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Sustainable use of the Amazon River floodplain: problems and
possibilities
Wolfgang J. Junk
Max-Planck-Institute for Limnology,
Working Group Tropical Ecology, 24306 Plön, Germany
E-mail: wjj@mpil-ploen.mpg.de
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Abstract
The Amazon River floodplain (várzea)
belongs to the few areas in central Amazonia with relatively high
natural fertility and productivity, because the annual flooding
with sediment-rich water add nutrients to the system. Many development
planners consider the area to be of high agricultural production
potential and of great importance for regional and national economy
and development. Inland fishery provides an important part of the
animal protein supply of the local population. However, agricultural
production is low and does not satisfy the demand of large cities
like Manaus, because of the specific ecological conditions of the
várzea. Politicians have two options directing development
planning: towards a small-scale diversified agriculture to satisfy
local and regional market demand or towards large-scale export-oriented
agro-industrial development. Decision makers face the problem that,
because of the flood pulse, floodplain ecosystems behave differently
from other ecosystems. There is little useful information available
from other regions, because most of the cost-intensive management
systems of temperate zone floodplains have failed and there is little
information on low-cost management systems of tropical floodplains.
Principle ecological parameters of the Amazon floodplain
and a cost benefit analysis of the actual production systems are
presented. Data analysis shows serious economic, social and ecological
restrictions favoring small scale labor-intensive farming systems
in comparison with high-technological agro-industrial solutions.
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