Deforestation in Paraguay’s Gran Chaco
The Gran Chaco—South America’s second largest forest—is disappearing. Cattle ranching and soybean production are fragmenting the region’s Dry Chaco, a massive tropical dry forest spanning 87 million hectares across parts of Argentina, Paraguay, and Bolivia (larger than Texas and New York combined). Dry forests get less attention than their rainforest counterparts, but their degradation severely impacts biodiversity.
This animation shows the progression of deforestation in the Paraguayan Chaco from 1985 to 2025 using natural-color images from Landsat satellites. Research using Landsat imagery found that 27% of the Paraguayan Chaco disappeared between 1987 and 2012. Another study found that Dry Chaco forest cover decreased by 20.2% between 2000 and 2019, with Paraguay’s forest experiencing the highest levels of loss.
A natural-color Landsat time series of the Chaco region in Paraguay, spanning 1985 to 2025, showing extensive deforestation and land cover changes over four decades.
Credits
Please give credit for this item to:
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
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Visualizer
- Ross K. Walter (SSAI)
Missions
This page is related to the following missions:Datasets used
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[Landsat]
ID: 47
Note: While we identify the data sets used on this page, we do not store any further details, nor the data sets themselves on our site.
Release date
This page was originally published on Wednesday, May 6, 2026.
This page was last updated on Wednesday, May 6, 2026 at 3:58 PM EDT.