in the rainforest ecology section.
THE
CHANGING AMAZON
The Amazon has a long history of
human settlement, but in recent decades the pace of change has accelerated due
to an increase in human population, the introduction of mechanized agriculture,
and integration of the Amazon region into the global economy. Vast quantities
of commodities produced in the Amazon — cattle beef and leather, timber, soy,
oil and gas, and minerals, to name a few — are exported today to China, Europe,
the U.S., and other countries. This shift has had substantial impacts on the
Amazon. This transition from a remote backwater to a cog in the global economy
has resulted in large-scale deforestation and forest degradation in the Amazon
— more than 1.4 million hectares of forest have been cleared since the 1970s.
An even larger area has been affected by selective logging and forest fires.
Conversion for cattle grazing is
the biggest single direct driver of deforestation. In Brazil, more than 60
percent of cleared land ends up as pasture, most of which has low productivity,
supporting less than one head per hectare. Across much of the Amazon, the
primary objective for cattle ranching is to establish land claims, rather than
produce beef or leather. But market-oriented cattle production has nonetheless
expanded rapidly during the past decade.
Industrial agricultural production,
especially soy farms, has also been an important driver of deforestation since
the early 1990s. However since 2006 the Brazil soy industry has had a
moratorium on new forest clearing for soy. The moratorium was a direct result
of a Greenpeace campaign. Mining, subsistence agriculture, dams, urban
expansion, agricultural fires, and timber plantations also result in
significant forest loss in the Amazon. Logging is the primary driver of forest
disturbance and studies have shown that logged-over forests — even when
selectively harvested — have a much higher likelihood of eventual deforestation.
Logging roads grant access to farmers and ranchers to previous inaccessible
forest areas.
Deforestation isn't the only reason
the Amazon is changing. Global climate change is having major impacts on the
Amazon rainforest. Higher temperatures in the tropical Atlantic reduce rainfall
across large extents of the Amazon, causing drought and increasing the
susceptibility of the rainforest to fire. Computer models suggest that if
current rates of warming continue, much of the Amazon could transition from
rainforest to savanna, especially in the southern parts of the region. Such a
shift could have dramatic economic and ecological impacts, including affecting
rainfall that currently feeds regions that generate 70 percent of South
America's GDP and triggering enormous carbon emissions from forest die-off.
These emissions could further worsen climate change.
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