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Peruvian Amazonia

Peruvian Amazonia (Spanish: Amazonía del Perú), informally known locally as the Peruvian jungle (Spanish: selva peruana) or just the jungle (Spanish: la selva), is the area of the Amazon rainforest included within the country of Peru, from east of the Andes to the borders with Ecuador, Colombia, Brazil and Bolivia. This region comprises 60% of the country and is marked by a large degree of biodiversity. Peru has the second-largest portion of the Amazon rainforest after the Brazilian Amazon.

Amazon rainforest in Peru

Extension edit

Most Peruvian territory is covered by dense forests on the east side of the Andes, yet only 5% of Peruvians live in this area. More than 60% of Peruvian territory is covered by the Amazon rainforest, more than in any other country.

According to the Research Institute of the Peruvian Amazon (Instituto de Investigaciones de la Amazonía Peruana, IIAP), the spatial delineation of the Peruvian Amazon is as follows:

  • Ecological criteria: 782,880.55 km2 (60.91% of Peruvian territory and approximately 11.05% of the entire Amazon jungle).
  • Hydrographic criteria or basin criteria: 96,922.47 km2 (37,421.97 sq mi) (75.31% of Peruvian territory and approximately 16.13% of the whole Amazon basin).

Ecoregions and climate edit

 
The Amazon rainforest in Manu National Park
 
Peruvian researcher Tatiana Espinosa [es] next to the Dipteryx micrantha tree

The Peruvian Amazon is traditionally divided into two distinct ecoregions:

Lowland Jungle edit

The lowland jungle (in Spanish Selva Baja) is also known as Omagua region, Walla, Anti, Amazonian rainforest or Amazon basin. This ecoregion is the largest of Peru, standing between 80 and 1,000 meters above sea level. It has very warm weather with an average temperature of 28 °C, high relative humidity (over 75%) and yearly rainfall of approximately 260 cm (100 in). Its soils are very heterogeneous, but almost all have river origins. Because of high temperatures and high rainfall, they are poor soils with few nutrients.

The jungle contains long and powerful rivers such as the Apurimac, Mantaro, Amazon, Urubamba, Ucayali, Huallaga, Marañón, Putumayo, Yavarí, Napo, Pastaza, Madre de Dios, Manu, Purus, and Tigre. The Apurímac River is the source of the Amazon River. The Pacaya-Samiria National Reserve, the Allpahuayo-Mishana National Reserve and the Tamshiyacu Tahuayo Regional Conservation Area are within the forest.

Highland Jungle edit

The highland jungle (in Spanish Selva Alta) is also called Rupa-Rupa region, Andean jungle, ceja de selva. This ecoregion extends into the eastern foothills of the Andes, between 1,000 and 3,800 m above the sea level. The eastern slopes of the Andes are home to a great variety of fauna and flora because of the different altitudes and climates within the region. Temperatures are warm in the lowlands and cooler in higher altitudes. There are many endemic fauna because of the isolation caused by the rugged terrain of the area.[1]

Within the Amazon rainforest there are several other types of forest but they all have one characteristic in common: abundant rains. Over the course of a year, a portion of tropical forest will receive between 1,500 and 3,000 mm of rain. This creates the typical tropical atmosphere of a rainforest, with an average temperature of around 24 °C or more.[2]

Biodiversity edit

The Peruvian Amazon jungle is one of the most biologically diverse areas on Earth. As a nation, Peru has the largest number of bird species in the world and the third-largest number of mammals; 44% of bird species and 63% of mammal species inhabit the Peruvian Amazon. Peru also has a very high number of species of butterflies, orchids, and other organisms.[3]

Taxa Number of known species Percentage of species
In the world In Peru In the Peruvian Amazon Peru vs. world Peruvian Amazon vs. Peru
Amphibians 5,125 403 262 8 65
Birds 9,672 1,815 806 19 44
Flowering plants 250,000 17,144 7,372 7 43
Ferns (Pteridophyta) 10,000 1000 700 10 70
Mammals 4,629 462 293 10 63
Butterflies (Lepidoptera) 16,000 3,366 2,500 21 74
Fish (river fish) 8,411 900 697 11 77
Reptiles 7,855 395 180 5 46

Demography edit

 
Amazon River floating village neighborhood in Iquitos
 
Mototaxis in Pucallpa

Although it is the largest region of Peru, the Peruvian Amazon is the least populated. It is home to approximately 5% of the country's population. Many indigenous peoples, such as the Aguaruna, Cocama-Cocamilla and the Urarina,[4] inhabit the jungle, some in relative isolation from the rest of the world.

