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Amazon’s sustainable giant fish catch threatened by severe drought

Two years of drought has fishermen and indigenous communities requesting government aid, in what is being called a matter of climate justice

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Three pirarucu fish, captured by fishermen, on a floating warehouse in San Raimundo settlement, Medio Jurua region, Amazonia State, Brazil, on September 5, 2022. (AP Photo/Jorge Saenz, File)

Two years of record-breaking drought have dealt a heavy blow to what is arguably the Amazon’s most successful sustainable economy: the managed fishery for the giant pirarucu.

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In Brazil´s Amazonas state, almost 6,000 riverine dwellers authorised to fish have reported a sharp drop in production and rising costs. They are demanding aid from the federal government and debating how to adapt to climate change.

Last year’s catch totalled 70 per cent of the government-authorised quota of 100,443 fish. This year could see an even steeper decline, since many communities still haven´t been able to fish. The season runs from June 1 to November 30.

Pirarucu managed fishing began in the Amazon 25 years ago in the Mamiraua region and has since expanded. It helped the Amazon’s largest fish escape risk of extinction and is now an important source of income for locals in 10 sustainable conservation units and eight Indigenous territories, where deforestation is close to zero.

Unlike other aquatic species of the Amazon, such as river dolphins, the pirarucu – also known as arapaima – historically have proven resilient to drought and climate change. But low water levels are making it extremely difficult for fishers to transport their catch from remote lakes to major rivers and onward to cities.

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It’s a mammoth task. The pirarucu, which can weigh up to 200 kilograms, lives in large lakes that during flood season are often connected to major rivers. Fishing typically occurs when water levels begin to recede, making it easier to trap the fish and transport them out in small boats or canoes. In several areas, however, water levels dropped so quickly that this connection was cut off before fishing could begin.

Yagua Indigenous people carrying water and other goods due to the low level of the Amazon river at Isla de los Micos, Amazonas department, Colombia, on October 4. More than 420,000 children in the Amazon basin are being badly affected by a drought parching much of South America that is impacting water supplies and river transport, Unicef said on November 6. Photo: AFP
Yagua Indigenous people carrying water and other goods due to the low level of the Amazon river at Isla de los Micos, Amazonas department, Colombia, on October 4. More than 420,000 children in the Amazon basin are being badly affected by a drought parching much of South America that is impacting water supplies and river transport, Unicef said on November 6. Photo: AFP
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