Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/38014
Title: Large-scale Degradation of the Tocantins-Araguaia River Basin
Authors: Pelicice, Fernando Mayer
Agostinho, A. A.
Akama, Alberto
Andrade-Filho, José Dilermando
Azevedo-Santos, Valter Monteiro De
Barbosa, Marcus Vinícius Moreira
Bini, Luis Mauricio
Brito, Marcelo Fulgêncio Guedes
Dos Anjos Candeiro, Carlos Roberto
Caramaschi, Érica Pellegrini
Carvalho, Priscilla
de Carvalho, Rodrigo Assis
Castello, Leandro
das Chagas, Davi Borges
Chamon, Carine Cavalcante
Colli, Guarino R.
Daga, Vanessa Salete
Dias, Murilo Sversut
Diniz-Filho, José Alexandre Felizola
Fearnside, Philip Martin
de Melo Ferreira, Wagner
Garcia, Diego Azevedo Zoccal
Krolow, Tiago Kütter
Krüger, Rodrigo Ferreira
Latrubesse, Edgardo Manuel
Lima-Junior, D. P.
de Fátima Lolis, Solange
Lopes, Fabyano Alvares Cardoso
Loyola, Rafael Dias
Magalhães, André Lincoln Barroso De
Malvásio, Adriana
De Marco Júnior, Paulo
Martins, Pedro Ribeiro
Mazzoni, Rosana
Carlos Nabout, João
Orsi, Mario Luís
Padial, André Andrian
Pereira, Hasley Rodrigo
Pereira, Thiago Nilton Alves
Perônico, Phamela Bernardes
Petrere, Miguel
Pinheiro, Renato Torres
Pires-Oliveira, Etiene Fabbrin
Pompeu, Paulo Santos
Portelinha, Thiago Costa Gonçalves
Sano, Edson Eyji
Dos Santos, Vagner Leonardo Macêdo
Shimabukuro, Paloma Helena Fernandes
da Silva, Idelina Gomes
Souza, Lucas Barbosa E.
Tejerina-Garro, Francisco Leonardo
de Campos Telles, Mariana Pires
Teresa, Fabrício Barreto
Thomaz, Sidinei Magela
Tonella, Lívia Helena
Vieira, Ludgero Cardoso Galli
Simões Vitule, Jean Ricardo
Zuanon, Jansen Alfredo Sampaio
Keywords: Biodiversity
Conservation
Policy
South America
Sustainability
Issue Date: 2021
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Environmental Management
Abstract: The Tocantins-Araguaia Basin is one of the largest river systems in South America, located entirely within Brazilian territory. In the last decades, capital-concentrating activities such as agribusiness, mining, and hydropower promoted extensive changes in land cover, hydrology, and environmental conditions. These changes are jeopardizing the basin’s biodiversity and ecosystem services. Threats are escalating as poor environmental policies continue to be formulated, such as environmentally unsustainable hydropower plants, large-scale agriculture for commodity production, and aquaculture with non-native fish. If the current model persists, it will deepen the environmental crisis in the basin, compromising broad conservation goals and social development in the long term. Better policies will require thought and planning to minimize growing threats and ensure the basin’s sustainability for future generations. © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1007/s00267-021-01513-7
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