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WATER WORLD
In Rio favela, hungry caimans complicate water hunt
By Claire DE OLIVEIRA NETO
Rio De Janeiro (AFP) Feb 5, 2015


Scientists: Invading golden mussels threaten Amazon
Brasilia, Brazil (UPI) Feb 5, 2015 - Like so many other invasive species propagating throughout the ecosystems of the Western Hemisphere, the golden mussel traveled all the way from Asia.

Since arriving from Chinese freighters in the 1990s, the tiny mollusk has invaded much of South America's waterways. So far, the Amazon -- the region's largest and most important river -- has remained uncolonized by the disruptive species, but researchers worry it is only a matter of time before the bivalve shows up along the banks of Brazil's hydrological engine.

Like the most successful invasive species, the golden mussel is a prolific breeder. It quickly reproduces, unfettered by any natural predators. The invader can wreck both natural and manmade systems, clogging pipes and disrupting dams and other hydraulic structures. Their filter feeding habits augment phosphorous and nitrogen levels in the water, encouraging blooms of toxic algae that can suck up oxygen and choke out other aquatic animals.

Though the mussels can quickly become a favorite food source of fish, bolstering local populations, the disruption of the natural order can have unintended consequences.

"In some rivers, there is evidence showing that the fish population has increased 20 percent because they have a new food resource in the mussels," computational biologist Marcela Uliano da Silva, a native of Brazil who's trying to thwart the mussels' proliferation, told the TED Blog.

"But when you increase the number of fish, it has a domino effect, as they are at the top of the food chain," said Silva. "Ultimately, when the mussel invades, it transforms the ecosystem, decreasing biodiversity and homogenizing the environment."

Da Silva is a fellow with TED Global, and is currently working on a virus that targets the species genome. Released into the water, the virus could infect the mussels and render them infertile.

Of course, many are skeptical of Silva's plan. Some even say it's dangerous, as the virus, or so-called biobullet, could do more harm than good once released into the wild.

"We know that evolution does not stop," James Collins, an evolutionary biologist at Arizona State University, told OZY.

But Silva says a large problem like the golden mussel requires bold ideas.

"Every day, I'm anxious," Silva admitted. "But you have to be able to live in agony. Otherwise, you're not going to do great things. ... You cannot be safe. You need to take risks."

But techniques that would enable genetic manipulation of the species remain in their infancy, at least four years away from being part of an executable plan. Meanwhile, conservationists can only hope to contain the invader. The golden mussel advance has so far been stopped in wetlands just 1,000 miles from the Amazon. But a sinlge boat carried across land to the Amazon, with just a bit of water in the bottom, could deliver several thousand mussel larvae.

Residents of a Rio de Janeiro favela face a dangerous challenge in their quest for clean drinking water: a canal infested with hungry caimans, South America's alligator cousins.

With a severe drought that's left much of southeastern Brazil parched and the main water company accused of skimping on favela water supplies to benefit wealthier parts of town, residents are illegally tapping into a pipe near the reptile-filled canal.

"With this drought, we are often short of water and residents come here to stock up," says Alessandra dos Santos from the nearby Vila Amizade favela.

"They have to distract the caimans by throwing food."

The scene is repeated almost daily in this area of Recreio dos Bandeirantes just west of Rio, a few kilometers (miles) from a construction site for venues to be used in the 2016 Olympics.

Brazil has come under fire as it spends billions of dollars on the Summer Games while many residents remain mired poverty.

Vila Amizade's vice president Marcos Conti told AFP that Rio water company Cedae sometimes rations water to the favelas before cutting the supply to residential areas. The water shortage is even worse in Sao Paulo.

- Infested waters -

At the favela entrance, people have fashioned illegal water connections to Cedae's main line that still has running water.

The place is known as "bica dos jacares" (caiman tap) where a huge pipe from Cedae passes above a narrow channel teeming with the scaly creatures.

"They have already eaten a cat and ripped the leg of a dog," dos Santos says.

The caimans, which are a bit smaller than alligators, were said to have come from the increasingly polluted lagoons and marshes of a nearby ecological park.

"When it rains we are afraid because sometimes the water overflows and we have to push them back into the water with sticks," said resident Luciane de Oliveira, 36.

Claus Gordes, a retired engineer who has lived in a comfortable home near the slum for 18 years, said he has witnessed the "degradation" of the neighborhood.

"Before, this was forest and swamps, and then it became a slum that developed without any water or sewage infrastructure," he said.

A local biologist sees a dangerous situation that is being ignored by the government.

"People here live in filth, among mosquitoes and caimans, in totally unhealthy and inhumane conditions," says biologist Ricardo Freitas Filho, who runs a caiman institute.

"That's the reality of Rio de Janeiro, the wonderful city of the Olympics," he said sarcastically.

Freitas Filho studies caimans, which live an average of about 70 years, and he worries their numbers are dropping as development and pollution take their toll.

Still, since 2005, he has tallied more than 500 of the animals in the polluted waters of the nearby lagoon.

Freitas Filho, who wears the same sort of wide-brimmed hat as Mick Dundee in the movie "Crocodile Dundee," said the government or the water company have not taken responsibility for the caiman infestation, even after the residential area has tripled in size.

He said he has identified a number of sewage outlets in the park coming from the water company that reduce oxygen in the lagoon and push the caimans to new territory.

"In search of a more favorable environment, the caiman is seen at the edge of the water or more often in the middle of town," Filho said.

"They should at least put up a sign telling people not to feed the animals, so they return to the lagoon," he said.

"They can sense food in the water from a distance of 1.5 kilometers and now they are expecting people to feed them."


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