Texarkana Gazette

Welcome to the Amazon

- Founded by Betty Debnam

This week, The Mini Page goes on a virtual adventure to the Amazon River Basin in South America. ¡Vamos!

A vast river

The Amazon River begins high in the Andes Mountains and flows about 4,000 miles across the continent. Only the Nile River in Africa is longer.

The Amazon River has more than 1,100 tributarie­s. (A tributary is a stream or river that feeds a larger river or lake.) Seventeen of these are more than 900 miles long. The Amazon carries one-fifth of all the river water flowing into the oceans of the Earth. The mouth of the river is 200 miles wide where it enters into the Atlantic Ocean.

What is a basin?

We use basins, or sinks and bowls, to hold things, especially water. Our planet Earth has basins, too.

A drainage basin collects rainwater, which drains into a common outlet, like a river.

The Amazon River Basin covers more than 2.4 million square miles. This river system flows in seven countries, including about half of Brazil, and covers land in Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Peru, Suriname and Venezuela.

People along the Amazon

Each year, for a six-month period, the banks along the Amazon flood. People, plants and animals in the area adjust to these changes. Waters rise from 20 feet to 50 feet

image courtesy European Space Agency and flood an area as far as 50 miles from the river. Many houses are built on stilts, or designed to float on the river.

Most of the river basin is covered with rainforest­s, so this large area is home to a comparably small number of people, about 30 million. About 2.7 million of those are Indigenous people, or those whose ancestors first inhabited the area.

People living in the Amazon River Basin are farmers, growing soya beans, nuts, rice and corn. The river provides fish for food.

Who else lives there?

“Bio” means life, and “diversity” means variety. The biodiversi­ty is probably greater in rainforest areas than anywhere else.

Hundreds of different species, including mammals, fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and insects, thrive in the warm, damp climate.

Some of the creatures who live there include:

• Jaguars are the largest cats in the Western Hemisphere.

Emerald tree boa constricto­rs coil around prey and squeeze it to death.

• The tapir is related to the rhinoceros. It spends most of the time in the water.

Living in layers

Animals in the rainforest live on different levels, from the ground up to the top of the trees. That is why so many of them can live in small areas.

Emergent layer: The tallest trees with thick leaves are homes to lightweigh­t birds, bats and butterflie­s.

More animals live in the canopy than in any other layer. Many of the trees have tough and shiny leaves. Some animals never go down to the ground.

Understory: Because of the thick leaves above, not much direct sunlight reaches this area. Many plants have huge leaves. Snakes might live here.

Floor: This layer is dark and quiet. Animals that hunt, such as jaguars, live here. Many insects crawl on the ground.

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 ??  ?? The bright blue color of the poison dart frog is a warning to predators not to attack.
The bright blue color of the poison dart frog is a warning to predators not to attack.

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