The
text that follows is a PREPRINT.
Please cite as:
Fearnside, P.M. 2005.
Indigenous peoples as providers of environmental services in Amazonia: Warning
signs from Mato Grosso. pp. 187-198. In: A. Hall (ed.) Global Impact, Local Action: New Environmental Policy in Latin America, University of London, School of Advanced Studies,
Institute for the Study of the Americas, London, U.K. 321 pp.
ISBN
1-900039-56-7
Copyright:
University
of London, School of Advanced Studies, Institute for the Study of the Americas,
The
original publication is available from University of London, School of Advanced Studies,
Institute for the Study of the Americas, London, U.K.
Indigenous peoples as
providers of environmental services in Amazonia: Warning signs from Mato Grosso
Philip M.
Fearnside
Department
of Ecology
National
Institute for Research
in the Amazon (INPA)
Av. André Araújo, 2936
C.P.
478
69011-970
Manaus, Amazonas
BRAZIL
Fax:
+55-92-642-8909
Tel:
+55-92-643-1822
e-mail
pmfearn@inpa.gov.br
Forthcoming in: A. Hall (ed.) Global Impact,
Local Action: New Environmental Policy in Latin America. University of
London, Institute of Latin American Studies (ILAS), London, U.K.
27
June 2003
INTRODUCTION
Deforestation in Brazilian Amazonia is
currently advancing at a rate that alarms many because of its potential damage
to biodiversity and climate and to the indigenous peoples who depend on forest
for their cultural and physical survival (Fearnside, 2002a). Planned infrastructure projects would further
speed deforestation, logging and other forms of degradation in the coming
decades (Laurance et al., 2001;
Nepstad et al., 2001). The roles played by the forest in providing
environmental services, such as avoidance of global warming, maintenance of the
hydrological cycle and biodiversity, represent an opportunity to obtain
financial and political support for preventing forest loss (Fearnside,
1997a). Currently, the role of Amazonian
forest in the global carbon cycle is closest to providing the basis for
monetary flows (Fearnside; 1999a, 2001a,b).
The
July 2001 Bonn agreement rules out credit for avoided deforestation under the Kyoto Protocol’s “Clean Development Mechanism” during the
Protocol’s first commitment period (2008-2012), but inclusion of such
provisions could occur for 2013 onwards depending on negotiations to begin in 2005. Although the Convention on Biodiversity (CBD)
lags behind the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UN-FCCC)
as a potential source of financial flows, biodiversity concerns are sufficient
to suggest that, with time, this role may also advance towards providing
tangible rewards (Fearnside, 1999b).
So far, Amazonian indigenous peoples
receive almost no reward for the environmental services they provide by
maintaining forests. An exception is the
international funds that have been granted through the G-7 Pilot Programme to
Conserve the Brazilian Rainforest (PP-G7), which includes among its objectives
the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions from deforestation (Brazil, MMA,
2002). As is also true for
non-indigenous groups benefited by such funding sources, the recipients rarely
understand the link between the benefits they receive and the environmental
services of the forests they maintain, thus greatly reducing any strengthening
effect that the funding might have on their motivation to maintain the forest
(Fearnside, 2003a).
The Mato Grosso provides a unique
view of the benefits and vulnerabilities of indigenous reserves as suppliers of
environmental services. Mato Grosso is
notorious as a state where deforestation is most rapid, due to the proximity of
this state of sources of population migration and of markets for grains, beef
and timber. The advance of soybeans and
associated infrastructure has been especially strong in Mato Grosso due to
climate and location factors (Fearnside, 2001c, 2002b; Schneider et al., 2000). Mato Grosso, together with the adjacent areas
in southern Pará, has accounted for a substantial portion of the total forest loss
in Brazilian Amazonia, as well as loss of non-forest ecosystems such as cerrado (central Brazilian savanna)
(Fearnside, 1986, 1993). From 1999 to
2001, the Mato Grosso state environment agency (FEMA) undertook an
unprecedented licensing and control program to induce larger landholders to
comply with federal legislation on land clearing (Mato Grosso, FEMA,
2001). The pattern of clearing rate
changes over the 1996-2001 period in counties (municípios) with differing amounts of previous clearing and differing
levels of enforcement effort indicates that the program had a significant
effect on deforestation (Fearnside, 2003b).
