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Study details links between coca, conflict, deforestation in Colombia

By Brooks Hays
Scientists used satellite images to study the relationships between spatial patterns of deforestation and variables like armed conflict and illegal coca farming. Photo by NASA/UPI
Scientists used satellite images to study the relationships between spatial patterns of deforestation and variables like armed conflict and illegal coca farming. Photo by NASA/UPI | License Photo

Aug. 13 (UPI) -- Sometimes, trees fall down on their own, but deforestation is fueled by human activities. In Colombia, those activities sometimes involve coca, the crop from which cocaine is derived.

When an international team of researchers analyzed deforestation patterns in Colombia using satellite images, they found trees were more likely to be felled in areas with close proximity to armed conflict between illegal groups and governmental military forces, coca plantations, mining operations, oil wells and roads.

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Researchers hope their work can help wildlife management and conservation groups identify and curb the main drivers of deforestation, including armed conflict. To slow deforestation, researchers argue, policy makers must address the specific causes of deforestation.

"The relationship between conflict and deforestation is far from simple," Pablo Negret, a doctoral student at the University of Queensland, said in a news release. "Many factors interact to increase or decrease deforestation risk, but stable governance can help forest retention."

In 2016, the Colombian government and Colombia's largest dissident group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, signed a peace agreement. But deforestation has continued in areas previously occupied by FARC.

"Our research shows that conservation projects need to work in parallel with social projects and substituting illegal coca crops," Negret said. "One way to do this is to work with the communities in Indigenous reserves and Afro-Colombian collective lands to reach conservation objectives, while fostering economic activity."

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For the latest study -- published this week in the journal Biological Conservation -- Negret and his colleagues analyzed the relationships between spatial patterns of deforestation in Colombia and 17 variables.

"On their own, armed conflict and coca cultivation had a notable effect, particularly in the Amazon, but in combination with other variables it was small," researchers wrote in the paper. "Deforestation pressure induced by armed conflict and coca cultivation was highest in Tumaco and Catatumbo regions and in la Macarena, Sierra Nevada and San Lucas mountains -- all areas of high biodiversity and conservation importance."

Authors of the new study hope their work will make it clear that curbing deforestation is about more than simply thwarting tree cutters. To protect forests, leaders and policy makers must work to solve the social and environmental ills that fuels deforestation, the researchers say.

In much of the world, curbing deforestation may require dietary changes, like eating less meat, and more sustainable agriculture practices. In Colombia, preventing deforestation may sometimes require peace-making work.

"Peace and sustainability make good bedfellows," Queensland professor Martine Maron said.

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