The primary cities located in the Peruvian Amazon include:

History edit

In the 1730s, Roman Catholic Franciscan missionaries established missions in the Gran Pajonal, but the missions were destroyed in the 1740s by the Asháninka under the leadership of Juan Santos Atahualpa. Several Spanish military expeditions tried to suppress the rebellion but failed or were defeated.[5] The rebellion destroyed the missionary enterprise and left the Gran Pajonal in Asháninka control for 150 years although they suffered from periodic epidemics of European diseases and in the late 19th century from slave raids by businesses engaged in the gathering of rubber during the Amazon rubber boom.

Illegal logging edit

Over the last decades illegal logging has become a serious problem in the Peruvian Amazon. In 2012 the World Bank estimated that 80% of Peru's timber exports are illegally harvested.[6] This uncontrolled deforestation could negatively affect the habitats of indigenous tribes, the Peruvian biodiversity and contribute to climate change. Moreover, illegal deforestation might lead to more violent crimes. This has already been demonstrated on 1 September 2014, when four indigenous leaders were murdered, including the famous environmental activist Edwin Chota. These leaders were asking for governmental protection against illegal loggers, after being threatened several times. Partly due to this, illegal loggers are being blamed for the assassination.[7]

Emergence of illegal industry edit

In an attempt to support local incomes in the Amazon, the Peruvian government granted non-transferable contracts to some farmers to perform small-scale logging activities. Soon however, big logging companies started paying individual loggers for the use of their contracts and established an illegal, large-scale logging industry.[8] In 1992 the National Institute of Natural Resources (INRENA) was founded to guarantee a more sustainable use of national resources.[9] Yet, this institution has never been able to carry out its task due to several reasons. First of all, INRENA lacked sufficient resources compared with the magnitude of their responsibilities.[10] Next to this, corruption was a problem in several layers of the organisation.[11] Moreover, until recently, INRENA was part of the Ministry of Agriculture.[12] This suggests that INRENA was not completely independent; it was housed in an institution that had to safeguard the interest of the agricultural sector, which could be conflicting with INRENA's objective.

In 2000 Peru modified the Forestry and Wildlife Law in order to improve the logging sector.[13] In the subsequent years however, the situation in the Peruvian timber industry only deteriorated. To some extent this can be explained by the fact that Brazil illegalised the exports of mahogany (one of the most valuable and endangered types of wood in the world) from 2001 on.[14] This Brazilian ban is likely to have caused the increase in Peruvian mahogany exports. Soon after the ban, international institutions revealed their severe concerns about the state of the Peruvian timber industry. In particular the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), started paying extra attention to Peru as the trade in mahogany falls under CITES’ regulation. Albeit the fact that from then on, one needed special permits for harvesting and exporting any endangered species, the forestry sector was still far from sustainable.

Illegal logging with permits edit

Although it is understandable that illegal logging cannot be stopped easily in the Peruvian Amazons (an inaccessible area bigger than Spain), the illegal exportation of timber is supposed to be more difficult; the shipments are huge and there are very few routes from the Amazons to the coast. Nevertheless, until now it has been relatively easy for companies to ship and export illegal timber. Despite the fact that the Peruvian government claims that it does not know anything about the method used by these companies, it is common-knowledge.[15]

The Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) provided a clear picture of this mechanism in their report The Laundering Machine. According to them, the biggest flaw in the Peruvian system for years has been the granting of logging permits: 'Concessionaires submit for approval lists that do not exist in the real world, and complicit authorities approve the extraction of this non-existent wood'.[16] These permits allow companies to transport almost all sorts of wood (both legal and illegal) out of the country. There are only two ways to stop illegal loggers: catching them in the act, or, in case of controlling a shipment, environmental prosecutors have to prove that the timber does not come from the place written on the permit (which is only possible by going to this place). With not more than a hundred environmental prosecutors in Peru, it is not surprising that both methods are far from effective.

The American-Peruvian Free Trade Agreement edit

The international attention levels increased again in 2007, when Peru and the United States (US) agreed on a new Free Trade agreement (FTA), which was implemented in 2009. According to the United States Trade Representative (USTR) the FTA included a number of binding commitments to ensure environmental protection, focussing on the Peruvian forestry sector.[17] Both parties agreed, amongst others, on the following measures: establishing an independent forestry oversight body, penalising those who committed logging crimes, creating new (and a better implementation of existing) laws, developing an anti-corruption plan and the US would provide monetary help.[18] Yet the results are ambiguous. On the one hand proponents claim that the forestry sector experienced significant improvements. Some (small) improvements are indeed visible. With the formation of the Supervisory Body of Forest and Wildlife Resources (OSINFOR),[19] the first promise was met. Next to this, US officials started training Peruvian law enforcement officers, although only on a minor scale.

