A global campaign will make young people aware of the danger the illicit drug trade represents to hundreds of species in Colombia’s rainforests Slash and burn in Columbian rainforest. Aerial spraying destroys everything, forcing Colombia's peasant farmers to move to new land and clear more forest.

By Jamie Doward, The Observer, Sunday 25 October 2009 Until recently, the Gorgeted Puffleg was rather obscure – in fact, until four years ago it did not officially exist. But although the tiny hummingbird was discovered only in 2005, in a small and remote region of rainforest in south-western Colombia, it is about to take centre stage in the war on drugs as governments around the globe alert the younger generation to the dangers of cocaine. Experts fear the bird is one of several hundred species that will become extinct within decades if Colombia’s rainforests continue to be razed for the purposes of coca cultivation. Other animals under threat – and that appear in information packs distributed to European schoolchildren – include the harpy eagle, titi monkey, golden poison frog, tapir, spectacled bear and gorgona blue lizard. Colombia, one of the largest environmental hubs in the planet, with a territory of more than 1 million square kilometres, has been warning about the dangers of “ecocide” caused by the country’s drug cartels for several years. As one of the most biodiverse countries in the world, it is home to 50,000 plant species and 18% of the world’s bird species. But now it is attempting to make children aware that the threats facing its rainforests are a global issue that will have an impact on climatic stability. The move represents a tacit admission that the past strategy of highlighting the cocaine trade’s links to violence and kidnappings has struggled to leave much of an impression on the drug’s users. “The environment is an issue that is important to everyone,” said the Colombian minister for the environment, Carlos Costa Posada. “We are tired of using images of violence. It is all people think about when they think about Colombia – people don’t want to come here for tourism. We are not saying this issue [cocaine’s role in the destruction of the rainforests] is the most important issue, but it is something people can identify with.” Cultivation of illicit crops has led to destruction of 2.2 million hectares of tropical forest in Colombia, an area slightly larger than Wales. For every hectare of coca grown, three of forest are cut down. This means that for each gram of cocaine used, four square metres of rainforest are cleared. The gorgeted puffleg, only 90 millimetres long, is particularly vulnerable. Its habitat consists of only 1,200 hectares of rainforest, 100 of which are disappearing every year because of coca cultivation. “We have around 400 species that are facing extinction,” Costa Posada said. “Violence is a local issue, but biodiversity is a world issue – deforestation is a major contributor to climate change.” …

Colombia’s endangered species at the mercy of jungle drug cartels via Endangered Species