The Telegram (St. John's)

Water is disappeari­ng from Mexico’s vital desert oasis Cuatro Cienegas

- DANIEL BECERRIL

CUATRO CIENEGAS, Mexico — Alfalfa plants sway under a thin veil of mist as towering irrigation equipment rolls above the crops, spraying the vast fields with water.

It’s an important agricultur­e product in Mexico’s northern state of Coahuila, grown there for hundreds of years. Rich in fibre and protein, it’s used to feed livestock in Latin America’s second-largest economy.

But alfalfa crops and other agricultur­al activities are also sapping dry the ancient oasis of Cuatro Cienegas, the most important wetland in the Chihuahuan Desert and a geological anomaly that scientists say can help them understand the origin of Earth, climate change and the chances of life on Mars.

The 170 cactus-ringed pools contain important species of fish, snails, turtles, bacteria and unique living rock structures that offer important clues to life on Earth millions of years ago.

But since 1985, about 40 per cent of surface pools and lagoons have been lost, the Mexican Institute of Water Technology estimated in a 2023 report. Water extraction­s from these bodies has increased at least 400 per cent in 25 years, which the institute said is primarily due to an uptick in water concession­s and water-reliant crops like alfalfa.

Scientists warn that the area could suffer catastroph­ic damage without a recovery plan.

Dairy farming in Mexico’s main milk-producing region — the nearby city of Torreon — has since the beginning of the 20th century heavily relied on Cuatro Cienegas for water to feed wells used for as much as 6,000 hectares of fodder crops each year, according to the Mexican Institute of Water Technology.

Ranches and crops run by large companies have diverted much of the supply, according to small-scale farmers like Mario Lopez, who has watched his own water access dwindle since he started growing alfalfa, corn and beans in 2008.

“We all have the right (to water) but for the small landowners, the pace has slowed down over the years,” said Lopez. “When I started here, there was plenty of water, and now there isn’t.”

Lopez said his crops have scaled down to about six hectares due to the lack of water.

“Cuatro Cienegas is at risk of disappeari­ng,” said Valeria Souza, a researcher at the Institute of Ecology at Mexico’s National Autonomous University who focuses on sustainabl­e agricultur­e models for desert settings.

“It has survived two global freezes and five global extinction­s, but it hasn’t survived us 50 years,” Souza said, adding that Cuatro Cienegas’ unique characteri­stics reveal an understand­ing of whether other planets like Mars could be home to primitive life.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Farmer Mario Lopez turns off an irrigation faucet while working in his fields of alfalfa and other agricultur­al products in Cuatro Cienegas, state of Coahuila, Mexico, on March 19.
REUTERS Farmer Mario Lopez turns off an irrigation faucet while working in his fields of alfalfa and other agricultur­al products in Cuatro Cienegas, state of Coahuila, Mexico, on March 19.

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