The Cerrado savanna occupies about 26% of Brazil and is home to more than 12,000 plant species and diverse animal life. It’s also speckled with groundwater-fed wetlands that serve as the headwaters for two-thirds of Brazil’s major waterways, including the Amazon River, making it not only a biodiversity hot spot but also a critical ecosystem to preserve water security in the region.

This savanna’s wetlands also have another superpower: storing carbon in their waterlogged soils. According to a new paper published today in New Phytologist, the Cerrado’s wetlands store carbon at a density about 6 times greater than the Amazon rainforest’s vegetation.

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