Minas Gerais — Beneath the shade of the umbu tree
Maria Neves tells Maria José that ripe umbu fruit is like a woman on the brink of giving birth: It demands immediate attention
“Umbu doesn’t take a day off; it’s like milking cows
it’s every day,” says Maria Neves Almeida
a Caatinga dweller (or caatingueira) from the Furado da Roda community in the municipality of Porteirinha
known as Zezé in those semiarid valleys of northern Minas Gerais
the livelihood of the small-scale farmer came from cotton
With the infestation of the cotton boll weevil (Anthonomus grandis)
“When we saw the cotton turn out this way
we thought it was the end of the road; everyone would starve,” she says
But it was in this infested territory that the traditional communities of northern Minas Gerais found hope in tastes and smells forgotten since childhood: native fruits
and the cooperative processes them into pulp
there has been a significant improvement,” says Zezé
people have given up on soft drinks.”
In the transition area between Caatinga and Cerrado
Quilombolas and Indigenous people have been recovering native fruits such as umbu
The latter carries the reputation of being the “meat of the hinterland” due to the richness of nutrients and proteins it contains in its pulp
Operating since 2003, the Grande Sertão Cooperative
local cooperatives and the financial support of partners such as WWF and the Banco do Brasil Foundation
serves as the primary purchaser of fruit production from small-scale farmers within a 600-kilometer (373-mile) radius
involving more than 280 cooperative members and supporting approximately 2,000 families
“We developed an eye for the Cerrado
We’re always looking at those fruits that will produce from now on
We’re checking if they’re blooming
if they’ll yield a good harvest,” recounts Jorge Martins Corrêa
a Quilombola born and raised in the 1960s in the Quilombo da Onça
where approximately 45 families now make a living through family farming and extractivism in Januária
“After the 1970s, the northern region of Minas Gerais went through massive eucalyptus plantations, leading to the aggressive clearing of the Cerrado. Consequently, we’ve been losing vegetation, biodiversity, and water. How do you sustain the meat of the hinterland?” says Sarah de Mello Teixeira, who oversees interinstitutional relations at the Núcleo do Pequi
a network of partner associations and cooperatives in 16 municipalities in the north of Minas Gerais
which strengthens the pequi production chain
who sometimes rely on the pequi harvest as their main source of income for the year
“We processed almost 700,000 kilos [1.5 million pounds] of pequi in the last harvest,” says José Fabio Soares
a food engineer and technician at the Grande Sertão Cooperative
referring to the harvest from December 2022 to February 2023
“What was processed was converted into oil
The cooperative aims to grow from the 40,000 dozen pequi currently sold to 200,000 in the next two years
It is estimated that more than 50 million reais ($9.9 million) circulated from pequi extractivism in northern Minas Gerais in 2020
Sarah Teixeira points out that the sale of Minas Gerais pequi at the Ceasa market in Goiânia has yielded more profits than pumpkin and coconut and was close to oranges
“Extractivism will yield much more than a meter of charcoal and will yield every year,” says Adailton Lopes Viana
president of the Association of Users of the Rio dos Cochos Sub-Basin
“And then you can plant another pequi tree
you’ll want to increase the population.”
