Flying Rivers
- Recently, a new analysis revealed that relentless deforestation across South America is disrupting the continent’s “flying rivers” — invisible air currents that carry vast volumes of moisture from the Atlantic Ocean across the Amazon Basin.
- This has led to worsening droughts, fires, and power shortages across Peru, Brazil, Bolivia, and Ecuador.
- Flying rivers are atmospheric flows of water vapor generated when trees in the Amazon rainforest absorb water from the soil and release it back into the atmosphere through transpiration.
- These air currents act like an enormous “water pump,” transporting moisture thousands of kilometres inland, sustaining rainfall across the ....
Do You Want to Read More?
Subscribe Now
To get access to detailed content
Already a Member? Login here
Take Annual Subscription and get the following Advantage
The annual members of the Civil Services Chronicle can read the monthly content of the magazine as well as the Chronicle magazine archives.
Readers can study all the material since 2018 of the Civil Services Chronicle monthly issue in the form of Chronicle magazine archives.
Ecology & Environment
- 1 COP30 in Belém
- 2 Global Carbon Emissions to Rise Again in 2025
- 3 Global Methane Status Report 2025
- 4 India Joins Tropical Forest Forever Facility as Observer
- 5 Moss Spores Survive Harsh Space Conditions
- 6 Doha Political Declaration Adopted at World Social Summit 2025
- 7 IUCN Rates Khangchendzonga National Park as “Good”
- 8 Grey Seal Milk Found to Be More Complex than Human Breast Milk
- 9 Global Cooling Demand Set to Triple by 2050
- 10 Antarctic Ozone Hole Fifth-Smallest Since 1992

