Amazon rainforest day

Amazon rainforest day

The Amazon rainforest is the largest tropical forest on Earth, with the highest density of plant and animal species anywhere. This impressive region provides essential ecological services, stabilizing the world’s rainfall patterns and storing massive amounts of carbon that mitigate climate change. 

Spanning nine South American countries and 2.5 million square miles, the Amazon represents over half of the world’s remaining rainforest. Its moist, tropical vegetation stretches from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Andes Mountains in the west, a reflection of the high rainfall, high humidity and high temperatures that prevail in the region year-round. Running through the north of the rainforest is the Amazon River. Flowing a length of 4,000 miles, it contains the largest number of freshwater fish species in the world. 

One in ten of the world’s known species live in the Amazon. The rainforest is the planet’s richest and most-varied biological reservoir, containing millions of species of plants, insects, birds and other forms of life, many still unrecorded by science.

The Amazon is home to more than 120 indigenous groups, including remote tribes that have not yet made contact with modern civilization. Groups such as the Awajun and Maijuna have been living in the region for thousands of years, accumulating a detailed knowledge of the rainforest and methods to subsist from it. Across the Amazon, thousands of plant species are used for medicine by local communities – Malaria can be addressed by 41 different species of plants in the Brazilian Amazon alone. Foods such as rice, potatoes, coffee and corn are also products of the Amazon.

The Amazon has long been recognized as an important repository of natural resources and services not only for local and indigenous communities, but also for the rest of the world. The rainforest plays a crucial role in stabilizing the world’s rainfall patterns. 

Vegetation in the region takes in massive amounts of carbon dioxide, helping to mitigate climate change. Currently, the Amazon’s forests hold 100 billion tons of carbon in the lignin of its trees. Furthermore, the Amazon circulates more than 20% of the world’s oxygen.

Humans have deforested 20 percent of the Amazon rainforest over the last 40 years alone, and an additional 20 percent is at risk of being destroyed. Agricultural expansion is the greatest threat to this ecosystem. Industrial farming, urban expansion, mining, petroleum extraction, dams and irresponsible timber production have also led to massive forest loss.

As deforestation continues and the effects of climate change intensify, we run the risk of losing this spectacular ecosystem for future generations. (source: natureandculture.org)

Help the Amazon to stay green, adopt an eco-friendly lifestyle today! Try our natural eco-friendly plastic-free products, plant a tree wherever most needed, Say Yes to Life, Earth Thanks! 🌿

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