Half of Pedro Pereira da Mota’s monthly family income is ensured by the coquinho azedo fruit
“The other 50% we manage; we raise a chicken
extracting coquinho has become much better
Now we collect and deliver directly to the cooperative; they sell it
Sueli Rodrigues Santos also belongs to the Cooperative of Small Agro-extractive Producers of the Peruaçu Valley (Cooperuaçu)
and the money from the first harvest of coquinho azedo she sold made her work easier
I got about 300 or 400 reais [$60-$80] so I thought
‘You know what I’m going to do with this money
I’m going to buy a bicycle.'” The bicycle helped with collecting coquinho in the following harvest
with its peak harvest season between October and December
Cooperuaçu’s main buyer is the Grande Sertão Cooperative
which takes the coquinho azedo and other fruit varieties to the pulp factory
where more than 200 tons of native fruits and some backyard fruit varieties are processed each year
the Xakriabá Indigenous people cultivate coquinho azedo in São João das Missões and sell it to Grande Sertão
“Now we make money from what we used to waste,” says Wanderlandia da Silva Rodrigues
a farmer who now works at the Grande Sertão pulp factory in the municipality of Mirabela
She has earned a substantial income by selling boxes of mangoes
a window and a musical organ — her dream purchases — are among the items she acquired with her earnings
Her five children have also worked at the factory
One of her daughters is a food engineer who is researching pequi oil for her doctoral thesis
laying flooring or buying a cupboard are common stories among extractivist women regarding their achievements across northern Minas Gerais
works as a mobilizer with the “veredeiros” who collect buriti fruit in the municipality of Brasília de Minas
“Many people didn’t even have a gas stove
who visits producers and stores buriti shavings at her home
Grande Sertão takes the production to Montes Claros
buriti finds favor in Zenita’s hands
I deliver over 500 sweets there in the city.”
Climate change and water scarcity have impacted the harvests of many fruits
there are areas where the veredas (the springs where this species grows) dry up and the trees die
Macaws and parakeets have also become more frequent visitors to the palm trees
The veredas await the rains to then ripen and disperse the seeds
waiting to ripen,” explains Neucy Aparecido Fagundes
agronomist and technician at Grande Sertão
“I’m speaking as if I were in the mind of the buriti tree
the plant will understand that the fruit will fall to the ground and won’t thrive.”
Almost half of the Cerrado has already been deforested. An article published in November 2023 points out that the hydrographic basins of the Cerrado are drying up and losing the capacity to supply some of Brazil’s main rivers
Change in land cover is one of the reasons
“The Cerrado is the father of the waters
Of the 12 main hydrographic basins [of Brazil]
eight originate or receive water from the Cerrado,” says Kolbe Soares
the biome has a super strategic importance in terms of water resources.”
Rivers becoming intermittent and dried-up springs are part of the daily landscape for family farmers
It’s now commonplace to cross bridges over rivers that once flowed but are now mere memories
“The Pandeiros River is an important tributary of the São Francisco River that contributes significantly to the fauna
And it’s a river that year after year has been reducing its flow,” says Ernane Ronie Martins
a professor at the Federal University of Minas Gerais
“Imagine a river the size of the São Francisco losing a tributary that is biologically one of the most important in the basin.” With a length of 1,811 miles
it is the fourt- largest river system on the continent and the largest river wholly within Brazil
The increase in drilling artesian wells is evident in the region
every community that used to rely on water resources from a river or stream has to drill a well,” says Kolbe
Highly susceptible to climate change, which accelerates its desertification, the Caatinga is the third-most deforested biome. The article highlights that the expansion of agriculture
and deforestation has caused drastic changes in the biome
the rescue of native fruits through the empowerment of traditional peoples in their territories
people no longer think about cutting down fruit trees that could be providing income for them
that’s very good,” says Valdomiro da Mota Brito
“I have no doubt that we are providing a service to humanity
What we are selling here is not just fruit
We are selling a quality of life that is not just for us
Banner image: The umbu that Isbeni de Jesus Rodrigues collects from the 10 trees in his backyard in Porteirinha (Minas Gerais) earns up to $6,000 reais ($1,200) per harvest
Silva, C. D., Manzione, R. L., & Caldas, M. M. (2023). Net water flux and land use shifts across the Brazilian Cerrado between 2000 and 2019. Regional Environmental Change, 23(4). doi:10.1007/s10113-023-02127-x
Araujo, H. F., Canassa, N. F., Machado, C. C., & Tabarelli, M. (2023). Human disturbance is the major driver of vegetation changes in the caatinga dry forest region. Scientific Reports, 13(1). doi:10.1038/s41598-023-45571-9
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