On the other hand, the FTA caused a lot of social unrest as indigenous groups expected the FTA to 'give incentives for further and irreversible destruction of virgin rainforest'.[20] Local communities were not the only ones who criticised the agreement. In 2010 Public Citizen published an article, which stated that, despite all promises, 'environmental and labour conditions in Peru have deteriorated rapidly since the congressional passage of the FTA'.[21]

Notwithstanding who was right, the FTA has not prevented illegal timber trade between Peru and the US. At least 35% of the Peruvian timber exports to the US between 2008 and 2010, contained illegal wood.[22] This percentage however, only covers the trade in species that are regulated by the CITES. As only very few types of timber fall under this legislation, the real percentage of illegally harvested timber in Peru is assumed to be significantly higher.

Illegal gold mining edit

Illegal gold mining is rampant among the Madre de Dios Region of Peru, and is extremely harmful to the environment. Individuals are mining more gold each year because of the exponential price hike in this commodity – a 360% surge in the last ten years.[23] This price surge is driving many people who often are not able to attain jobs into the gold mining business because of the great financial gain. With the Interoceanic Highway available, "30,000 miners are estimated to be in operation without legal permits."[24]

More mercury is being imported into the country than ever before for mining purposes because of the price increase.[25] In mining, mercury is used to "amalgamate gold particles and then burned off – generally without even rudimentary technology".[26] The import of mercury for this purpose is shown through atmosphere and water pollution, directly impacting human, animal, and plant lives in the area and beyond[27] Much of this contamination is a result of lack of education by the people directly mining the gold in Peru.[citation needed] The harmful impacts of gold mining in Madre De Dios can be seen from space.[citation needed]

Illegal oil extraction edit

Oil extraction is a critical threat to the health of Peruvian Amazonia. While the land is potentially oil-rich, there are also many indigenous peoples living within the Amazon rainforest. The Camisea Gas Project on Lot 88 impacts the daily lives of indigenous residents.[28] Project Camisea has numerous economic benefits, including savings of up to $4 billion in energy costs, however the environmental and cultural payoffs are widespread.[29] In 2008, 150,000 square kilometers was set aside for oil drilling in the Western Amazon, and today that number has grown exponentially to over 730,000 square kilometers[30] Direct destruction and deforestation often comes from the creation of access roads for oil and gas extraction. These roads then become catalysts for other illegal industries such as logging and gold mining[31]

