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Deep in the Pantanal, the world’s largest wetland, where nature fights the intensifying impacts of climate change, women are also battling to make a living on their own, exploring what they’ve ...
The Pantanal sits at the southern edge of the Amazon rainforest — which was also devastated by unprecedented fires in 2019 — stretching from Brazil into Bolivia and Paraguay across more than ...
In Brazil’s Pantanal region, home to the world’s largest tropical wetland, a crew of firefighters layer on extra protective gear in the triple-digit heat before heading into the forest to ...
The Pantanal, which sprawls across Brazil into Bolivia and Paraguay, is bigger than England at more than 42 million acres.It's one of the world's most biologically rich environments and "a real ...
The world's largest wetland, Brazil’s Pantanal is home to around 5,000 jaguars and is the best place on earth to see the elusive cats in the wild. And at around 70,000sq miles, the UNESCO world ...
I stayed in Brazil's Pantanal, where you can see the world's biggest jaguars and largest flying parrots. Simon Barnes stayed at Caiman, a lodge in the wildlife haven of the Pantanal; READ MORE ...
Brazil’s Pantanal wetlands have the capacity to generate 15.8 million REDD+ and 738,000 afforestation, reforestation and revegetation (ARR) carbon credits annually, according to a report published ...
Brazil is still weeks away from its traditional fire season, but hundreds of blazes, fanned by searing temperatures, are already laying waste to the Pantanal, the world’s largest tropical ...
The Pantanal, the largest wetland on the planet and a paradise for jaguars and caimans, extends over 200,000 square kilometers in South America, three-quarters of it in Brazil. Images from the ...
Reuters. A female jaguar named Ti, by the NGO Jaguar ID, bites an alligator at Encontro das Aguas State Park, in the Pantanal, the largest wetland in the world, in Pocone, Mato Grosso, Brazil ...
Brazil saw a 32.4% decline in deforestation, ... The Atlantic forest remained virtually stable -a 2% increase- while the Pantanal, Pampa, Cerrado, Amazon, and Caatinga all saw decreases.