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In recent months, images taken from the Pantanal wetlands in Brazil have shown flames, heartbreaking images of injured animals and burned animal carcasses.
The Pantanal is found in parts of Brazil, Paraguay, and Bolivia and is made up of swamps, rivers, and salt marshes. But the wetland area is not so humid during the day.
Extreme drought, strong winds and temperatures above 40 degrees are one of the main causes of the fires that break out there.
Volunteers and local firefighters are working hard to fight the flames while trying to save the animals from the fires.
Fish skin on burnt legs
There is still something good in the horrible. Brazilian researchers and veterinarians, with the help of public funds, have gone out to the fire-affected areas to help the burned animals, the AP news agency reports.
Researchers have a new way of treating animals with burns. They use fish skin as a bandage on wounds. Fish skin is especially rich in collagen and keeps the skin moist. Veterinarians use Talipa fish skin, and according to AP, this will heal burns faster than normal.
The researchers brought 130 fish skin bandages to the wetlands, giving them the opportunity to treat about 40 animals.
This is the first time this technique has been used in wild animals. This is the same group of researchers who brought the technique to veterinarians in California, where they treated burned bears after fires on the West Coast.
– The president does nothing
President Jair Bolsonaro has been criticized for the increase in fires since he took office in January 2019, not only in the Pantanal, but also in the Amazon.
Bolsonaro has done little to stop the fires in the wetlands, nor has he done anything to clean up the aftermath, the AP writes.
A quarter of the Pantanal has been destroyed by fires, according to satellite images from the University of Rio de Janeiro.
The vegetation of the Pantanal can regenerate quickly in the rain, but the wildlife that survives is left without habitat in many places.
“Irreparable”
The damage is irreparable and especially devastating for animals, according to leader Juliana Camargo of the nature conservation organization Ampara Animal, according to NTB.
– Very few animals survive. Those who do are often severely affected. They are burned to the bone, often have to be killed or die of hunger and thirst, she says, according to NTB.
– The worst is when people on the ground fighting the flames tell us that “there is nothing we can do, everything will burn”. The only hope is for it to rain, but it is not expected to happen until November, says Camargo.
Since August alone, 15,000 square kilometers have been burned.
So far this year, there have been 12,567 fires in the Brazilian Pantanal, representing a new annual record with more than three months to 2020, according to satellite data compiled by Brazil’s national institute for space research, INPE.
Many of the inhabitants of the Pantanal depend on ecotourism in the region and the industry is now affected by both the pandemic and the fires.