The largest river on Earth is actually in the sky - Iseult Gillespie

802,357 views ・ 2023-12-12

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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The largest rainforest in the world, the Amazon,
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exists between two rivers— but not in the way you might think.
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At ground level, the Amazon River and its tributaries weave their path.
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But above the canopy, bigger waterways are on the move.
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These flying rivers are almost invisible, but are essential to life on Earth.
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As rain seeps into the soil,
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trees draw water back up through their roots
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and pump it through their trunks for nourishment.
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The leaves and stems transpire, or release,
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excess water in the form of vapor.
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In the Amazon,
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a fully grown tree transpires between 200 and 1,000 liters of water a day.
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This collective release creates a startling phenomenon:
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huge jets of rapid, humid air that constantly flow above the canopy.
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Dubbed “flying rivers” by a Brazilian climatologist,
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these aerial waterways carry about 20 billion tons of water
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through the air per day.
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This is more than the Amazon River’s daily output into the ocean.
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Along the equator, the trade winds blow from east to west.
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Caught in these winds, flying rivers flow in the same direction
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before encountering the Andes.
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The mountains act like a giant barrier,
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causing the winds and rivers to redirect southwards.
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When flying rivers meet the masses of cold air,
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they grow heavier and release torrents of water.
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In this way, they bring rain, cooler temperatures,
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and humidity to much of South America.
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But these waterways are under threat.
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Clearing the Amazon for agriculture and industry
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is already causing flying rivers to dry up,
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leading to drought and hotter temperatures across South America.
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If this pattern continues,
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swaths of the continent may be reduced to desert in a matter of decades.
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In response, a radical movement is working intensely to keep the rainforest—
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and the flying rivers— alive.
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The northwest of the Peruvian Amazon is the territory of the Wampís Nation,
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a community of over 15,000 people
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who manage over 130,000 square kilometers of land.
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These Indigenous people have lived in the rainforest for thousands of years,
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practicing sustainable hunting, fishing, and agriculture.
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For the Wampís,
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protecting the rainforest has long meant fighting invaders.
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Between the 15th and 17th centuries,
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Wampís people resisted and expelled the Incas
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and later the Spanish colonists who exploited the rainforest.
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Today, the Wampís Nation are still battling extractive industries—
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and the policies that sanction them.
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For instance, since the 1960s,
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the Peruvian government has been licensing the Wampís’ territory
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to corporations for gold mining and oil extraction.
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These activities poison the rivers, clear thousands of trees,
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and threaten the Wampís way of life.
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In 2015, after years of protests and negotiations,
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the community formed the Autonomous Territorial Government
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of the Wampís Nation.
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While the Wampís people remain Peruvian citizens,
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they seek recognition as a government
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responsible for their own lands, forests, and internal affairs.
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In its policies, the Wampís Nation prioritizes collective land ownership,
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cultural preservation, and conservation of animals, plants,
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and natural cycles that protect the rainforest.
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This is the foundation of their philosophy of Tarimat Pujut,
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or living in harmony with nature
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to ensure food, friendships, and quality of life.
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The high, humid forest of the Wampís Nation
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is crucial to the flying river cycle,
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transpiring over 34 million liters of water a day
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that flow to Peru, Ecuador, and Colombia.
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To track this output, Wampís scientists measure rainfall, monitor the wind,
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and weigh water levels in leaves and soil.
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One of their climate goals is to defend this and other natural systems,
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including native soil that acts as a carbon sink
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and the forest itself as a fire barrier.
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The Wampís Nation constantly battles corporations that threaten these systems.
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Between 2016 and 2018,
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the community fought illegal gold mining along the Santiago River.
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They organized protests, uncovered mercury pollution,
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guarded the area, and attacked illegal machinery for months,
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eventually expelling the miners.
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And in 2017, the Wampís Nation successfully petitioned a court
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to bar a private oil company from their land.
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While these are significant victories,
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the Wampís Nation and other Indigenous groups need more recognition and support.
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Indigenous people and local communities live in and manage
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more than a quarter of the world’s land,
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but only have legal ownership to a small percentage of it.
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And less than 1% of international climate and forest funds
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go to their crucial conservation efforts.
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This is despite the fact that forests managed by Indigenous people
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have better survival rates.
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The Amazon is often described with language evocative of a giant organism—
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one that grows, dies, breathes in carbon dioxide and exhales oxygen.
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The processes that sustain it weave together in a complex
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and often invisible web of water, air, soil, and human activity—
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both destructive and protective.
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We are far from understanding it in its entirety,
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but some are closer than others.
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