The plot of land where Camisea is located is on one of the most highly prioritized areas for biodiversity and conservation.[32] In addition, these oil extraction projects impact the country through: fish stock decline, deforestation, pollution, disease and death of indigenous people, and roads and migration.[33] The World Wildlife Federation concluded that the government has very little power over these oil sanctions, and there are countless loopholes in the policy, which makes stopping them in Peru extraction extremely difficult. Additionally, only seven percent of the oil blocs in the Western Amazon have been extracted, so there is potential for further illegal exploration in undiscovered areas.[34]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Pulgar Vidal, Javier: Geografía del Perú; Las Ocho Regiones Naturales del Perú. Edit. Universo S.A., Lima 1979. First Edition (his dissertation of 1940): Las ocho regiones naturales del Perú, Boletín del Museo de historia natural, „Javier Prado", n° especial, Lima, 1941, 17, pp. 145-161.
  2. ^ "Oh no! The page you are looking for has gone extinct".
  3. ^ was elaborated by Edwin Jesús Villacorta Monzón, with data obtained among many sources from years 1997, 2001 and 2006.
  4. ^ Dean, Bartholomew 2009 Urarina Society, Cosmology, and History in Peruvian Amazonia, Gainesville: University Press of Florida ISBN 978-0-8130-3378-5
  5. ^ "Atahualpa (Juan Santos) (1710?–c. 1756) | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com.
  6. ^ World Bank (2012) Justice for Forests. Improving Criminal Justice Efforts to Combat Illegal Logging. Washington, DC: Pereira Goncalves, P., Panjer, M., Greenberg, T. S. & Magrath, W.B.
  7. ^ Collins, D. (2014). Illegal loggers blamed for murder of Peru forest campaigner. [1]
  8. ^ Environmental Investigation Agency (2012). La Máquina Lavadora, p. 8
  9. ^ Environmental Investigation Agency (2012). La Máquina Lavadora, p. 20
  10. ^ Smith, J., Colan, V., Sabogal, C., & Snook, L. (2006). Why policy reforms fail to improve logging practices: The role of governance and norms in Peru. Forest Policy and Economics, 8(4), 466.
  11. ^ Environmental Investigation Agency (2012). La Máquina Lavadora, p. 20
  12. ^ Smith, J., Colan, V., Sabogal, C., & Snook, L. (2006). Why policy reforms fail to improve logging practices: The role of governance and norms in Peru. Forest Policy and Economics, 8(4), 463.
  13. ^ Naughton-Treves, L. Deforestation and carbon emissions at tropical frontiers: a case study from the Peruvian Amazon. World Development 32.1 (2004): 185
  14. ^ Environmental Investigation Agency (2012). La Máquina Lavadora, p. 6
  15. ^ Matalon, L. (2014). Building a Template for Sustainable Forestry. Revista: Harvard Review of Latin America, Peru 20-24.
  16. ^ Environmental Investigation Agency (2012). La Máquina Lavadora, p. 4
  17. ^ United States Trade Representative (2013). UNITED STATES – PERU TRADE PROMOTION AGREEMENT: STRENGTHENING FOREST SECTOR GOVERNANCE IN PERU. [2]
  18. ^ United States Trade Representative (2013). UNITED STATES – PERU TRADE PROMOTION AGREEMENT: STRENGTHENING FOREST SECTOR GOVERNANCE IN PERU. [3]
  19. ^ http://www.osinfor.gob.pe/osinfor/
  20. ^ Asociacíon Interétnica de Desarrollo de la Selva Peruanana (2007). Peru’s mahogany exports threaten survival of indigenous tribes and violate international environmental laws.[4]
  21. ^ Public Citizen (2010). A Year after Implementation of Peru Free Trade Agreement, U.S. and Peru Left with Broken Promises and No New Trade Model. Washington, DC: McArthur, T. & Tucker T.
  22. ^ Environmental Investigation Agency (2012). La Máquina Lavadora, p. 3
  23. ^ "Overview." Amazon Conservation Association, About,. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Feb. 2015.
  24. ^ "Overview." Amazon Conservation Association, About,. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Feb. 2015.
  25. ^ Swenson, Jennifer J. et al. “Gold Mining in the Peruvian Amazon: Global Prices, Deforestation, and Mercury Imports.” Ed. Guy J-P. Schumann. PLoS ONE 6.4 (2011): e18875. PMC. Web. 17 Feb. 2015.
  26. ^ "Overview." Amazon Conservation Association, About,. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Feb. 2015.
  27. ^ Swenson, Jennifer J. et al. "Gold Mining in the Peruvian Amazon: Global Prices, Deforestation, and Mercury Imports." Ed. Guy J-P. Schumann. PLoS ONE 6.4 (2011): e18875. PMC. Web. 17 Feb. 2015.
  28. ^ "Oil and Gas Extraction in the Amazon: Camisea." WWF -. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Feb. 2015.
  29. ^ "Oil and Gas Extraction in the Amazon: Camisea." WWF -. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Feb. 2015.
  30. ^ "The Amazon's Oil Boom: Concessions Cover a Chile-sized Bloc of Rainforest." Mongabay. N.p., 3 Feb. 2015. Web. 16 Mar. 2015.
  31. ^ "The Amazon's Oil Boom: Concessions Cover a Chile-sized Bloc of Rainforest." Mongabay. N.p., 3 Feb. 2015. Web. 16 Mar. 2015.
  32. ^ "Oil and Gas Extraction in the Amazon: Camisea." WWF -. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Feb. 2015.
  33. ^ "Oil and Gas Extraction in the Amazon: Camisea." WWF -. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Feb. 2015.
  34. ^ "The Amazon's Oil Boom: Concessions Cover a Chile-sized Bloc of Rainforest." Mongabay. N.p., 3 Feb. 2015. Web. 16 Mar. 2015.