If constant clearing at the 1999 rate is assumed as the baseline for
comparison, the decrease in clearing in Mato Grosso over the 2000-2001 period
avoided 43 million tons of carbon emission annually, equivalent to about half
of Brazil’s current emissions from fossil fuels (Fearnside and Barbosa, nd).
In October 2002 the election as
governor of Mato Grosso of Blairo Maggi, largest individual soybean
entrepreneur in the World, made continued effectiveness of the FEMA program
unlikely. The widespread belief among
large landholders that Maggi’s electoral victory was assured may explain a
generalized increase in clearing rates throughout Mato Grosso in 2002 (Figure
1). Regardless of the fate of the
licensing program in Mato Grosso under the Maggi administration, the response
of deforestation rates at the county level over the 1999-2001 period offers an
important demonstration that governments can control deforestation if they want
to (Fearnside, 2003b).
[Figure
1 here]
Controlling deforestation in private
properties by enforcing environmental legislation, as in the FEMA program, is
only one of several approaches to reducing forest loss. Establishment and protection of various kinds
of parks and reserves is another strategy.
Protected areas potentially provide more assurance that forest will be
maintained over the long term, making them particularly important for
biodiversity (as opposed to carbon).
Different underlying conceptions of the importance of time, which
affects the relative importance of short-term versus long-term conservation, is
a critical difference between the global warming mitigation and biodiversity
conservation (Fearnside, 2002c,d; Fearnside et
al., 2000). The location of higher
biomass forests far from current deforestation frontiers and of threatened
areas with high biodiversity near the frontiers also affects these priorities
(Fearnside and Ferraz, 1995), as does the differing costs of forest protection
and differing possible bases of comparison used in calculating environmental
benefits (Fearnside, 1999a). Indigenous
areas represent the most important category of protected and “semi-protected”
areas, despite their not being considered “conservation units” (Fearnside and
Ferraz, 1995; Ferreira et al., 2001;
ISA, 1999).
THE ROLE OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
Indigenous reserves have a great
potential role in avoiding deforestation because they cover about 20% of Brazil’s
Amazon region, their forests are, on average, much better conserved than those
outside of reserves and protected areas, and the indigenous populations
actively defend their areas against invasion.
Although indigenous peoples have had a much better record of maintaining
natural vegetation than have their non-indigenous counterparts, the data from
Mato Grosso indicate that indigenous areas are not an automatic guarantee that
clearings will be avoided.
The 2001 imagery interpreted by FEMA
reveals large clearings in native vegetation (forest, “transition” and cerrado) appearing in several indigenous
reserves in Mato Grosso (Table 1 and Figure 2).
The Maraiwatsede reserve (Reserve No. 21 in Table 1 and Figure 2) had
over 6000 ha cleared in a single two-year biennium (2000-2001), including two
clearings of about 1800 ha each. In the
Bakairi reserve (Reserve No. 5), approximately 6000 ha cleared in
2000-2001. This was in the form of large
clearings of the type produced by large ranchers rather than small
farmers. Several of the 56 reserves
listed in Table 1 have very high clearing rates, expressed as a percentage of
the reserve area cleared in a single biennium (2000-2001). It should be emphasized that most reserves
have much less clearing. The most rapidly
cleared reserve (Baikairi: Reserve No. 5) lost 11.3% of its area in a single
biennium, even more than the county with a similar record: Ipiranga do Norte with 8.4%. Other reserves with dramatic deforestation
surges in 2000-2001 were Irantxe (Reserve No. 15) with 6.1% cleared in the
period, Juininha (Reserve No. 18) with 5.1%, Maraiwatsede (Reserve No.
21) with 4.0% Parecis (Reserve No. 29) with 3.6% and Perigara (Reserve No. 33) with 5.2%.
[Table
1 here]
[Figure
2 here]
In addition to clearing, logging is
an important source of disturbance in indigenous areas. The Cinta Larga tribe’s Roosevelt reserve
near the border with Rondônia (Reserve No.
37 in Figure 2) a large logging scar appeared on the 2001 imagery,
occupying the entire southwestern portion of the reserve.
DISCUSSION
Purists in indigenous
protection sometimes assert that indigenous peoples and their lands should be
protected solely on the basis of human rights, rather than on the basis of any
utilitarian benefits they provide to the rest of the World. The fear is raised that, if the utilitarian
benefits a group provides were perceived to have declined in importance, or if
the value of converting the land to other uses were to be seen as more
profitable, then the indigenous groups would be vulnerable if utilitarianism
had become the rationale for their maintenance.
However, it is important to realize that human rights and utilitarian
benefits are not mutually exclusive sources of motivation for support. Human rights concerns set a lower limit to
support, but recognition of their importance should not serve as justification
for foregoing the potentially much larger values implied by environmental
services.
While some indigenous
peoples inhabit desolate or degraded areas with little biodiversity, biomass
carbon stocks and other features that are valued for their environmental roles,
those who inhabit tropical rain forest have much to gain from tapping the value
of environmental services. Furthermore,
the magnitude of the resources is potentially much greater than can be expected
from other options that are realistically available to these people, including
subsidies based on human rights concerns.
Prior to the March 2001 decision of US president George W. Bush to
withdraw from negotiations over the Kyoto Protocol’s 2008-2012 first commitment
period, carbon markets were expected to total over US$ 15 billion annually by
2010. While the US withdrawal greatly
decreases this expectation for the first commitment period, and the July 2001
Bonn agreement rules out tropical forests altogether for that commitment
period, markets from 2013 onwards could expand considerably above the previous
expectations for 2008-2012. Even a tiny
fraction of these funds directed to indigenous peoples would eclipse other
likely revenue sources.
From the perspective of
the interests of the indigenous peoples, the sustainable nature of forest
maintenance, especially as compared with non-forested uses such as cattle or soybeans,
together with the compatibility of this use with traditional indigenous
lifestyles, give this option tremendous advantages. Brazil’s indigenous peoples
support the inclusion of forest maintenance for carbon credit under the Kyoto
Protocol’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM): the Coordination of Indigenous
Peoples of Brazilian Amazonia (COIAB) signed a statement of Brazilian
non-governmental organizations calling for such a provision in the CDM (“Manifestação ...”, 2000), and has promoted
a series of events and discussions of the issue in the region. It should be noted that no Brazilian
indigenous peoples were represented in the Indigenous Peoples’ Forum on Climate
Change (an international association of indigenous groups, led by Southeast
Asia) in its adoption of a contrary position (Indigenous Peoples’ Forum on
Climate Change, 2000a,b).
From the point of view of
biodiversity conservation, the question of whether funds should be devoted to
totally protected areas (i.e., areas without people) or to various forms of
inhabited and/or managed areas, is a matter of continuing debate (see
collections of views by Kramer et al.,
1997 and Brandon et al., 1998). At one end of a spectrum, the future is seen
as an inexorable march towards environmental degradation, with inhabited
reserves only slightly postponing the time when these areas will arrive at
their endpoint of virtually complete desolation (e.g., Terborgh, 1999). The
opposing view sees creation of large areas under total protection as politically
unviable, as tending to cause injustices for traditional populations already
living in the areas selected, and as ultimately offering less protection for
nature because they lack the popular support of local inhabitants who can
defend the forests from invaders more effectively than government-paid guards
(Schwartzman et al., 2000a; see
critiques by Terborgh, 2000 and by Redford and Sanderson, 2000 and reply by
Schwartzman et al., 2000b). In Amazonian forests outside of Brazil, indigenous
peoples have been important defenders of forest in many locations (e.g., Van de
Hammen, 2003 in Colombia), while adopting the destructive practices of
non-indigenous settlers in others (e.g., Rudel and Horowitz, 1993 in Ecuador). Although hunting and other activities by
traditional peoples can reduce biodiversity as compared to uninhabited forest,
the convergence of many objectives between those seeking to secure the land
rights of traditional peoples and those primarily concerned with biodiversity
conservation offers great scope for alliances with gains for both interest
groups (Redford and Stearman, 1993).
