INVESTIGADORES
GRAU Hector Ricardo
artículos
Título:
Agriculture expansion and deforestation in seasonally dry forests of north-west Argentina
Autor/es:
GRAU, HR; GASPARRI, NI; AIDE TM
Revista:
ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION
Editorial:
Cambridge University Press
Referencias:
Año: 2005 vol. 32 p. 140 - 148
ISSN:
0376-8929
Resumen:
In Argentina, deforestation due to agriculture expansion is threatening the Semiarid Chaco, one of the largest forested biomes of South America. This study focuses on the NW boundary of the Argentine Semiarid Chaco where soybean is the most important crop. Deforestation was estimated for areas with different levels of soil and rainfall limitation for agriculture between 1972 and 2001, with a finer analysis in three periods starting in 1984, which are characterized by differences in rainfall, soybean price, production cost, technology-driven yield, and national GDP. Between 1972 and 2001, 588,900 ha (c. 20 % of the forests) were deforested. Deforestation has been accelerating, reaching > 28,000 ha/y after 1997. The initial deforestation was associated with black bean cultivation following an increase in rainfall during the 1970s. In the 1980s, high soybean prices stimulated further deforestation. Finally, the introduction of soybean transgenic cultivars in 1997 reduced plantation costs and stimulated a further increase in deforestation. The domestic economy had little association with deforestation. Although deforestation was more intense in the moister (rainfall > 600 mm/y) areas, more than 300,000 ha have already been deforested in the drier areas, suggesting that climatic limitations are being overcome by technological and genetic improvement. Furthermore, more than 300,000 ha of forest occur in sectors without major soil and rainfall limitations. If global trends of technology, soybean markets and climate continue, and no active conservation policies area applied, vast areas of the Chaco will be deforested in the coming decades.