Pubdate: Sat, 03 Aug 2002 Source: New Scientist (UK) Copyright: New Scientist, RBI Limited 2002 Contact: http://www.newscientist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/294 Author: Jeff Hecht ECOLOGICAL HOTSPOTS NAMED AS LATEST CASUALTIES IN COLOMBIA'S DRUGS WAR CULTIVATING crops of illegal drugs in Colombia is threatening some of the world's rarest birds and plants. Half the forest cleared in the country each year is being lost to the burgeoning number of coca and poppy fields, says a Colombian scientist working in the US. And drug eradication programmes sponsored by the US are making the problem worse, says Maria Alvarez of Columbia University in New York. Rather than stamping out the drugs trade, the programmes are simply forcing growers to move into more inaccessible regions such as the Colombian highlands - which are home to some of the world's most diverse and fragile ecosystems. Ecological "hotspots" containing a unique blend of species pepper the country I s highlands. "Some are extremely localised to one valley or mountain top," says Norman Myers of Oxford University. Two years ago, Myers urged conservation groups to prioritise safeguarding biodiversity hotspots around the world (Nature, vol 403, p 6772). But Colombia is a hotbed of civil unrest and illicit drugs cultivation. Guerrillas control much of the countryside and the acreage devoted to coca and poppy growing has risen by an average 21 per cent a year, says Alvarez. In Conservation Biology (vol 16, p 1086 she has mapped out the extent to which drugs crops are spreading into ecologically sensitive areas. But some doubt that the drugs trade is the real problem. "Coca is no more a threat to conservation or threatened species than infrastructure projects, mining, logging and especially cattle farming," says Paul Salaman, a bird specialist at the Natural History Museum, who has worked in Colombia for 12 years. But Alvarez says that, like subsistence farmers, drugs growers clear the forest, plant their crops, then move on to clear more forest. "What matters is not the bulk of the deforestation, [but] where it is happening," she told New Scientist. So far, drug cultivation has been concentrated in the Amazonian forests of southern Colombia, which the government says is a low conservation priority. But this is also where the Colombian government has focused its drug eradication efforts, sending out US-sponsored planes to spray herbicide on coca and poppy fields. The bad news is that drugs growers escape this attention by moving to highland forests, often outside government control. Coca production has increased five times since small-scale government spraying started 16 years ago, despite an So-fold increase in herbicide applications (see Graph). Alvarez says there is now significant deforestation in several hotspots identified by Myers, including the Dorien lowlands near Panama and the north-west Andean mountain forests near Ecuador. One threatened area covers the entire range of Eriocnemis mirabilis, the colourful puffleg hummingbird. Because the number of rare species is highly concentrated in these areas, clearing creates far more irreversible damage. Most of the drug acreage is planted with coca, which grows below 700 metres. Poppies, introduced in the 1990s are grown above 2000 metres, creating "a new threat to higher elevations, which are critical for biodiversity", Alvarez says. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex