Brazil's Amazon Rainforest in flames

Wildlife Documentary: How wildlife is affected by the Brazil wildfires

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Watch our award-winning wildlife documentary that reveals the devastating impact of manmade wildfires in Brazil on wildlife and communities.

Image credit: World Animal Protection / Noelly Castro

In Brazil, 15 wild animals are killed on roads every second. The government chose to ignore this heartbreaking truth when planning for building the road. Find out more about the heartbreaking plight of wildlife in Brazil in our ‘BR-163: Progress for whom?’ documentary:

Thanks to your support, our Brazilian team travelled along the BR-163 highway between Mato Grosso and Pará, documenting the impact of these factory-farming-driven wildfires on the lives of wild animals, riverside communities, and indigenous territories.

Júlia Trevisan, Wildlife Coordinator at World Animal Protection (Brazil), said:

The construction of the road to benefit agribusiness has cut through the Amazon rainforest and ignored traditional communities and the rich biodiversity in its path.

Narrated by singer Mahmundi, the award-winning wildlife documentary also shows how you’re helping our partners on the ground to treat wild animals rescued from the fires. From sloths with harrowing burns to nocturnal tapirs who are hit on the highway while trying to escape the flames.

TapirYou’re helping Melancia the tapir recover from Brazil fires. Credit: Onçafari  

These incredible animals of the Amazon suffer the consequences of expanding animal agriculture and the demand for soybean production to feed factory farmed animals.

Thanks to your ongoing support, the mini documentary has won two awards: ‘Best Script’ at the Webseries and Film Festival 2024 in Lima, Peru, and 'Best Movie’ in the Ataíde film show at the Cine Amazônias festival in Pará, Brazil.

Together, we were recognised by four film festivals across Brazil, Peru, Singapore and the US – where we also received an Honourable Mention from a film festival in Missouri – amplifying your efforts to protect animals in Brazil from factory farming even more.

With you by our side, we’re tackling the root causes of animal suffering.

Factory farming's environmental damage

Factory farming

Intensive animal agriculture causes billions of animals to suffer annually, and also causes significant harm to the environment.

Animals in the wild

At least 1.6 trillion wild animals are exploited as commodities and suffer through people’s actions every year.

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