From the point of view
of conservation, much better results can be achieved by using financial
resources to pay directly for environmental services provided, rather than
subsidizing conservation indirectly by promoting ecotourism, agroforestry,
sustainable forest management and other uses that are environmentally-friendly
as compared to presumed alternatives (Ferraro and Kiss, 2002). Essentially, “you get what you pay for”, and
the best way to conserve biodiversity, carbon stocks, and other forest values
is to pay for these functions directly.
Credible monitoring arrangements would be necessarily be a part of any
system for direct-payments for environmental services (Fearnside, 1997b).
Negotiation with indigenous peoples
is a crucial area for Amazonian conservation policy that has hardly begun. Indigenous lands represent much greater areas
of natural ecosystems than do all of the types of conservation units combined,
and the future fate of indigenous lands will therefore be the dominant factor
in the ultimate fate of these ecosystems. So far, indigenous peoples have had a
much better record of maintaining the natural ecosystems around them than have
other populations in Amazonia. However, it is important to realize that
indigenous peoples are not inherently conservationist, as is sometimes assumed,
and that they can be expected to respond to the same economic stimuli that
induce other actors to destroy and degrade forests. Indigenous areas are already a major source
of illegally logged timber from Amazonia (Cotton and Romine, 1999).
Logging and clearing in indigenous
areas not only sacrifice tropical forest but also damage what is perhaps the
greatest asset of indigenous peoples for securing sustainable revenues in the
future: the credibility of these peoples as reliable forest guardians. Opting for short-term gains from
environmental destruction would be a
great error from the point of view of the well-being of the indigenous groups,
in addition to its impact on global environmental concerns such as biodiversity
and climate. It is precisely the ability
of indigenous peoples to defend and maintain their forests that gives them an
as-yet unremunerated role in providing environmental services (Fearnside,
1997a). In order to chart their future,
they need to see that their conservationist role is valuable and is also the
source of their support.
To date, indigenous
peoples have been receiving no direct benefit from their environmental role as
maintainers of forest. This is also the
case for non-indigenous Amazonians. Were
environmental services to become a significant source of financial flows, the
economics of forest maintenance would be radically changed in favor of
maintaining these areas (Fearnside, 1997a).
The increasing losses of forests within indigenous areas is an
indication of the urgency of achieving progress on mechanisms to provide compensation
for environmental services.
CONCLUSIONS
Indigenous areas have
great potential importance for conservation of biodiversity and for maintenance
of the climate stabilization functions of tropical forest. Indigenous peoples
have demonstrated much better ability to maintain forest than have
non-indigenous groups. Capturing the
value of these environmental services represents a vital opportunity to the
indigenous peoples. Data from the state
of Mato Grosso, while showing that indigenous reserves reserve mostly intact
(2.7% of original vegetation lost by 2001), the rate of clearing in some
reserves is alarmingly high: at the extreme, 11.3% of one reserve was cleared
in a single two-year period. Several
clearings of over 1500 ha appeared in reserves in 2001, indicating that some
groups are allowing outside farmers to exploit their land (for a fee). The presumption that indigenous peoples are
inherently environmentalist is flawed, and the events in Mato Grosso underline
the importance of speedy integration of environmental services into the
economies of the reserves and of the World.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I thank the Fundação
Estadual do Meio Ambiente do Mato Grosso (FEMA-MT) for allowing me to accompany
them in the field and both FEMA-MT and Tecnomapas, Ltda. for their information
and patience. The Natural Resources Subprogram of the Pilot Program to Conserve
the Brazilian Rainforest (PPG7-SPRN), in the Ministry of the Environment’s
Secretariat for Coordination of Amazonia (MMA-SCA) provided travel
support. The author’s work is supported
by the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development
(CNPq)(Proc. 470765/01-1).
LITERATURE CITED
Brazil, MMA (Ministério do Meio Ambiente) (2002) Programa Piloto para Proteção das Florestas Tropicais do Brasil--PPG – 7. http://www.mma.gov.br/port/sca/fazemos/ppg7/apresent.html. (Brasília, DF, Brazil: MMA).
K. Brandon, K. Redford and S.
Sanderson (eds.) (1998) Parks in Peril:
People, Politics and Protected Areas. (Covelo, California, U.S.A.: Island
Press).
C. Cotton and T. Romine (1999) Facing destruction: A
Greenpeace briefing on the timber industry in the Brazilian Amazon. (Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Greenpeace
International).
P.M. Fearnside, ‘Spatial Concentration of
Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon,’ Ambio,
vol. 15, no. 2 (1986), pp. 72‑79.
P.M. Fearnside, ‘Deforestation in Brazilian
Amazonia: The effect of population and land tenure,’ Ambio, vol. 22, no. 8 (1993), pp. 537-545.
P.M. Fearnside,
‘Environmental services as a strategy for sustainable development in rural
Amazonia,’ Ecological Economics, vol.
20 (1997a), pp. 53-70.
P.M. Fearnside,
‘Monitoring needs to transform Amazonian forest maintenance into a global warming
mitigation option,’ Mitigation and
Adaptation Strategies for Global Change, vol. 2, nos. 2-3 (1997b), pp.
285-302.
P.M.
Fearnside, ‘Forests and global warming mitigation in Brazil: Opportunities in
the Brazilian forest sector for responses to global warming under the ‘Clean
Development Mechanism’,’ Biomass and
Bioenergy, vol. 16 (1999a), pp. 171-189.
P.M. Fearnside, ‘Biodiversity as an
environmental service in Brazil's Amazonian forests: Risks, value and
conservation,’ Environmental Conservation,
vol. 26 (1999b), pp. 305-321.
P.M.
Fearnside, ‘The potential of Brazil's
forest sector for mitigating global warming under the Kyoto Protocol,’ Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for
Global Change, vol. 6, nos. 3-4 (2001a), pp. 355-372.
P.M. Fearnside, ‘Saving tropical forests as a global warming
countermeasure: An issue that divides the environmental movement,’ Ecological Economics, vol. 39 (2001b), pp.
167-184.
P.M. Fearnside, ‘Soybean cultivation as a threat to the
environment in Brazil,’ Environmental
Conservation, vol. 28 (2001c), pp. 23-38.
P.M.
Fearnside, (2002a) ‘Amazonia, Deforestation of,’ in A.S. Goudie and D.J. Cuff
(eds.), Encyclopedia of Global Change:
Environmental Change and Human Society, Vol. I. (New York, U.S.A.: Oxford
University Press), pp. 31-38.
P.M. Fearnside, ‘Avança
Brasil: Environmental and social consequences of Brazil’s planned infrastucture
in Amazonia,’ Environmental Management, vol. 30, no. 6 (2002b), pp. 748-763.
P.M. Fearnside, ‘Time preference in global warming calculations: A
proposal for a unified index,’ Ecological
Economics, vol. 41, no. 1 (2002c), pp. 21-31.
P.M. Fearnside, ‘Why a 100-year time horizon should be
used for global warming mitigation calculations,’ Mitigation
and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change, vol. 7, no. 1 (2002c), pp.
19-30.
P.M. Fearnside,
‘Conservation policy in Brazilian Amazonia: Understanding the dilemmas,’ World Development, vol. 31 (2003a), pp.
757-779.
P.M. Fearnside, ‘Deforestation control in Mato
Grosso: A new model for slowing the loss of Brazil’s Amazon forest,’ Ambio, vol. 32, no. 5, (2003b), pp.
343-345.
P.M. Fearnside and R.I. Barbosa, ‘Avoided
deforestation in Amazonia as a global warming mitigation measure: the case of
Mato Grosso,’ World Resources Review (nd). (in press)
P.M.
Fearnside and J. Ferraz, ‘A conservation gap analysis of Brazil's Amazonian
vegetation,’ Conservation Biology,
vol. 9, no. 5 (1995), pp. 1134-1147.
P.M. Fearnside, D.A. Lashof and P.
Moura-Costa. ‘Accounting for time in mitigating global warming through land-use
change and forestry,’ Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for
Global Change, vol. 5, no. 3 (2000), pp. 239-270.
P.
Ferraro and A. Kiss, ‘Direct payments to conserve biodiversity,’ Science, vol. 298 (2002), pp. 1718-1719.