External links edit

  • IIAP - Instituto de Investigaciones de la Amazonía Peruana (Peruvian Amazon Research Institution)
  • www.peru.travel Peruvian Tourism Board with information about Iquitos and Loreto (English).
  • Seasons in the Amazon and river levels
  • Peruvian Amazon Travel Advisor Iquitos tourist information (English).
  • Fundación Para el Desarrollo de la Selva-Universidad Nacional de San Martín
  • Peru Cultural Society - The Peruvian Amazon Jungle
  • Siamazonía - Sistema de Información de la Diversidad Biológica y Ambiental de la Amazonía Peruana (Peruvian Amazon Bio-Diversity Information System)
  • WWF in the Amazon rainforest

peruvian, amazonia, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, available. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Peruvian Amazonia Spanish Amazonia del Peru informally known locally as the Peruvian jungle Spanish selva peruana or just the jungle Spanish la selva is the area of the Amazon rainforest included within the country of Peru from east of the Andes to the borders with Ecuador Colombia Brazil and Bolivia This region comprises 60 of the country and is marked by a large degree of biodiversity Peru has the second largest portion of the Amazon rainforest after the Brazilian Amazon Amazon rainforest in Peru Contents 1 Extension 2 Ecoregions and climate 2 1 Lowland Jungle 2 2 Highland Jungle 3 Biodiversity 4 Demography 5 History 6 Illegal logging 6 1 Emergence of illegal industry 6 2 Illegal logging with permits 6 3 The American Peruvian Free Trade Agreement 7 Illegal gold mining 8 Illegal oil extraction 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksExtension editMost Peruvian territory is covered by dense forests on the east side of the Andes yet only 5 of Peruvians live in this area More than 60 of Peruvian territory is covered by the Amazon rainforest more than in any other country According to the Research Institute of the Peruvian Amazon Instituto de Investigaciones de la Amazonia Peruana IIAP the spatial delineation of the Peruvian Amazon is as follows Ecological criteria 782 880 55 km2 60 91 of Peruvian territory and approximately 11 05 of the entire Amazon jungle Hydrographic criteria or basin criteria 96 922 47 km2 37 421 97 sq mi 75 31 of Peruvian territory and approximately 16 13 of the whole Amazon basin Ecoregions and climate edit nbsp The Amazon rainforest in Manu National Park nbsp Peruvian researcher Tatiana Espinosa es next to the Dipteryx micrantha treeThe Peruvian Amazon is traditionally divided into two distinct ecoregions Lowland Jungle edit The lowland jungle in Spanish Selva Baja is also known as Omagua region Walla Anti Amazonian rainforest or Amazon basin This ecoregion is the largest of Peru standing between 80 and 1 000 meters above sea level It has very warm weather with an average temperature of 28 C high relative humidity over 75 and yearly rainfall of approximately 260 cm 100 in Its soils are very heterogeneous but almost all have river origins Because of high temperatures and high rainfall they are poor soils with few nutrients The jungle contains long and powerful rivers such as the Apurimac Mantaro Amazon Urubamba Ucayali Huallaga Maranon Putumayo Yavari Napo Pastaza Madre de Dios Manu Purus and Tigre The Apurimac River is the source of the Amazon River The Pacaya Samiria National Reserve the Allpahuayo Mishana National Reserve and the Tamshiyacu Tahuayo Regional Conservation Area are within the forest Highland Jungle edit The highland jungle in Spanish Selva Alta is also called Rupa Rupa region Andean jungle ceja de selva This ecoregion extends into the eastern foothills of the Andes between 1 000 and 3 800 m above the sea level The eastern slopes of the Andes are home to a great variety of fauna and flora because of the different altitudes and climates within the region Temperatures are warm in the lowlands and cooler in higher altitudes There are many endemic fauna because of the isolation caused by the rugged terrain of the area 1 Within the Amazon rainforest there are several other types of forest but they all have one characteristic in common abundant rains Over the course of a year a portion of tropical forest will receive between 1 500 and 3 000 mm of rain This creates the typical tropical atmosphere of a rainforest with an average temperature of around 24 C or more 2 Biodiversity editThe Peruvian Amazon jungle is one of the most biologically diverse areas on Earth As a nation Peru has the largest number of bird species in the world and the third largest number of mammals 44 of bird species and 63 of mammal species inhabit the Peruvian Amazon Peru also has a very high number of species of butterflies orchids and other organisms 3 Taxa Number of known species Percentage of speciesIn the world In Peru In the Peruvian Amazon Peru vs world Peruvian Amazon vs PeruAmphibians 5 125 403 262 8 65Birds 9 672 1 815 806 19 44Flowering plants 250 000 17 144 7 372 7 43Ferns Pteridophyta 10 000 1000 700 10 70Mammals 4 629 462 293 10 63Butterflies Lepidoptera 16 000 3 366 2 500 21 74Fish