More than two million wild animals, including jaguars, pumas and llamas, have perished in weeks of wildfires that devastated huge swaths of Bolivian forest and grassland, environmental experts said Wednesday.
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"The forest is totally charred and the damage is irreversible. It will never get back to normal," said Sandra Quiroga of Santa Cruz University [Credit: Pablo Cozzaglio/AFP] |
Latin American ocelots, and other wild cats like pumas and jaguars, as well as deer, llamas -- and smaller forest animals like anteaters, badgers, lizards, tapirs and rodents -- were victims of the fires, according to biologists investigating the scale of the damage.
Local media showed images of charred animal carcasses in the smouldering forests and birds fleeing to zones spared by the flames.
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This snake could not escape the flames of a fire in the Otuquis National Park in eastern Bolivia [Credit: Aizar Raldes/AFP] |
"The forest is totally charred and the damage is irreversible. It will never get back to normal," said Quiroga.
The eastern department of Santa Cruz has been the hardest hit of Bolivia's nine departments since the fires began in May and intensified in late August
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The remains of a fox killed in a forest fires in the Otuquis National Park in eastern Bolivia [Credit: Aizar Raldes/AFP] |
Environmentalists blame laws enacted under leftist President Evo Morales, who has encouraged burning of forest and pasture land to expand agricultural production.
The government attributes the blazes to dry weather and flame-fanning winds.
Source: AFP [September 26, 2019]
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