L.V. Ferreira, R.L. de Sá, R. Buschbacher, G. Batmanian, J.M.C. da Silva, M.B. Arruda, E. Moretti, L.F.S.N. de Sá, J. Falcomer and M.I. Bampi (2001) ‘Identificação de áreas prioritárias para a conservação de biodiversidade por meio da representatividade das unidades de conservação e tipos de vegetação nas ecorregiões da Amazônia brasileira,’ in A. Veríssimo, A. Moreira, D. Sawyer, I. dos Santos, L.P. Pinto and J.P.R. Capobianco (eds.), Biodiversidade na Amazônia Brasileira: Avaliação e Ações Prioritárias para a Conservação, Uso Sustentável e Repartição de Benefícios. (São Paulo, SP, Brazil: Instituto Socioambiental & Estação Liberdade). pp. 268-286.
Indigenous Peoples’ Forum on Climate Change
(2000a) Declaration of the First International Forum of Indigenous Peoples on
Climate Change, Lyon, France, September 4-6, 2000. Indigenous Peoples’ Forum on
Climate Change. (available from:
http://www.yvwiiusdinvnohii.net/Articles2000/IFOIP000913Declaration.htm#English).
Indigenous Peoples’ Forum on Climate Change (2000b)
Declaration of Indigenous Peoples on Climate Change, The Hague, November 11-12,
2000. Indigenous Peoples’ Forum on Climate Change. (available from:
http://www.klimabuendnis.org/kbhome/cop6_decl.htm).
ISA (Instituto Socioambiental), IMAZON (Instituto do Homem e do Meio
Ambiente da Amazônia), IPAM (Instituto de Pesquisa Ambiental da Amazônia), ISPN
(Instituto Sociedade, População e Natureza), GTA (Grupo de Trabalho Amazônico)
and CI (Conservation International) (1999) Seminário
Consulta de Macapá 99: Avaliação e identificação das ações prioritárias para a
conservação, utilização sustentável e repartição dos benefícios da
biodiversidade da Amazônia. (http://www.isa.org.br/bio/index.htm). (São Paulo, SP, Brazil: ISA).
R.
Kramer, C. van Schaik and J. Johnson, (eds.) (1997) Last Stand:
Protected Areas and the Defense of Tropical Biodiversity. (Oxford, UK:
Oxford University Press).
W.F. Laurance, M.A. Cochrane, S.
Bergen, P.M. Fearnside, P. Delamônica, C. Barber, S. D’Angelo and T. Fernandes,
‘The Future of the Brazilian Amazon,’ Science,
vol. 291 (2001), pp. 438-439.
“Manifestação da sociedade civil brasileira sobre as relações entre florestas e mudanças climáticas e as expectativas para a COP-6, Belém, 24 de outubro de 2000” (2000) (Belém, Pará, Brazil: Instituto de Pesquisa Ambiental da Amazônia [IPAM]), (available at http://www.ipam.org.br/polamb/manbelem.htm.).
Mato Grosso, Fundação Estadual do Meio Ambiente (FEMA) (2001) Environmental Control System on Rural
Properties in Mato Grosso. (Cuiabá, Mato Grosso, Brazil: FEMA).
Nepstad, D.C., G.
Carvalho, A.C. Barros, A. Alencar, J.P. Capobianco, J. Bishop, P. Moutinho, P.
Lefebvre, U.L. Silva Jr. and E. Prins, ‘Road paving, fire regime feedbacks, and
the future of Amazon forests,’ Forest
Ecology and Management, vol. 154, no. 3 (2001), pp. 395-407.
K.H. Redford and S.E. Sanderson,
‘Extracting humans from nature,’ Conservation
Biology, vol. 14 (2000), pp. 1362-1364.
K.H. Redford and
A.M. Stearman, ‘Forest-dwelling native Amazonians and the conservation of
biodiversity: Interests in common or in collision?,’ Conservation Biology, vol. 7 (1993), pp. 248-255.
T.K. Rudel and B.
Horowitz (1993) Tropical Deforestation:
Small Farmers and Land Clearing in the Ecuadorian Amazon. (New York, NY,
U.S.A.: Columbia University Press).
R.R.
Schneider, E. Arima, A. Veríssimo, P. Barreto and C. Souza Junior (2000) Amazônia Sustentável: Limitantes e
Oportunidades para o Desenvolvimento Rural. (Brasília, DF, Brazil: International Bank for Reconstruction and Development -World Bank and Belém, Pará, Brazil: Instituto para o Homem e o Meio Ambiente na
Amazônia-IMAZON).