river fish 8 411 900 697 11 77Reptiles 7 855 395 180 5 46Demography edit nbsp Amazon River floating village neighborhood in Iquitos nbsp Mototaxis in PucallpaAlthough it is the largest region of Peru the Peruvian Amazon is the least populated It is home to approximately 5 of the country s population Many indigenous peoples such as the Aguaruna Cocama Cocamilla and the Urarina 4 inhabit the jungle some in relative isolation from the rest of the world The primary cities located in the Peruvian Amazon include Lowland jungle Iquitos with 500 000 inhabitants at 104 m Loreto region Pucallpa with 380 000 inhabitants at 154 m Ucayali region Yurimaguas with 140 000 inhabitants at 182 m Loreto region Puerto Maldonado with 104 000 inhabitants at 139 m Madre de Dios region Tarapoto with 181 000 inhabitants at 350 m San Martin region Jaen with 86 743 inhabitants at 729 m Cajamarca region Moyobamba with 77 000 inhabitants at 860 m San Martin region Bagua with 65 000 inh at 400 m Amazonas region Rioja with 60 000 inh at 848 m at San Martin region History editIn the 1730s Roman Catholic Franciscan missionaries established missions in the Gran Pajonal but the missions were destroyed in the 1740s by the Ashaninka under the leadership of Juan Santos Atahualpa Several Spanish military expeditions tried to suppress the rebellion but failed or were defeated 5 The rebellion destroyed the missionary enterprise and left the Gran Pajonal in Ashaninka control for 150 years although they suffered from periodic epidemics of European diseases and in the late 19th century from slave raids by businesses engaged in the gathering of rubber during the Amazon rubber boom Illegal logging editOver the last decades illegal logging has become a serious problem in the Peruvian Amazon In 2012 the World Bank estimated that 80 of Peru s timber exports are illegally harvested 6 This uncontrolled deforestation could negatively affect the habitats of indigenous tribes the Peruvian biodiversity and contribute to climate change Moreover illegal deforestation might lead to more violent crimes This has already been demonstrated on 1 September 2014 when four indigenous leaders were murdered including the famous environmental activist Edwin Chota These leaders were asking for governmental protection against illegal loggers after being threatened several times Partly due to this illegal loggers are being blamed for the assassination 7 Emergence of illegal industry edit In an attempt to support local incomes in the Amazon the Peruvian government granted non transferable contracts to some farmers to perform small scale logging activities Soon however big logging companies started paying individual loggers for the use of their contracts and established an illegal large scale logging industry 8 In 1992 the National Institute of Natural Resources INRENA was founded to guarantee a more sustainable use of national resources 9 Yet this institution has never been able to carry out its task due to several reasons First of all INRENA lacked sufficient resources compared with the magnitude of their responsibilities 10 Next to this corruption was a problem in several layers of the organisation 11 Moreover until recently INRENA was part of the Ministry of Agriculture 12 This suggests that INRENA was not completely independent it was housed in an institution that had to safeguard the interest of the agricultural sector which could be conflicting with INRENA s objective In 2000 Peru modified the Forestry and Wildlife Law in order to improve the logging sector 13 In the subsequent years however the situation in the Peruvian timber industry only deteriorated To some extent this can be explained by the fact that Brazil illegalised the exports of mahogany one of the most valuable and endangered types of wood in the world from 2001 on 14 This Brazilian ban is likely to have caused the increase in Peruvian mahogany exports Soon after the ban international institutions revealed their severe concerns about the state of the Peruvian timber industry In particular the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora CITES started paying extra attention to Peru as the trade in mahogany falls under CITES regulation Albeit the fact that from then on one needed special permits for harvesting and exporting any endangered species the forestry sector was still far from sustainable Illegal logging with permits edit Although it is understandable that illegal logging cannot be stopped easily in the Peruvian Amazons an inaccessible area bigger than Spain the illegal exportation of timber is supposed to be more difficult the shipments are huge and there are very few routes from the Amazons to the coast Nevertheless until now it has been relatively easy for companies to ship and export illegal timber Despite the fact that the Peruvian government claims that it does not know anything about the method used by these companies it is common knowledge 15 The Environmental Investigation Agency EIA provided a clear picture of this mechanism in their report The Laundering Machine According