terça-feira, 4 de fevereiro de 2020

As águas de Minas vêm da Amazônia, Assim como as águas que caem No Paraná, Santa Catarina, Rio Grande do Sul São Paulo, Buenos Aires e Assunção.

As Águas de Minas, por Roberto Malvezzi (Gogó)


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AS ÁGUAS DE MINAS

Roberto Malvezzi (Gogó)

As águas de Minas vêm da Amazônia,
Assim como as águas que caem
No Paraná, Santa Catarina, Rio Grande do Sul
São Paulo, Buenos Aires e Assunção.

Porém, as águas aqui de Juazeiro-Petrolina vêm de Minas,
Pelo Velho Chico
Mas que vieram da Amazônia para Minas pelos Rios Voadores

Os Rios Voadores fazem chover nas áreas de recarga do Bambuí e do Urucuia, mas também do Guarani
E as águas de superfície de Minas vão para a Bacia do Prata
Ou para a Bacia do São Francisco
Ou para a Bacia do Doce
Ou Jequitinhonha
E outros.

O ciclo das águas é a pedra angular das recargas dos mananciais
Porém, se destruírem a Amazônia, não haverá mais o ciclo das águas brasileiras como é hoje
Se continuarem destruindo a vegetação das bacias hidrográficas
Emparedando rios

As águas aumentarão sua fúria
E pode chegar a bairros chiques de Belo Horizonte
Inclusive seus restaurantes

A vingança de Gaia já começou
E nem sempre os pobres morrerão primeiro


Ainda há tempo de reversão
Porém, como diz o Papa Francisco,
Se tardar mais, tarde demais

Roberto Malvezzi (Gogó)*,  possui formação em Filosofia, Teologia e Estudos Sociais. Atua na Equipe CPP/CPT do São Francisco. Membro da Equipe de Assessoria da REPAM (Rede Eclesial Pan Amazônica)

www.robertomalvezzi.com.br


in EcoDebate, ISSN 2446-9394, 04/02/2020

As Águas de Minas, por Roberto Malvezzi (Gogó), in EcoDebate, ISSN 2446-9394, 4/02/2020, https://www.ecodebate.com.br/2020/02/04/as-aguas-de-minas-por-roberto-malvezzi-gogo/.

Koalas found dead on Australia logging plantation

Koalas found dead on Australia logging plantation

  • 2 February 2020

     

Dozens of koalas have been found dead or injured at a timber plantation in the Australian state of Victoria, sparking an investigation by officials.

Blue gum trees - an important koala habitat - were harvested from the plantation in December, leaving only a few isolated stands of trees.

Some koalas had starved to death in the remaining trees. Others were apparently killed by bulldozers.
About 80 surviving koalas have been removed and are being cared for.

The deaths come after tens of thousands of koalas were killed in the bushfires that have ravaged Australia. The marsupial is listed as "vulnerable" by Australia's Environment Ministry.

'Australia should be ashamed'

After the plantation was logged in December, reports of hundreds of starving koalas came in, environmental group Friends of the Earth Australia said. 

"People apparently witnessed the bulldozing of many dead koalas into slash piles," it said.
The Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning said it was prepared to prosecute over the incident.

Local resident Helen Oakley, who first raised the alarm on Wednesday, posted a video to Facebook, saying she had seen dead koalas at the site.

"There are koalas lying there dead," she said. "Mothers killed and their little babies. Australia should be ashamed of this. We need help."

Animal protection group Animals Australia said it has sent teams to the site in order to "save as many of these precious animals as possible".

It added: "We are still gathering the details as to what has occurred in this case but it would appear that there are various breaches of legislation, including the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, which we will be supporting authorities to pursue."

Andrew Pritchard from the Department of the Environment said 25 koalas had been euthanised. He told ABC News the surviving koalas would be "rehabilitated at a later stage".

Investigations under way

The company behind the logging is currently unclear. According to the logging industry, the blue gum trees were harvested in November and the contractor followed all of the protocols in place to protect the animals.

However, Animals Australia said it was investigating several apparent breaches of legislation.
"By law, the companies that own these plantations must provide koala 'spotters' to identify koalas in trees before logging commences, so that animals can be safely removed and relocated. There is also a legal responsibility to ensure the welfare of koalas after logging has ceased," it said.

The Australian Forest Products Association said the remaining trees were cleared after the contractors had left. It has vowed to investigate the incident.

Chief Executive Ross Hampton told The Age: "It is unclear as yet who bulldozed the trees with the koalas apparently still in them, but it is absolutely certain that this was not a plantation or a forestry company.

"We support all those calling for the full force of the law to be applied to the perpetrator.
The incident comes after a number of koalas were killed in recent bushfires in the country.

Turkey lost 10 lakes in 30 years: Expert


Turkey lost 10 lakes in 30 years: Expert

ANTALYA – Demirören News Agency
Turkey lost 10 lakes in 30 years: Expert
Turkey has lost 10 of its lakes in the last 30 years due to climate change, drought and wrong agricultural irrigation techniques, the head of a natural protection association has said.
“The water levels in Lake Beyşehir and Lake Eğirdir, two of Turkey’s biggest freshwater reservoirs, have decreased 60 percent in the last 30 years. Many of our lakes, Lake Kovada and the surrounding natural park coming first, have entered a period of drying and malfunction. It has been 10 years since Lake Akşehir, which was the country’s fifth largest natural freshwater lake, was wiped off the map,” said Erol Kesici, a limnology expert from the Turkish Association for Conservation of Nature (TTKD).
Turkey’s southwest, an area of a series of lakes located within the borders of the Burdur, Isparta, Antalya, Afyonkarahisar and Konya provinces, is in “great danger,” as some of the lakes in the area have already dried up and others are on the brink of extinction, he warned, marking the World Wetlands Day on Feb. 2.
The dams, ponds and regulation basins on the streams feeding the lakes should be limited, according to the academic.
“The pollution of the lakes by agricultural wastewater occurring from drainage areas and including manures and pesticide, by the dense sewage from residential areas and by the industrial wastes should definitely be stopped. The treatment and filtration systems in the watershed areas should be structured and operated with the new technology. The agriculture activity and water consumption should be arranged in accordance with the principles of ecological agriculture,” said Kesici.
Migratory birds, fish and other organisms are inseparable part of wetlands, he said, also warning against cutting the reeds on the lakefronts.
Some 75 percent of Turkey’s annual water consumption, nearly 35 billion cubic meters, consists of agricultural irrigation, according to the expert.