Latin America
Related: About this forumFears grow as residents at mouth of Amazon River face troublesome phenomenon: 'Nature is revolting'
"I've been reading nature since I was a child, but I am no longer able to decipher it."
By Tina Deines
March 14, 2024
Rising sea levels, coupled with other man-made actions, are wreaking havoc on the islands of Brazil's Bailique Archipelago, Mongabay reported.
What's happening?
The Bailique Archipelago sits at the crossroads of the Amazon River and the Atlantic Ocean, and saltwater intrusion when salty seawater pushes upstream into freshwater is a natural phenomenon. However, rising sea levels and human actions like damming are causing water cycle changes, and brackish water is overtaking the river and inundating communities for longer periods.
Why are these changes concerning?
More frequent saltwater intrusion is making it harder for residents to gather potable water for their drinking and cooking needs, and many have turned to catching rainwater.
It's also making the archipelago's main economic crop, açaí berries, salty in flavor. Meanwhile, erosion caused by changes to the Amazon's flow is destroying palm trees.
While thousands of people have already fled the region, others, like boat pilot Aurélio Marques, struggle to adapt, according to Mongabay.
"It seems that nature is revolting, angry with us," Marques told the publication. "I've been reading nature since I was a child, but I am no longer able to decipher it."
More;
https://www.thecooldown.com/outdoors/bailique-archipelago-saltwater-intrusion-brazil/
femmedem
(8,444 posts)to accept climate refugees.
jaxexpat
(7,794 posts)peacebuzzard
(5,267 posts)jaxexpat
(7,794 posts)That factor, by itself, could explain saltwater inundation increase for this area. Coupled with freshwater retention at reservoirs created on tributaries, the situation begins to mirror the Louisiana wetlands' salination invasion vis-à-vis the Mississippi/Atchafalaya basin.
All the roads of scientific observation regarding changing environmental phenomena seem to lead to a commonality, humanity's peculiar relationship with its very existence.
You know, logic and stuff, I think that sort of "discovery" should be expected when you're dealing with a species that created God in its image. Of course, one could, logically, blame it all on Caterpillar Inc. and be done with such hurtful fact-finding.