to them the biggest flaw in the Peruvian system for years has been the granting of logging permits Concessionaires submit for approval lists that do not exist in the real world and complicit authorities approve the extraction of this non existent wood 16 These permits allow companies to transport almost all sorts of wood both legal and illegal out of the country There are only two ways to stop illegal loggers catching them in the act or in case of controlling a shipment environmental prosecutors have to prove that the timber does not come from the place written on the permit which is only possible by going to this place With not more than a hundred environmental prosecutors in Peru it is not surprising that both methods are far from effective The American Peruvian Free Trade Agreement edit The international attention levels increased again in 2007 when Peru and the United States US agreed on a new Free Trade agreement FTA which was implemented in 2009 According to the United States Trade Representative USTR the FTA included a number of binding commitments to ensure environmental protection focussing on the Peruvian forestry sector 17 Both parties agreed amongst others on the following measures establishing an independent forestry oversight body penalising those who committed logging crimes creating new and a better implementation of existing laws developing an anti corruption plan and the US would provide monetary help 18 Yet the results are ambiguous On the one hand proponents claim that the forestry sector experienced significant improvements Some small improvements are indeed visible With the formation of the Supervisory Body of Forest and Wildlife Resources OSINFOR 19 the first promise was met Next to this US officials started training Peruvian law enforcement officers although only on a minor scale On the other hand the FTA caused a lot of social unrest as indigenous groups expected the FTA to give incentives for further and irreversible destruction of virgin rainforest 20 Local communities were not the only ones who criticised the agreement In 2010 Public Citizen published an article which stated that despite all promises environmental and labour conditions in Peru have deteriorated rapidly since the congressional passage of the FTA 21 Notwithstanding who was right the FTA has not prevented illegal timber trade between Peru and the US At least 35 of the Peruvian timber exports to the US between 2008 and 2010 contained illegal wood 22 This percentage however only covers the trade in species that are regulated by the CITES As only very few types of timber fall under this legislation the real percentage of illegally harvested timber in Peru is assumed to be significantly higher Illegal gold mining editIllegal gold mining is rampant among the Madre de Dios Region of Peru and is extremely harmful to the environment Individuals are mining more gold each year because of the exponential price hike in this commodity a 360 surge in the last ten years 23 This price surge is driving many people who often are not able to attain jobs into the gold mining business because of the great financial gain With the Interoceanic Highway available 30 000 miners are estimated to be in operation without legal permits 24 More mercury is being imported into the country than ever before for mining purposes because of the price increase 25 In mining mercury is used to amalgamate gold particles and then burned off generally without even rudimentary technology 26 The import of mercury for this purpose is shown through atmosphere and water pollution directly impacting human animal and plant lives in the area and beyond 27 Much of this contamination is a result of lack of education by the people directly mining the gold in Peru citation needed The harmful impacts of gold mining in Madre De Dios can be seen from space citation needed Illegal oil extraction editOil extraction is a critical threat to the health of Peruvian Amazonia While the land is potentially oil rich there are also many indigenous peoples living within the Amazon rainforest The Camisea Gas Project on Lot 88 impacts the daily lives of indigenous residents 28 Project Camisea has numerous economic benefits including savings of up to 4 billion in energy costs however the environmental and cultural payoffs are widespread 29 In 2008 150 000 square kilometers was set aside for oil drilling in the Western Amazon and today that number has grown exponentially to over 730 000 square kilometers 30 Direct destruction and deforestation often comes from the creation of access roads for oil and gas extraction These roads then become catalysts for other illegal industries such as logging and gold mining 31 The plot of land where Camisea is located is on one of the most highly prioritized areas for biodiversity and conservation 32 In addition these oil extraction projects impact the country through fish stock decline deforestation pollution disease and death of indigenous people and roads and migration 33 The World Wildlife Federation concluded that the government has very