Texarkana Gazette

Mexico sees jungle lakes evaporate amid lower rainfall

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MEXICO CITY — Some of the mystical blue-green lakes of the Lacandon jungle in southern Mexico are drying up this year, the result of what experts say is an extended drought and rising temperatur­es in the region.

The Metzabok lake, which normally covers 220 acres (89 hectares), dried up completely this month, leaving cracked mud where the translucen­t waters normally reflect the surroundin­g jungle and Lacandon Indians travel by canoe.

About 350 Lacandones, an indigenous group that still uses traditiona­l dress of long hair and white cotton tunics, depend on tourism, fish and water from the lake and 20 other jungle lagoons nearby for their livelihood.

In recent days they worked with biologists to capture and transfer crocodiles, fish and turtles from the dried-up lake to those nearby that still have water. The area is part of a nature preserve known as Naha-Metzabok, and the Lacandones have preserved the surroundin­g jungle for decades by avoiding the slash-and-burn agricultur­e and cattle ranching.

Some of the older Lacandones remember that the Metzabok lake (the name means “The god of thunder” in the Maya language) had dried up once ago, in the 1950s.

But experts worry that such episodes will become more frequent as rainfall declines and peak temperatur­es rise in the area, located just a few dozen miles from the Guatemalan border.

Mexico’s National Water Commission lists most of the Lacandon jungle as being in a “moderate drought” situation, but some areas whose waters normally feed the lagoons are listed as “severe to extreme” drought.

Since the jungle lakes are fed by groundwate­r flows, not rivers, the situation may take some time to recover.

But it is not just Metzabok lake that has suffered.

Adrián Méndez Barrera, a biologist who serves are regional director for Mexico’s National Commission for Protected Nature Areas, said he knowns of six lagoons outside the nature reserve that have dried up.

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