S. Schwartzman, A. Moreira and D.
Nepstad, ‘Rethinking tropical forest conservation: Perils in parks,’ Conservation Biology, vol. 14 (2000a), pp. 1351-l357.
S. Schwartzman, A. Moreira and D. Nepstad, ‘Arguing
tropical forest conservation: People versus parks,’ Conservation
Biology,
vol. 14 (2000b), pp. 1370-l374.
J. Terborgh (1999) Requiem for Nature. (Washington, DC, U.S.A.: Island Press).
J. Terborgh, ‘The fate of tropical forests: A
matter of stewardship,’ Conservation
Biology, vol. 14 (2000), pp. 1358-1361.
M.C. van der Hammen (2003) The Indigenous Resguardos of Colombia: Their
Contribution to Conservation and Sustainable Forest Use. (Amsterdam, The
Netherlands: Netherlands Committee for IUCN).
FIGURE LEGENDS
Figure 1 – Clearing of forest,
transition and cerrado in Mato
Grosso. At least a part of the decline
from 1999 to 2001 can be attributed to the licensing and control
programme. The upsurge in 2002 may be
partly explained by expectation of a change of governor at the end of that
year, which, in fact, occurred.
Figure 2 – Principal indigenous areas in Mato
Grosso. Numbers correspond to the
reserves in Table 1.
Table 1: Clearing in Indigenous Areas in Mato Grosso(a) |
||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reserve number |
Indigenous Area |
Area of reserve |
Clearing in the 2000-2001 biennium |
Cumulative total by
2001 |
||||
|
|
(ha) |
|
(ha) |
(%) |
(ha) |
(%) |
|
1 |
Apiaka-Kaiabi |
109,245 |
|
219 |
0.20% |
2,444 |
2.24% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2 |
Arara
do Rio Branco |
114,842 |
|
48 |
0.04% |
390 |
0.34% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
3 |
Areões |
218,515 |
|
462 |
0.21% |
1,132 |
0.52% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4 |
Areões
Ii |
16,650 |
|
6 |
0.04% |
971 |
5.83% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4 |
Aripunã |
750,649 |
|
439 |
0.06% |
1,961 |
0.26% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5 |
Bakairi |
61,405 |
|
6,922 |
11.27% |
13,190 |
21.48% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
6 |
Batovi |
5,130 |
|
0 |
0.00% |
109 |
2.12% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
7 |
Capoto/Jarina |
634,915 |
|
127 |
0.02% |
3,243 |
0.51% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
8 |
Chão
Preto |
8,060 |
|
8 |
0.10% |
1,857 |
23.04% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
9 |
Enawenê-Nawê |
542,089 |
|
0 |
0.00% |
0 |
0.00% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
10 |
Erikbaktsa |
79,936 |
|
74 |
0.09% |
|
0.00% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
11 |
Escondido |
169,139 |
|
0 |
0.00% |
27 |
0.02% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
12 |
Estação
Parecis |
3,620 |
|
0 |
0.00% |
2,852 |
78.77% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
13 |
Estivadinho |
2,032 |
|
0 |
0.00% |
430 |
21.14% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
14 |
Figueiras |
9,859 |
|
0 |
0.00% |
622 |
6.31% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
15 |
Irantxe |
45,556 |
|
2,796 |
6.14% |
5,115 |
11.23% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
16 |
Japuira |
152,510 |
|
262 |
0.17% |
5,899 |
3.87% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
17 |
Jarudore |
4,706 |
|
10 |
0.22% |
3,802 |
80.79% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
18 |
Juininha |
70,538 |
|
3,611 |
5.12% |
19,965 |
28.30% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
19 |
Kayabi |
466,434 |
* |
1,520 |
0.33% |
3,861 |
0.83% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
20 |
Lagoa
dos Brincos |
1,845 |
|
0 |
0.00% |
0 |
0.00% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
21 |
Maraiwatsede |
168,000 |
|
6,645 |
3.96% |
61,305 |
36.49% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
22 |
Marechal
Rondon |
98,500 |
|
2,119 |
2.15% |
27,300 |
27.72% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
23 |
Mekragnoti |
142,853 |
* |
0 |
0.00% |
6 |
0.00% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
24 |
Menku |
47,094 |
|
45 |
0.10% |
427 |
