The most popular stories from our Spanish-language service, Mongabay-Latam, followed new deforestation from gold mining in Peru, new fish species deep in Chile’s sea, mining on Ecuador’s beaches, and hundreds of dead turtles in Mexico.
Gold mining tears through Peru’s Amazon
A new study shows that gold mining in Peru’s Madre de Dios region has cleared more forest than originally estimated: 100 square kilometers (39 square miles) in 2017 alone. Since 1985, more than 950 square kilometers (367 square miles) have been lost. Most of the deforestation in the last 32 years occurred in the buffer zones of three protected areas.
Atacama Trench: New species observed in Pacific depths of Chilean coast
Gelatinous fish, scavenger crustaceans, octopuses and strange worms have been seen for the first time, 8 kilometers (5 miles) deep in the most extensive trench in the world along the Peruvian and Chilean coasts. This year, for the first time, an expedition reached the bottom by sending a robot to take samples from this unknown abyss.
Mining the metallic sands of Ecuador’s beaches
Mining concessions have taken over the black sands of Playa Negra in Ecuador’s Esmeraldas province. The mining of the metallic sand in search of iron and titanium is happening on beach zones that buffer protected areas. There are eight such concessions on the beaches of three of Ecuador’s Pacific provinces.
Hundreds of turtles die in nets off Mexico
Almost 400 sea turtles found dead and rotting on the western coast of Mexico in April were caught in abandoned, illegal nets, a crime that carries a jail sentence of up to nine years. Mexico is the site of the most important sea turtle nesting beaches in the world. Juan Carlos Cantú, head of the Mexican program of the Defenders of Wildlife, says such accidental capture, illegal capture for their meat, and taking of their eggs in nesting season are now the biggest threats to sea turtles.
Peruvian indigenous group uses an app to fight mining
Members of the Masenawa indigenous community in Peru’s Amazon documented the presence of an illegal mining camp through a mobile app called ForestLink, developed by the Rainforest Foundation UK. Once a group that works with the community had evidence that the miners were working in a zone close to the Amarakaeri communal reserve in the south of Manu National Park, they shared the information with government officials.
Read all these stories in full at Mongabay-Latam in Spanish here.