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The Amazon - Bio-Diversity - Deforestation - The Rainforest -
Peru - Pucalpa.
What can you do?
First you can find out about international and national organisations
concerned with saving the Rainforests, their animals and the people
who live there.
Use your resources and those in the learning centre/library to
find out about these organisations; what they do, where they are
and contact them for further information and details and ideas
about the contribution you can make.
Find out about:
The WorldWide Fund for Nature (WWF), WorldWide Fund in Canada
& USA, Friends of the Earth, Greenpeace, the International Union
for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), and UNESCO, United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation, have all been
very involved in supporting plans to arrest deforestation.
Survival International is a worldwide organisation which helps
tribal people.
The International Council for Bird Preservation (ICBP), works
to save endangered birds.
Foundation Amazonie, was set up in September 1991 by Belgian
film-maker Jean-Pierre Dutillex. Donations towards the purchase
of strips of rainforest in the upper Solimnoes River region of
the Amazon Basin to create a national park three times the size
of Belgium were invited - have they reached the £3 million / 5
million US$ needed?
Rainforest can be purchased and so protected through the Rainforest
Action Group (www.ran.org/kids) and they run an International
Children's Rainforest Network (www.sierraclub).
Tropical Rainforest timbers are hardwoods. Temperate Forests are
also being felled for similar industrial purposes - paper products,
furniture etc. Think about all the items you use that are made
from timber and that you dispose of: paper cups & plates, fast-food
containers, disposal napkins & towels, writing paper & newsprint.
Use your own shopping bag at the store instead of plastic carriers!
Think about recycling programmes and how you can contribute. Is
there such a facility near you? How good are you at using it?
Over the course of a week, make a note of the garbage / rubbish
that you could/should recycle rather than just disposing of it
in the rubbish bin. Not all of it will come from timber but much
of it will be using non-replenished raw materials.
Think about other items you might purchase that come from rainforests:
plants & animals - bromeliad houseplants, parrots & iguanas &
other reptiles; shells & wooden souvenirs; furs & reptile skins;
gold & precious metals used in jewellery are often mined in rainforest
areas. Think about the effect your purchase could have had on
the destruction of the rainforest.
Some people do not support companies which exploit and destroy
rainforest. They refuse to buy / boycott their products. They
consider that if everyone unites, company revenues will go down
and there will be less profits and so the company will reconsider
its practices. Consumer power is very influential and many companies
and organisations have recognised the importance of protecting
the rainforests. In 1989, Friends of the Earth launched a Rain
Forests: protect them! campaign. In 1989, 100 British companies,
including Body Shop & Habitat, agreed to stop using hardwoods
unless they came from properly managed forests. Find out what
is happening now in the UK and in the USA.
Remember, knowledge is power. Find out what is happening. Find
out who the key players are in changing the negative practices.
Can you change what is taking place - even by the smallest amount?
Every little helps.
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