Download Let Them Eat Shrimp: The Tragic Disappearance of the by Kennedy Warne PDF

By Kennedy Warne

What’s the relationship among a platter of jumbo shrimp at your neighborhood eating place and murdered fishermen in Honduras, impoverished ladies in Ecuador, and disastrous hurricanes alongside America’s Gulf coast? Mangroves. many of us have by no means heard of those salt-water forests, yet in the event you rely on their riches, mangroves are imperative. they're ordinary typhoon limitations, domestic to innumerable unique creatures—from crabeating vipers to man-eating tigers—and supply nutrients and livelihoods to hundreds of thousands of coastal dwellers. Now they're being destroyed to make approach for shrimp farming and different coastal improvement. in the event you stand within the manner of those industries, the results should be deadly. 
  In Let Them consume Shrimp, Kennedy Warne takes readers into the muddy conflict region that's the mangrove wooded area. A tangle of snaking roots and twisted trunks, mangroves are usually brushed off as foul wastelands. in reality, they're supermarkets of the ocean, supplying shellfish, crabs, honey, trees, and charcoal to coastal groups from Florida to South the USA to New Zealand. Generations have outfitted their lives round mangroves and view those swamps sacred. To shrimp farmers and land builders, mangroves easily characterize a great funding. The tidal land on which they stand usually has no name, so with a nod and wink from a compliant reputable, it may be became from a public source to a personal ownership. The forests are bulldozed, their conventional clients dispossessed. 
  the real fee of shrimp farming and different coastal improvement has long gone mostly unheralded within the U.S. media. an established journalist, Warne now captures the insatiability of those industries and the magic of the mangroves. His brilliant account will make each reader pause ahead of ordering the shrimp.

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Extra resources for Let Them Eat Shrimp: The Tragic Disappearance of the Rainforests of the Sea

Sample text

In the northeast it is subsistence fishers who are excluded—shut out of traditional harvesting grounds, protesting as the forests fall to the shrimp juggernaut. Occasionally, there is a setback for the juggernaut. In 2005 an old whaling port called Caravelas, on the eastern seaboard a thousand miles south of Curral Velho, said no to the establishment of what would have been Brazil’s largest shrimp farm. Elaine Corets was involved, and she wants me to meet some of her friends who stood up to the developers.

Manuel. He is going to show me how he earns his living. I am in the Parnaíba Delta, on Brazil’s northeastern coast— the heartland of crab and crab-catching. Along this coast, up to a third of the rural population depends on the crab fishery as their main source of income. No one knows the exact number of crabbers—it is not a registered fishery—but there must be thousands who, like Seu Manuel, step into the mangroves each day in search of caranguejo. And that’s just in Brazil. Across Central and Latin K.

If these are the troubles of a protected forest—its life-giving streams choked and diverted, an army of netters straining out its biological treasure—how much more vulnerable are the 99 percent of mangrove forests that enjoy no such protection? To find out, I traveled to Brazil, where, in the name of development, wetlands are being turned into wastelands, destroying a traditional way of life. Chapter 2 Paradise Lost A morte da floresta é o fim da nossa vida. The death of the forest is the end of our life.

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