February 23, 2026 - After weeks of protesting at a major port in the Amazon, Indigenous activists forced Brazil’s government to revoke a controversial privatization plan that could have destroyed their livelihoods and polluted waterways. It would have allowed US agricultural giant Cargill to dredge rivers and streams in the amazon to more easily transport soy exports. The Amazon rainforest is rapidly being clearcut, legally and illegally, to build soy bean plantations. [video]
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I've done Arapaima gigas, but not Arapaima in general! Good choices!
Have you seen an arapaima (Genus: Arapaima)?
I have now
Yes, in photos/videos
Yes, irl
I'm not sure
Voting ended onNov 15, 2025
Both of these photos are thanks to the Smithsonian National Zoo & Conservation Biology Institute. I believe they are both of Arapaima gigas sadly, but at least they're gorgeous photos.
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Deep in the Peruvian Amazon, a sprawling industrial facility has been carved out of the rainforest. This is the Camisea Gas Complex, a natur
Excerpt from this story from Mongabay Environmental News:
Deep in the Peruvian Amazon, a sprawling industrial facility has been carved out of the rainforest. This is the Camisea Gas Complex, a natural gas mega-field operated by a consortium of oil companies led by Argentina’s Pluspetrol.
The complex now supplies 70% of Peru’s liquefied petroleum gas, primarily used for cooking. But the project has left behind a trail of socioenvironmental rights violations, from threats to the survival of isolated Indigenous people to failure to provide energy access to the communities closest to the complex — and on the frontlines of the multiple gas leaks that have contaminated the forest in the 20 years since production began.
In September, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, OECD, deemed Pluspetrol responsible for environmental damage and Indigenous rights violations in the Peruvian Amazon.
A plethora of banks help fund the Camisea Gas Complex. According to nonprofit Stand.earth, Pluspetrol’s local subsidiary and fellow consortium members Repsol and Hunt Oil Peru have received $3.1 billion in financing since 2016. At least 16 banks — including Citibank, JPMorganChase, Itaú Unibanco and HSBC — have provided funding in the last year.
These numbers are part of a new report, “Banks vs. The Amazon,” which uncovers how global financial institutions continue to direct resources toward oil and gas extraction in Amazonia, contributing to the destruction of the rainforest and the rise of carbon emissions that contribute to higher global temperatures — despite some banks having adopted policies to end this.
Between January 2024 and June 2025, direct financing for the extraction of oil and gas in the Amazon added up to $2 billion. More than 80% of this went to just six companies: Pluspetrol Camisea and Hunt Oil Peru as well as Canadian firm Gran Tierra, Brazilian companies Petrobras and Eneva and global oil trader Gunvor, based in Cyprus.
“Although we know the Amazon has escalating threats, and people seem to care about that and governments want to protect it, the expansion of the oil and gas industry is not actually stopping,” Martyna Dominiak, lead author of the report, told Mongabay over videocall.
Lake Sandoval, Puerto Maldonado, Peru: Lake Sandoval is a lake in Peru, close to the city of Puerto Maldonado, part of the Madre de Dios in the Amazon basin. There is a touristic hike from the river Madre de Dios to the lake. On the way if you're lucky, you might see parrots, macaws and some other species from the rain forest. Wikipedia
Clay, Culture, and Crisis: How Climate Change Threatens the Waurá Pottery Tradition
In the heart of Brazil’s Xingu National Park, the Waurá people have shaped clay into vessels of memory for over a thousand years. Their pottery—crafted from riverbed clay and bound with a freshwater sponge called cauxi—is more than utility. It’s ritual, identity, and intergenerational storytelling. But today, this ancient art is under threat, not from cultural erosion, but from the climate crisis…