Brazilian Amazon indigenous territories under deforestation pressure

Author:

Silva-Junior Celso H. L.,Silva Fabrício B.,Arisi Barbara Maisonnave,Mataveli Guilherme,Pessôa Ana C. M.,Carvalho Nathália S.,Reis João B. C.,Silva Júnior Admo R.,Motta Nathalia A. C. S.,e Silva Paulo Vinícius Moreira,Ribeiro Francarlos Diniz,Siqueira-Gay Juliana,Alencar Ane,Saatchi Sassan,Aragão Luiz E. O. C.,Anderson Liana O.,Melo Maycon

Abstract

AbstractStudies showed that Brazilian Amazon indigenous territories (ITs) are efficient models for preserving forests by reducing deforestation, fires, and related carbon emissions. Considering the importance of ITs for conserving socio-environmental and cultural diversity and the recent climb in the Brazilian Amazon deforestation, we used official remote sensing datasets to analyze deforestation inside and outside indigenous territories within Brazil's Amazon biome during the 2013–2021 period. Deforestation has increased by 129% inside ITs since 2013, followed by an increase in illegal mining areas. In 2019–2021, deforestation was 195% higher and 30% farther from the borders towards the interior of indigenous territories than in previous years (2013–2018). Furthermore, about 59% of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions within ITs in 2013–2021 (96 million tons) occurred in the last three years of analyzed years, revealing the magnitude of increasing deforestation to climate impacts. Therefore, curbing deforestation in indigenous territories must be a priority for the Brazilian government to secure these peoples' land rights, ensure the forests' protection and regulate the global climate.

Funder

University of Manchester

Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior

Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference79 articles.

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2. Instituto Socioambiental (ISA). Localização e extensão das TIs. https://pib.socioambiental.org/pt/Localização_e_extensão_das_TIs (2021).

3. Ana Carolina Moreira Pessôa. Assessment of fire occurrence within protected areas in the Amazon basin from 2003 to 2020. (Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE), 2022).

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