- Title: Mangrove in Brazil is reborn amongst the trash
- Date: 4th June 2022
- Summary: GRAMACHO, RIO DE JANEIRO (JUNE 1, 2022) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE) (Portuguese) BIOLOGIST, MARIO MOSCATELLI, SAYING: “Where there used to be waste and degradation now, we have a mangrove. After 25 years of work, we have developed a 130-hectare mangrove - 1,300,000 square meters of mangrove - where there used to be the Gramacho landfill, one of the most degraded areas in Guanabara Bay.†VARIOUS OF PLANTS GROWING IN MANGROVE FISH SWIMMING IN MANGROVE VARIOUS OF PLANTS IN MANGROVE CONTRAST BETWEEN PROTECTED MANGROVE AND TRASH BROUGHT BY TIDES IN THE SAME AREA VARIOUS OF WASTE ITEMS BROUGHT BY TIDES (SOUNDBITE) (Portuguese) BIOLOGIST, MARIO MOSCATELLI, SAYING: “For the last three months, we assess 1,500 tons (3,306,934 lbs) of rubbish have been dumped to the bay and they will probably never be removed. This is our big problem, and it takes a lot of time and resources to restore mangroves. If we don’t preserve these areas, it’s impossible to have them restored.†RUBBISH BROUGHT BY TIDES NEAR MANGROVE VARIOUS OF MANGROVE RESTORATION PROJECT WORKERS REMOVING ITEMS BROUGHT BY TIDES WORKER DISENTANGLING TRASH IN A CRAB WORKER RELEASING CRAB TO MANGROVE CRAB MOVING AROUND MANGROVE
- Embargoed: 18th June 2022 14:03
- Keywords: BRAZIL CLIMATE CHANGE LANDFILL MANGROVE RESTORATION RIO DE JANEIRO SUSTAINABILITY
- Location: GRAMACHO, RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL
- City: GRAMACHO, RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL
- Country: Brazil
- Topics: Pollution,Environment,South America / Central America
- Reuters ID: LVA003242502062022RP1
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: In Brazil, a mangrove bursting with life where a landfill that received 7,500 tons of waste per day used to exist.
In 1997, biologist Mario Moscatelli set to restore this mangrove-turned-into-landfill.
Although mangroves were legally protected since 1965, in 1975 the growing urbanization of Rio de Janeiro took 1,300 hectares of the mangrove to dump waste generated in the capital city's metropolitan area, the Gramcho region.
"From an environmental and technical perspective, it doesn't make sense – it is not a suitable place, not only for environmental reasons but also for legal ones. But that was back in the ’70s and it happened this way," Moscatelli said.
After decades of hard work, the Gramacho mangrove, near Rio de Janeiro, is an outstanding successful case that proves it is possible to restore wildlife in what used to be a consume-and-waste era landscape.
“For the last three months, we assess 1,500 tons (3,306,934 lbs) of rubbish have been dumped to the bay and probably, it will never be removed from there. This is our big problem, and it takes a lot of time and resources to restore mangroves. If we don't preserve these areas, it's impossible to have them restored,†Moscatelli added.
Mangroves help fight the climate crisis because a large part of coastal biodiversity depends on them and they absorb nitrogen and phosphorus from polluted waters and sewage.
These ecosystems also absorb four times as much and accumulate ten times as much carbon as any forest.
Growing urban areas and a lax environmental-rules enforcement represent its biggest threats.
(Production: Sebastian Rocandio, Anna Portella, Alfonso Duarte) - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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