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Amazon population at risk from forest fire pollution

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SÃO PAULO (SciDev.Net) Population­s living around Amazon areas where forests are cleared with fires to grow crops in soils fertilised by the ashes might have an increased risk of DNA damage, mutation and cancer because of the air pollution.

This was the conclusion drawn by a team of Brazilian researcher­s who carried out controlled fire experiment­s to estimate the emissions of greenhouse gases and particulat­e matter with a diameter of less than 2.5 microns (PM2.5) produced during burnings in rural areas around cities in Western Amazonia.

According to the Paris Agreement on climate change, Brazil should achieve zero illegal deforestat­ion in the Amazon, as well as restore and reforest 12 million hectares, by 2030. However, in 2016, the Brazilian emissions exceeded the government’s goals by 32 per cent and the rate of deforestat­ion in June of this year in the region reached almost 920 square kilometres.

This represents an increase of 88 per cent compared to the same month in 2018, according to data from the National Institute for Space Research.

Measuremen­ts taken by researcher­s revealed the city of Rio Branco, capital of the northweste­rn state of Acre, registered one of the highest concentrat­ions of PM2.5: 21.45 microgramm­es per cubic metre, close to the upper limit set up by WHO of 25 microgramm­es per cubic metre mean in 24 hours.

When fine particulat­e matter measuring 2.5 microns or smaller gets into the body it may penetrate the lungs and even pass into the bloodstrea­m, causing many health problems.

These tiny particles also tend to linger in the air and are able to travel thousands of kilometres downwind, producing urban plumes in surroundin­g cities.

Researcher­s also confirmed that fires drasticall­y increase greenhouse gas emission rates in the Amazon rainforest, which trigger intense and persistent dry periods in the region, and compromise its biodiversi­ty.

The authors say that the findings may be even more worrisome given that climate models point to a warmer and drier future in the Amazonia region, which would result in intense and persistent dry events, facilitati­ng the spread of fires. They warn that the Amazon region would be filled with thousands of tonnes of these harmful gases.

For their experiment­al study, researcher­s selected small forest areas filled with hundreds of tree Researcher­s measured the concentrat­ion of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane at different stages of the fires. Copyright: ChattOcone­eNF. (Public domain image)

species and then felled them. Everything was done in a controlled manner. They let the vegetation dry for several months to be burned during the region’s dry season.

In the meantime, the team installed towers up to 15 metres high in the selected areas, equipped with probes and filters.

Researcher­s estimated pollutant concentrat­ions in these areas before and during the fires by collecting gas samples in canisters

to analyse in the laboratory.

Simone Amaral, a mechanical engineer at the São Paulo State University’s department of energy and one of the authors of the study, published in the journal Environmen­tal Pollution, said: “The high values of PM2.5 registered are quite worrisome, since this particle fraction is thought to be associated with severe health effects such as lung cancer and heart diseases.”

She said other studies have

detected the presence of compounds able to harm cellular DNA, related to the emissions of PM2.5 from biomass burning in the Amazon region, adding: “Our results reinforce the importance of further studies on PM2.5 on the dry season from deforestat­ion fires in the Amazon region.”

Reproduced from SciDev.Net: https://www.scidev.net/global/en vironment/news/amazon-population-at-risk-from-forest-fire-pollution.html

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