Royal Oak Tribune

As wetlands burned, government did little to help

- By Tatiana Pollastri and David Biller

PORTOJOFRE, BRAZIL » After hours navigating Brazil’s Pantanal wetlands in search of jaguars earlier this month, Danie lMoura beached his boat to survey the fire damage. In every direction, he saw only devastatio­n. No wildlife, and no support from federal authoritie­s.

“We used to see jaguars here all the time; I once saw 16 jaguars in a single day,” Moura, a guide who owns an eco-tourism outfit, said on the riverbank in the Encontro das Aguas state park, which this year saw 84% of its vegetation destroyed.

“Where are all those animals now?”

Theworld’s largest tropical wetlands, the Pantanal is popular for viewing the furtive felines, along with caiman, capybara and more. This year it is exceptiona­lly dry and burning at a record rate. The fires have been so intense that at one point smoke reached Sao Paulo, 900 miles away.

President Jair Bolsonaro’s government says it has mobilized hundreds of federal agents and military service members to do use the flames. However, all along the only highway through the northern Pantanal, dozens of people — firefighte­rs, ranchers, tour guides

and veterinari­ans — told The Associated Press the government has exaggerate­d its response and there are few federal boots on the ground.

What little concrete assistance has come mostly from planes dropping water from above, locals said, but that only happened after great delay and mainly targeted private ranch es rather than protected areas. Making matters worse, several aircraft remained grounded at the start of the inferno.

“I can’t see much federal help; it is basically us here,” said Felipe

Augusto Dias, executive director of SOS Pantanal, an environmen­tal group.

Both sides of the Trans-Pantanal highway— an area that should feature pools of water, even in its dry season— were parched. As of Sunday, nearly a quarter of the Pantanal— an area more than the size of Maryland — had been consumed by fire, according to satellite imagery from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. Pantanal vegetation can regenerate quickly with rain, but the wildlife that survive are left stranded without habitat.

 ?? ANDRE PENNER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Volunteer Divino Humberto tries to douse the fire along a dirt road off the Trans-Pantanal highway, in the Pantanal wetlands near Pocone, Mato Grosso state, Brazil, Sept. 11.
ANDRE PENNER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Volunteer Divino Humberto tries to douse the fire along a dirt road off the Trans-Pantanal highway, in the Pantanal wetlands near Pocone, Mato Grosso state, Brazil, Sept. 11.

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