Tuesday, May 6, 2008
Search Site:
Home | About Us | Contact Us | Archives | Feedback | Career Avenues
News
National
State
Assembly Elections 2008
District
City
Business
Foreign
Sports
Comments
Edit Page
Panorama
Net Mail
Your Take
Infoline
In City Today
HelpLine
Daily Almanac
Festivals of India
Weather
Leisure
Crossword
Horoscope
Year 2008
Weekly
Daily Astrospeak
Calendar 2008
Pearls of Wisdom
"Cricket is not illegal, for it is a manly game."
- Queen Anne
Supplements
Metro Life - Mon
Economy & Business
DH Avenues
Cyber Space
DH Education
ENGLISH FOR YOU
Sportscene
Metro Life - Thurs
Movie Reviews
She
Living
Metro Life - Sat
Open Sesame
DH Realty
Metro Life - Fri
Science & Technology
Spectrum
ENVIRONMENT
Sunday Herald
Entertainment
Fine Art / Culture
Reviews
Book Reviews
Articulations
Hi Life
Banking & Finance
Dasara dazzle
Art Reviews
Bangalore IT.in
COLLEGE CONNECT
Columns
Kuldip Nayar
Khushwant Singh
N J Nanporia
Tavleen Singh
Swami Sukhabodhananda
Bittu Sehgal
Suresh Menon
Shreekumar Varma
Movie Guide
Ad Links
Deccan
International School
Real Estate Properties in Bangalore
Deccan Herald
Now Available
Globally
in Print Format
Others
About Us
Subscription

Send your Suggestions / Queries about the Website to the
Webmaster


To send letters to Editor :
Letters to Editor

You are welcome to post your letters/responses to NETMAIL here.

For enquiries on advertisements :
Contact Us

Deccan Herald » ENVIRONMENT » Detailed Story
Livelihoods that help conserve
NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF
A bankrupt American businessman and an Amazonian hunter come together to save the Amazon, and hence, the world from global warming.

Vampire bats are remarkably well-adapted to the rain forest. They come out at night and use heat sensors to find a goat, child or other mammal, which they feed upon only after determining from its breathing that it is truly asleep.

If the prey is an animal with fur, vampire bats use special teeth to shave the skin. Then they use incisors to cut the skin almost painlessly, while the saliva prevents clotting, and they lap up the blood.

So the question is: Can we humans adapt as effectively to the rain forest as vampire bats have?
It doesn't seem so. Instead of living in harmony with the rain forest -- or only as parasitically as, say, a vampire bat -- we're destroying the jungle in ways that contribute hugely to global warming.

Somewhere in the world, we humans cut down an area of jungle the size of a football field every second of every day, and deforestation now contributes as much to global warming as all the carbon emitted by the United States. By one calculation, four years of deforestation have the same carbon footprint as all flights in the history of aviation up until the year 2025.

That's the challenge that Douglas McMeekin and Juan Kunchikuy are trying to address. As I noted when I began their story in my Sunday column, they make an unusual pair: McMeekin is a 65-year-old American businessman who came to Ecuador after going bankrupt at home in Kentucky, and Kunchikuy is a 30-year-old naturalist and guide from an indigenous tribe who grew up in the rain forest with his blowgun and never wore shoes or saw electricity until he was 17.

They have joined forces to protect the rain forest by working with local inhabitants, trying to create incentives for them to leave trees standing -- while also raising local living standards. "Save the Rain Forest" bumper stickers don't sustain local families, who earn an average of only $300 per year and see trees as a way to boost their incomes.

"People have to make a living," McMeekin said. "But they can chop down 50 acres of forest to make a pasture, or they can earn the same income by chopping down 5 acres and planting cacao."
So his organization, Yachana Foundation, is distributing high-quality cacao seedlings to encourage farmers to manage small plots that leave most of the jungle intact. Yachana also operates a factory that buys the cacao and turns it into mail-order chocolate.

Yachana also encourages family planning -- to reduce population pressures that lead to deforestation -- and runs a new private high school to train young people from throughout the Ecuadorean Amazon. The 120 students in the school get a superb education with English taught by American volunteers; the first graduation will be in July.
One aim is to build a core of indigenous leaders who can represent local views internationally and also serve as agents of change within the region. Kunchikuy -- who speaks fluent English and serves on the board of Yachana Foundation -- is a prototype. After all, there aren't many board members as comfortable with a microphone as with a blowgun (and who have scars on their noses from vampire bats).

Education

The school focuses on practical skills, such as how to graft cacao or fruit-tree saplings, or how to operate fish ponds. The idea is to earn significant incomes without large clear-cuts.

Many students work part time in the foundation's neighboring eco-lodge, Yachana, which has 18 rooms catering to American tourists (and generates part of the cash to pay for the school).

As I walk through the jungle paths here, serenaded by the twittering of birds and monkeys overhead, or the splashing of turtles in the river, I marvel at this land. The Amazon is grand for putting us humans in our place -- until you reach a clear-cut, and the spell breaks and you realize maybe we're not so puny after all.
One approach to saving the rain forests is to pay poor countries to preserve them. Research suggests that by paying tropical countries $27.25 per ton of carbon not emitted by destroying forests, the world could avoid $85 in damage per ton from the carbon.

But these can't just be transactions with governments; too often we lose sight of the inhabitants of the forests. In a remote part of Central African Republic, I once found teams of Western volunteers dedicated to preserving gorillas -- but there were no volunteers helping local Pygmies who were dying of malaria.
With Yachana, this partnership of a bankrupt American businessman and an Amazonian hunter, we have a model of how to help the forest by helping the people who live in it. Preserving the rain forest should be a priority, if we have a bat's brains....

New York Times News Service

comment on this article
Other Headlines
Livelihoods that help conserve
Ad Links
Flowers to India , Gifts to India
Flowers to India , UAE , Italy, Spain, Thailand, Malaysia, UK
Gifts to India, Flowers to India, Gifts to India, Bangalore, Gifts to India, Mumbai, Delhi, Rakhi
Gifts to India , Flowers to Bangalore India
No minimum balance NRI account
India Flowers - Dehradun Hyderabad Kolkata Gurgaon Punjab
Flowers to Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Delhi, Mumbai, Pune Kolkata.
Send Flowers, Cakes, Chocolate, Fruits to Pune.
Flowers to India , France , Japan, Germany, Hong Kong, Singapore, Mexico, USA
Flowers to India , Mumbai , Pune, Delhi, Chennai,
Your Life Partner? Get personalized proposals daily. Thousands of New members with Photo Profiles. Profession,Religion, Community searches & more. Register FREE!
click here
Copyright 2007, The Printers (Mysore) Private Ltd., 75, M.G. Road, Post Box No 5331, Bangalore - 560001
Tel: +91 (80) 25880000 Fax No. +91 (80) 25880523
200x200
Gender:MaleFemale

Email:

click here
click here