Earth Science News
FARM NEWS
In Brazil town turning to desert, farmers fight to hang on
In Brazil town turning to desert, farmers fight to hang on
By Joshua Howat Berger
Gilbues, Brazil (AFP) Nov 1, 2023

Standing amid a terrain of rugged red craters that looks like something from Mars, Brazilian farmer Ubiratan Lemos Abade extends his arms, pointing to two possible futures for this land fast turning to desert.

Abade, a 65-year-old cattle rancher, lives in Brazil's worst desertification hotspot: Gilbues, in the northeastern state of Piaui, where a parched, canyon-pocked landscape is swallowing up farms and residences, claiming an area bigger than New York City.

Experts say the phenomenon is caused by rampant erosion of the region's naturally fragile soil, exacerbated by deforestation, reckless development and probably climate change.

But several hundred determined farming families are hanging on in this desolate land, scraping by with hardscrabble ingenuity and sounding the alarm over the spreading problem.

"Things have gone haywire. It's not raining the way it used to. So we use irrigation. Without that, we wouldn't get by," says Abade.

To his right, he points to a barren field of withered grass that died before his cattle could eat it. To his left, he points to an exuberant patch of tall bluestem grass watered with a makeshift irrigation system, which he is counting on to keep his 15 cows -- and himself -- alive.

He installed the system a year ago, digging a well and jerry-rigging a network of hoses.

"Without irrigation, this whole place would look like that -- dying of thirst," he says.

"It takes technology to farm here. But when you're poor, technology is hard to come by."

- 'Fragile land' -

Seen from the sky, the "Gilbues desert" looks like a giant sheet of crumpled, brick-red sandpaper.

Its erosion problem isn't new. The name "Gilbues" likely comes from an Indigenous word meaning "fragile land," says environmental historian Dalton Macambira, of the Federal University of Piaui.

But humans have made the problem worse by razing and burning vegetation whose roots helped secure the silty soil, and by over-taxing the environment as Gilbues has grown to a town of 11,000 people, he says.

Gilbues was the scene of a diamond-mining rush in the mid-20th century, a sugarcane boom in the 1980s and is now one of the biggest soybean-producing counties in the state.

"Where there are people, there's demand for natural resources," Macambira says.

"That accelerates the problem, by demanding more of the environment than it can sustain."

Macambira published a study in January finding the area affected by desertification more than doubled from 387 square kilometers in 1976 to 805 (310 square miles) in 2019, hitting 15 counties and some 500 farming families.

Climate scientists say further studies are needed to pinpoint whether global warming is accelerating the phenomenon.

Farmers say the dry season has gotten drier, punctuated by a shorter, more-intense rainy season -- which exacerbates the problem, as heavy rains wash away more soil, deepening the gaping canyons known as "vocorocas."

Macambira says a hotter planet can only make things worse.

"Wherever you have environmental degradation, climate change tends to have a more perverse effect," he says.

- Turnaround -

The United Nations calls desertification a "silent crisis" that affects 500 million people worldwide, fueling poverty and conflicts.

But there is opportunity in the problem, says Fabriciano Corado, president of conservation group SOS Gilbues.

The 58-year-old agricultural engineer says although Gilbues's soil erodes easily, it is also a farmer's dream: rich in phosphorous and clay, it needs no fertilizer or other treatments.

Like Abade, he says farmers need technology to survive the encroaching desert -- but nothing too high-tech.

Local producers are getting extremely positive results with things like protecting native vegetation, drip irrigation, fish farming and the ancient anti-erosion technique of terrace farming, he says.

"We don't have to reinvent the wheel. The Aztecs, Incas and Mayas did it already," he says.

He condemns the closure six years ago of a government-run anti-desertification research center in Gilbues that helped local farmers implement just such techniques.

The state plans to reopen it -- but has not set a date.

The region meanwhile has huge potential as a solar energy producer, says Corado, citing the recent opening of a 2.2-million-panel solar park. Another is in the works.

Get the right mix of conservation and technology, and "there's no stopping us," he says.

Related Links
Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
FARM NEWS
Seaweed was once central to many European diets for thousands of years
London, UK (The Conversation) Oct 30, 2023
Seaweed isn't something that generally features today in European recipe books, even though it is widely eaten in Asia. But our team has discovered molecular evidence that shows this wasn't always the case. People in Europe ate seaweed and freshwater aquatic plants from the Stone Age right up until the Middle Ages before it disappeared from our plates. Our evidence came from skeletal remains, namely the calculus (hardened dental plaque) that built up around the teeth of these people when they were ... read more

FARM NEWS
U.N. urges opening of 2nd border crossing into Gaza as need for aid grows

Businesses talk reconstruction after deadly Libya flood

First evacuations from Gaza as refugee camp struck again

Mexico announces recovery plan for hurricane-hit Acapulco

FARM NEWS
NASA-ISRO radar mission to provide dynamic view of forests, wetlands

The tech to recycle clothes is only just being invented

Space rocks and asteroid dust are pricey, but these aren't the most expensive materials used in science

DLR and Tesat laser terminal paves way for high-speed data transfer from space

FARM NEWS
Plastic waste in rivers may carry dangerous microbes: study

Search on for Australian surfer's body after shark attack

Mayotte turns to bottled water in century's worst drought

Storms swell Iguazu falls to near decade-high flow

FARM NEWS
Increased West Antarctic ice sheet melting 'unavoidable'

How a climate model can illustrate and explain ice-age climate variability

Light, freshwater sticks to Greenland's east coast

Meltwater flowing beneath Antarctic glaciers may be accelerating their retreat

FARM NEWS
Bjork, Rosalia team up against Iceland fish farms

Italy's olive growers lament poor harvests from extreme weather

Biden courts rural US voters with Minnesota farm visit

Smart irrigation technology covers "more crop per drop"

FARM NEWS
Company guilty over New Zealand volcano disaster

Flooding, heavy rain kill three in Vietnam

6.1-magnitude quake hits Indonesia's Timor island: USGS

Hurricane devastates Acapulco's iconic 'Tarzan House'

FARM NEWS
Gambia court jails soldier for 12 years for coup plot

HRW says abuses persist in Ethiopia despite peace deal

One year on, peace holds in Tigray but Ethiopia still fractured

One year after Tigray peace deal, rights abuses persist

FARM NEWS
How "blue" and "green" appeared in a language that didn't have words for them

Brain health in over 50s deteriorated more rapidly during the pandemic

Eternal rest -- at the foot of a tree

Iraq dig unearths 2,700-year-old winged sculpture largely intact

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2024 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.