The Amazon River carries
rain and snowfall from high in the Andes
Mountains
to the Atlantic Ocean. Along its journey, the river has created
a unique environment that serves people beyond the borders of Brazil.
The Amazon
River basin is possibly the earth’s most fragile and necessary
ecosystem. The basin holds and astonishing twenty percent of
the earth’s fresh water, more than the next six largest rivers combined.
The flow of the Amazon is so powerful that it dilutes the saltwater
more than one hundred miles of beyond the coastline.
The Amazon
River basin is a rainforest
or jungle. It is home to a diversity of life forms found nowhere
else on earth. The rainforest includes more than two million
insect species of insects, one hundred thousand plants, two thousand
species of fish and six hundred mammals. The basin also has
huge reserves of bauxite, nickel, copper, tin and timber. The
flow of the Amazon
River can also be harnessed to provide hydroelectric power.
Trees and vegetation in the basin help to balance carbon dioxide and
oxygen. Trees and vegetation use carbon dioxide to make their
food and release oxygen into the atmosphere.
The rainforest
of the Amazon River basin provides a valuable resource to the entire
planet, but it is being destroyed.
People are moving into the Amazon basin and clearing the rainforest
to build cities. The rainforest is often cleared to create grazing
land for cattle. Finally, miners clear the land in order to
extract its minerals.
The deforestation of the Amazon basin may have
long reaching effects. When the trees are removed, we reduce
the amount of carbon dioxide
taken
from the air. Some scientists predict that the buildup of carbon
dioxide will cause global warming. If the temperature of the
earth rises, polar ice will melt, raising the level of the ocean and
possibly flood south Florida.
The entire world depends
on the rainforests in the Amazon basin and around the world.
At Roosevelt
Middle School in West Palm Beach, Florida, Mr.
Alicia and his students have been raising money to buy small portions
of the Amazon rainforest to ensure
that it will not be destroyed. He feels that if children from
around the world work together to preserve the Amazon basin, they
will have helped themselves and the generations that will follow them.