CAATINGA

'Caatinga' is a type of vegetation, and an ecoregion characterized by this vegetation in the northeastern part of Brazil. The name "Caatinga" is a Tupi word meaning "white forest" or "white vegetation" (''kaa'' = forest, vegetation, ''tínga'' = white). It covers between 700,000 km² and 1,000,000 km² (depending on the source), over 10% of the Brazil's territory.
Caatinga is a xeric shrubland and thorn forest, which consists primarily of small, thorny trees that shed their leaves seasonally. Cacti, thick-stemmed plants, thorny brush, and arid-adapted grasses make up the ground layer. Many annual plants grow, flower, and die during the brief rainy season.

Contents
Setting
Climate
Flora
Fauna
People
Agriculture
See also
External links

Setting


Caatinga covers the northeast portion of Brazil. It is located between 3°S 45°W and 17°S 35°W, extending across eight states of Brazil: Piauí, Ceará, Rio Grande do Norte, Paraíba, Pernambuco, Alagoas, Sergipe, Bahia, and parts of Minas Gerais. The Caatinga includes several enclaves of humid tropical forest, known as the Caatinga enclaves moist forests.
The Caatinga is bounded by the Maranhão Babaçu forests to the northwest, the Atlantic dry forests and the Cerrado savannas to the west and southwest, the humid Atlantic forests along the Atlantic coast to the east, and by the Atlantic Ocean to the north and northeast.
Caatinga is pronounced 'ca-chin-gaa'. The Caatinga is a very dry place in Brazil. The few people there have very little water and very little food. The little water they do have is most often dirty and people can die from drinking it. Droughts occur frequently in Caatinga. The poverty there is grinding; some people have heard to be living off cactus juice because they have no money to buy proper food.

Climate


The Caatinga has only two distinguishable seasons. These are the winter, when it is very hot and dry, and the summer when it is hot and rainy. During the dry winter periods there is no foliage or undergrowth. The vegetation is very dry and the roots begin to protrude through the surface of the stony soil. They do this in order to absorb water before it is evaporated. All leaves fall off the trees to reduce transpiration in order to lessen the amount of water that is lost in the dry season. During the peak periods of drought the Caatinga's soil can reach temperatures of up to 60 °C. With all the foliage and undergrowth dead during the drought periods and all the trees having no leaves the Caatinga has a grey, desert-like look.
The drought ends at the end of the year and it begins to rain in the new year. With the coming of rain, the grey, desert-like landscape starts to transform into a much greener land. Small plants start growing in the now moist soil and trees grow back their green leaves. At this time the waters in the rivers start to fill up and the streams begin to flow again. The parts of the river that were dried out now have flowing water again. Also, plant experts have said to have found a new cacti called the Columna Chollang. The plant is said to be pink with black thorns in a small ball shape. It is found in foliage in the hotter parts of the caatinga.

Flora


The Caatinga can be separated by vegetation types into eight different areas. The Caatinga forest has deciduous tropic broadleaved trees. The forest canopy covers about 60% of the ground. This type of vegetation is present in wetter areas with more rainfall. The arborescent area is an area mainly of shrubs with some trees with less than 60% coverage. Aborescent-shrubby closed Caatinga is forest with closed shrub and three coverage less than 60%. Aborescent-shrubby open Caatinga is similar but with more shrubs and cacti. In the shrubby closed Caatinga scrub is more common. The shrubby open Caatinga areas occur on shallow soils and rocky outcrops; this area contains trees, cacti and bromeliads. The Caatinga savanna is areas with some trees and some scrub. The rocky Caatinga savanna contains less than 10% coverage of tropical scrub; these plants are protruding from cracks in rocks and pavements.
People use many plant species from the Caatinga region. Palms are very important to the economy in northeast Brazil. People from this area are greatly dependent on extraction from babassu, carnaúba, tucúm and macaúba, from which lauric and oleic oils are made from. Many trees are also used for lumber in this area, including these species: ''Anadenanthera macrocarpa'', ''Ziziphus joazeiro'', ''Amburana cearensis'', ''Astronium fraxinifolium'', ''Astronium urundeuva'', ''Tabebuia impetiginosa'', ''Tabebuia caraiba'', and '' Schinopsis brasiliensis'', ''Cedrela odorata'', ''Dalbergia variabilis'', ''Didymopanax morototoni'' and ''Pithecellobium polycephalum''. Some plants are also used for medical purposes.
:''See also: ''List of plants of Caatinga vegetation of Brazil

Fauna


The Caatinga is home to several endemic species of birds, including Lear's Macaw or Indigo Macaw ''(Anodorhynchus leari)'', Spix's Macaw or Little Blue Macaw ''(Cyanopsitta spixii)'', and Moustached Woodcreeper ''(Xiphocolaptes falcirostris).''

People


The poorest population in Brazil lives in the northeast. Over 60 million people survive on the minimal vegetation of the Caatinga. A very large part of the population depends on agricultural or forest industries for over half of their income. Harvesting of the caraiba woodland for lumber has reduced its size. This reduction may have contributed to the endangerment of the Spix's Macaw.

Agriculture


In some places the Caatinga has very fertile soils. Inhabitants plant fruits in the fertile soil to process and eat, sell and export. Some regions are being irrigated, most notably the São Francisco River. This is very good news for farmers, although salinization of the soil is becoming a threat since the land is irrigated with saline water. If there is a surplus in goods as a result of the new irrigation this area will start exporting a lot more products outside of Brazil. The farms along the São Francisco River are currently exporting grapes, papayas and melons.
Having and using all these resources has some negatives. Intensive agriculture, along with excessive grazing by cattle and goats is affecting the population structure of some of the more important plant and animal species. Deforesting for industrial uses like fuel and charcoal destroys the vegetation. The combination of drought and misuse of the land are becoming a major threat. If these practices continue at the current rate, desertification is possible.

See also



Sertão

External links



Caatinga (World Wildlife Fund)

IBAMA

Brazil Nature

Caatinga: Brazilian national heritage threatened

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves