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Destination
Ecuador: Amazon Rainforest
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Destination
Ecuador: Amazon Rainforest
Large,
tropical rainforest occupying the drainage basin of the Amazon River and
its tributaries in northern South America, and covering an area of 2,300,000
square miles (6,000,000 square km). Comprising about 40 percent of Brazil's
total area, it is bounded by the Guiana Highlands to the north, the Andes
Mountain Ranges to the west, the Brazilian central plateau to the south,
and the Atlantic Ocean to the east.
The
Amazon River valley is the largest basin area in the world, and its rainforest
stretches from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the tree line of the
Andes in the west. The forest widens from a 200-mile (320-kilometre) front
along the Atlantic to a belt 1,200 miles (1,900 km) wide where the lowlands
meet the Andean foothills. The immense extent and great continuity of
this rainforest is a reflection of the high rainfall, high humidity, and
monotonously high temperatures that prevail in the region.
The
Amazon Rainforest is the world's richest and most varied biological reservoir,
containing several million species of insects, plants, birds, and other
forms of life, many still unrecorded by science. The luxuriant vegetation
encompasses a wide variety of trees, including many species of myrtle,
laurel, palm, and acacia, as well as rosewood, Brazil nut, and rubber
tree. Excellent timber is furnished by the mahogany and the Amazonian
cedar. Major wildlife includes jaguar, manatee, tapir, red deer, capybara
and many other types of rodents, and several types of monkeys.
In
the 20th century, Brazil's rapidly growing population settled major areas
of the Amazon Rainforest. The Amazon forest shrank dramatically as a result
of settlers' clearance of the land to obtain lumber and to create grazing
pastures and farmland. In the 1990s the Brazilian government and various
international bodies began efforts to protect parts of the forest from
human encroachment, exploitation, and destruction.
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