0.91% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
25 |
Merure |
82,301 |
|
156 |
0.19% |
3,718 |
4.52% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
26 |
Nambikwara |
1,011,961 |
|
4,824 |
0.48% |
7,268 |
0.72% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
27 |
Panará |
132,593 |
* |
222 |
0.17% |
4,476 |
3.38% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
28 |
Parabubure |
224,447 |
|
120 |
0.05% |
28,918 |
12.88% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
29 |
Parecis |
563,587 |
|
20,392 |
3.62% |
60,449 |
10.73% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
30 |
Parque
Indígena Aripuanã |
1,010,736 |
* |
37 |
0.00% |
10,893 |
1.08% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
31 |
Parque
Nacional do Xingu |
2,642,004 |
|
0 |
0.00% |
0 |
0.00% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
32 |
Pequizal |
9,887 |
|
0 |
0.00% |
968 |
9.79% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
33 |
Perigara |
10,740 |
|
555 |
5.17% |
1,602 |
14.92% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
34 |
Pimentel
Barbosa |
328,966 |
|
0 |
0.00% |
40,901 |
12.43% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
35 |
Pirines
de Souza |
29,580 |
|
20 |
0.07% |
766 |
2.59% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
36 |
Rio
Formoso |
19,749 |
|
34 |
0.17% |
1,232 |
6.24% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
37 |
Roosevelt |
85,433 |
* |
0 |
0.00% |
450 |
0.53% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
38 |
Sangradouro/Volta
Grande |
100,280 |
|
27 |
0.03% |
3,253 |
3.24% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
39 |
Santana |
35,471 |
|
19 |
0.05% |
929 |
2.62% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
40 |
São
Domingos |
5,705 |
|
86 |
1.51% |
2,714 |
47.57% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
41 |
São
Marcos |
168,478 |
|
10 |
0.01% |
1,972 |
1.17% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
42 |
Sararé |
67,420 |
|
17 |
0.03% |
4,232 |
6.28% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
43 |
Serra
Morena |
148,300 |
|
318 |
0.21% |
951 |
0.64% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
44 |
Sete
de Setembro |
145,975 |
* |
13 |
0.01% |
2,331 |
1.60% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
45 |
Tadarimana |
9,785 |
|
0 |
0.00% |
980 |
10.02% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
46 |
Taihantesu |
5,362 |
|
0 |
0.00% |
369 |
6.88% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
47 |
Tapirapé
/ Karajá |
66,166 |
|
16 |
0.02% |
2,492 |
3.77% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
47 |
Tereza
Cristina |
25,694 |
|
0 |
0.00% |
2,257 |
8.79% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
48 |
Tirecatinga |
130,575 |
|
150 |
0.12% |
536 |
0.41% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
49 |
Ubawawe |
51,900 |
|
4 |
0.01% |
8,760 |
16.88% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
50 |
Umutina |
28,120 |
|
3 |
0.01% |
5,617 |
19.98% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
51 |
Urubu
Branco |
157,000 |
|
1,727 |
1.10% |
1,727 |
1.10% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
52 |
Utiariti |
412,304 |
|
0 |
0.00% |
934 |
0.23% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
53 |
Vale
do Guaporé |
242,593 |
|
256 |
0.11% |
7,195 |
2.97% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
54 |
Wawi |
149,900 |
|
329 |
0.22% |
8,392 |
5.60% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
55 |
Xingú |
2,639,306 |
|
2,035 |
0.08% |
12,973 |
0.49% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
56 |
Zoró |
355,790 |
|
0 |
0.00% |
12,066 |
3.39% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL |
|
14,666,443 |
|
56,686 |
0.39% |
395,366 |
2.70% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(a) Data from
FEMA. Clearing includes cutting of all
classes of native vegetation: forest, “transition” (forest-cerrrado ecotones), and cerrado. * Areas
calculated by FEMA. All other areas
are from decree creating the reserve. |
||||||||