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Coca Cultivation in Central America Could Expand, Study Finds

Coca Cultivation in Central America Could Expand, Study Finds

Submitted by meghavi_admin on

icholas Magliocca, an LCLUC Principal Investigator, collaborated with Kendra McSweeney from Ohio State University and an international team to uncover the troubling potential for coca cultivation in Central America. Published in Environmental Research Letters, the study revealed that nearly 47% of Honduras, Guatemala, and Belize have ideal biophysical conditions for growing coca, the main ingredient in cocaine. This is significant, as coca cultivation has historically been limited to South America.

Podcast - Reimagining the Drug War Amid Rising Coca Cultivation in Central America

Podcast - Reimagining the Drug War Amid Rising Coca Cultivation in Central America

Submitted by meghavi_admin on

This podcast episode features Nicholas Magliocca, LCLUC Principal Investigator, alongside Kendra McSweeney (Ohio State University) and Fritz Pinnow (Honduras-based journalist and photographer). The discussion centers on the emerging trend of coca leaf cultivation in Central America, a region historically unaffected by this crop, which has been primarily associated with the Andean countries.

LCLUC Research on Narco-Trafficking Impacts Highlighted in 'The Guardian'

LCLUC Research on Narco-Trafficking Impacts Highlighted in 'The Guardian'

Submitted by meghavi_admin on

A recent article in The Guardian highlighted research on the environmental impacts of narco-trafficking in Central America, citing a study published in Nature Sustainability. The study, led by Nicholas Magliocca, a Principal Investigator (PI) of an LCLUC project at the University of Alabama, reveals how cocaine trafficking contributes to deforestation in the Mesoamerican Biological Corridor (MBC), a biodiversity hotspot with significant conservation value.