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    Home»Science»See how fire has changed the world’s largest wetland, the Pantanal
    Science

    See how fire has changed the world’s largest wetland, the Pantanal

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteJanuary 11, 2026No Comments2 Mins Read
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    A marsh deer escaping a forest fire in Poconé, Mato Grosso, in 2020

    Lalo de Almeida

    Science Museum

    How can these four pictures be images of the same region? What force could possibly transform the Pantanal – a tropical wetland straddling Brazil, Bolivia and Paraguay, full of jaguars, howler monkeys, caiman, marsh deer and a vast number of fish and birds – into a fire-ravaged wasteland?

    Dorado in the Olho-d?a?gua River. Cabeceira do Prata Ranch Private Natural Heritage Reserve, Jardim, Mato Grosso do Sul, May 2013 ? Luciano Candisani

    A dorado in the Olho D’Água river in 2013

    Luciano Candisani

    The 200,000-square-kilometre wetland – the world’s largest – is used to alternating dry and wet seasons. But climate change, deforestation and intensive farming have made a grim parody of its natural wet and dry cycles. In 2020, a record-breaking wildfire burned over a quarter of the region’s vegetation cover. The last major fire season was in 2024.

    A garden of freshwater macrophytes in a temporary waterway during inundation. Mangabal Floodplain. Pantanal da Nhecola?ndia, Mato Grosso do Sul, March 2011 ? Luciano Candisani.

    An aerial view showing how life was burgeoning in the main drainage channel of the Baía do Castelo, a floodplain lake, in 2018.

    Luciano Candisani

    The plight of the fragile ecosystem has captured the attention of two photographers, Lalo de Almeida and Luciano Candisani. Their radically different images are showcased in Water Pantanal Fire, a free exhibition opening on 6 February at London’s Science Museum, and running until the end of May.

    Volunteer firefighters assess the wildfire on Jofre Velho ranch, Porto Jofre, Mato Grosso, 2020 ? Lalo de Almeida

    Volunteer firefighters gathering at the Jofre Velho ranch during 2020’s catastrophic blaze.

    Lalo de Almeida

    Candisani’s photographs focus on water and the region’s freshwater life.

    De Almeida, a documentary photographer, has focused on the fires that devastated the region and on how it has been affected by climate change.

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