Princeton University: More Farmers, More Problems - How Smallholder Agriculture Is Threatening Western Amazon
July 15, 2019
July 15, 2019
PRINCETON, New Jersey, July 15 [TNSresearch] -- Princeton University issued the following news release:
A verdant, nearly roadless place, the Western Amazon in South America may be the most biologically diverse place in the world. There, many people live in near isolation, with goods coming in either by river or air. Turning to crops for profit or sustenance, farmers operate small family plots to make a living.
Unfortunately, these farmers and their smallholder agricult . . .
A verdant, nearly roadless place, the Western Amazon in South America may be the most biologically diverse place in the world. There, many people live in near isolation, with goods coming in either by river or air. Turning to crops for profit or sustenance, farmers operate small family plots to make a living.
Unfortunately, these farmers and their smallholder agricult . . .