little power over these oil sanctions and there are countless loopholes in the policy which makes stopping them in Peru extraction extremely difficult Additionally only seven percent of the oil blocs in the Western Amazon have been extracted so there is potential for further illegal exploration in undiscovered areas 34 See also edit nbsp Environment portal nbsp Ecology portal2009 Peruvian political crisis List of Peruvian monkey speciesReferences edit Pulgar Vidal Javier Geografia del Peru Las Ocho Regiones Naturales del Peru Edit Universo S A Lima 1979 First Edition his dissertation of 1940 Las ocho regiones naturales del Peru Boletin del Museo de historia natural Javier Prado n especial Lima 1941 17 pp 145 161 Oh no The page you are looking for has gone extinct This table was elaborated by Edwin Jesus Villacorta Monzon with data obtained among many sources from years 1997 2001 and 2006 Dean Bartholomew 2009 Urarina Society Cosmology and History in Peruvian Amazonia Gainesville University Press of Florida ISBN 978 0 8130 3378 5 Atahualpa Juan Santos 1710 c 1756 Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com World Bank 2012 Justice for Forests Improving Criminal Justice Efforts to Combat Illegal Logging Washington DC Pereira Goncalves P Panjer M Greenberg T S amp Magrath W B Collins D 2014 Illegal loggers blamed for murder of Peru forest campaigner 1 Environmental Investigation Agency 2012 La Maquina Lavadora p 8 Environmental Investigation Agency 2012 La Maquina Lavadora p 20 Smith J Colan V Sabogal C amp Snook L 2006 Why policy reforms fail to improve logging practices The role of governance and norms in Peru Forest Policy and Economics 8 4 466 Environmental Investigation Agency 2012 La Maquina Lavadora p 20 Smith J Colan V Sabogal C amp Snook L 2006 Why policy reforms fail to improve logging practices The role of governance and norms in Peru Forest Policy and Economics 8 4 463 Naughton Treves L Deforestation and carbon emissions at tropical frontiers a case study from the Peruvian Amazon World Development 32 1 2004 185 Environmental Investigation Agency 2012 La Maquina Lavadora p 6 Matalon L 2014 Building a Template for Sustainable Forestry Revista Harvard Review of Latin America Peru 20 24 Environmental Investigation Agency 2012 La Maquina Lavadora p 4 United States Trade Representative 2013 UNITED STATES PERU TRADE PROMOTION AGREEMENT STRENGTHENING FOREST SECTOR GOVERNANCE IN PERU 2 United States Trade Representative 2013 UNITED STATES PERU TRADE PROMOTION AGREEMENT STRENGTHENING FOREST SECTOR GOVERNANCE IN PERU 3 http www osinfor gob pe osinfor Asociacion Interetnica de Desarrollo de la Selva Peruanana 2007 Peru s mahogany exports threaten survival of indigenous tribes and violate international environmental laws 4 Public Citizen 2010 A Year after Implementation of Peru Free Trade Agreement U S and Peru Left with Broken Promises and No New Trade Model Washington DC McArthur T amp Tucker T Environmental Investigation Agency 2012 La Maquina Lavadora p 3 Overview Amazon Conservation Association About N p n d Web 17 Feb 2015 Overview Amazon Conservation Association About N p n d Web 17 Feb 2015 Swenson Jennifer J et al Gold Mining in the Peruvian Amazon Global Prices Deforestation and Mercury Imports Ed Guy J P Schumann PLoS ONE 6 4 2011 e18875 PMC Web 17 Feb 2015 Overview Amazon Conservation Association About N p n d Web 17 Feb 2015 Swenson Jennifer J et al Gold Mining in the Peruvian Amazon Global Prices Deforestation and Mercury Imports Ed Guy J P Schumann PLoS ONE 6 4 2011 e18875 PMC Web 17 Feb 2015 Oil and Gas Extraction in the Amazon Camisea WWF N p n d Web 17 Feb 2015 Oil and Gas Extraction in the Amazon Camisea WWF N p n d Web 17 Feb 2015 The Amazon s Oil Boom Concessions Cover a Chile sized Bloc of Rainforest Mongabay N p 3 Feb 2015 Web 16 Mar 2015 The Amazon s Oil Boom Concessions Cover a Chile sized Bloc of Rainforest Mongabay N p 3 Feb 2015 Web 16 Mar 2015 Oil and Gas Extraction in the Amazon Camisea WWF N p n d Web 17 Feb 2015 Oil and Gas Extraction in the Amazon Camisea WWF N p n d Web 17 Feb 2015 The Amazon s Oil Boom Concessions Cover a Chile sized Bloc of Rainforest Mongabay N p 3 Feb 2015 Web 16 Mar 2015 External links edit nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Peruvian Amazon IIAP Instituto de Investigaciones de la Amazonia Peruana Peruvian Amazon Research Institution www peru travel Peruvian Tourism Board with information about Iquitos and Loreto English Seasons in the Amazon and river levels Peruvian Amazon Travel Advisor Iquitos tourist information English Fundacion Para el Desarrollo de la Selva Universidad Nacional de San Martin Peru Cultural Society The Peruvian Amazon Jungle Siamazonia Sistema de Informacion de la Diversidad Biologica y Ambiental de la Amazonia Peruana Peruvian Amazon Bio Diversity Information System WWF in the Amazon rainforest Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peruvian Amazonia amp oldid 1195308203, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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