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Home | Save Land | Travel | Totals | Resources | Get Involved | About | May 28, 2:18 am CT | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The Project: South American Rainforest
Our South American Rainforest projects:
In addition to the Antpitta, this temperate-zone cloudforest reserve is also home to other vulnerable restricted range birds such as the Bearded Guan, Golden-plumed Parakeet, Rufous-capped Thornbill, and Masked Saltator. The reserve is also home to the Spectacled Bear and Woolly Mountain Tapir. © Nigel Simpson
For More Information: For further information on the Jocotoco Antpitta see: In the last year, RCF and their Peruvian allies have been working to expand the reserve on its northeastern side, along the Yavar' Miri and Yavar' Rivers. The main reason for this is to protect an area of forest that is the home to large populations of threatened or endangered fauna including red uakari monkeys, giant river otters, manatees, tapir, primates, the huge air-breathing fish (Arapaima gigas), and giant river turtles (Podcnemis expansa).
This forest is exceptionally undisturbed by humans, but must now be protected as we enter the 21st century because of the inevitable settlement and development forces that will emerge in these remote areas of Peru and Brazil. The local people (both native and mestizo), living in villages some 60 kilometers from the present border of reserve are in favor of this expansion, because it would help them to live in their traditional ways by protecting them from encroaching settlers. The Peruvian Department of Conservation in the Region of Loreto is assisting the effort to expand the reserve. The plans would essentially double the size of the reserve (from 800,000 acres to 1.6 millon acres), while protecting some of the most remote and fauna-rich lands in the Amazon. RCF has been supporting the research and extension efforts which led to this new development, and is actively supporting the surveys, map-making, and legal work that will be needed to complete this effort. Your clicks on EcologyFund help to pay for this work, along with money to monitor the existing reserve and provide sustainable community development and limited health care facilities for the surrounding villages. For More Information:
Habitats, Flora and Fauna: Reserve lands closest to the Rio Apayacu consist of seasonally flooded varzea forest, and include two ox-bow lakes ('cochas') which constitute important permanent aquatic habitats. Away from the river the land is dominated by low but steep hills covered with very tall primary rainforest with a high density of economically valuable timber species. Small clearwater creeks wtih sandy bottoms drain the area, and several swampy areas add further environmental heterogeneity. Ridgetops in the reserve share may characteristics with varillal habitat, a very restricted type of habitat that is found in several locations in the Peruvian Amazon. Varillal occurs on ancient sandy ridges between river systems, and is home to a number of relict bird and mammal species, all of which are endangered due to their dependence on this rare type of habitat. Large mammals are fairly common in the region, and recent sightings include mountain lions and giant anteaters. Tapirs and jaguars are known to occur in the immediate area, as evidenced by the presence of tracks. Birds are very diverse, but much more survey work is needed before a more-or-less complete list is compiled - at least one undescribed subspecies of bird (the Black-headed Antbird) is known to occur at Sabalillo, and it is probable that several more undescribed forms occur. The aquatic fauna is also very diverse, and blackwater creeks in the area (including Sabalillo Creek) are important resources for local people for the collection of neon tetras, hatchetfish, and other species for the ornamental fish trade. A joint fish sampling project being carried out by Shedd Aquarium (Chicago) and Project Amazonas, is documenting the fish species present in the area. Reptiles and amphibians are also being catalogued periodically by visiting herpetologists, with a number of rarely encountered species already noted, including the giant monkey frog (Phyllobates bicolor). A Cooperative Reserve: The Sabalillo Forest Reserve is a cooperative effort between Project Amazonas and other entities. The Reserve will be protected, managed and used in a cooperative manner. Project Amazonas has established a memorandum of understanding with the John G. Shedd Aquarium of Chicago, providing for funding for a caretaker position at the Sabalillo reserve, as well as for participation by Project Amazonas in a multi-year study of the aquarium fish industry in the region. This Shedd-initiated study is looking at ornamental fish populations in various locations in the Peruvian Amazon, including at the Sabalillo Forest Reserve. The Sabalillo Yagua Indian Community is also participating in the management and operation of the Sabalillo reserve. By agreement with community members, the community has first opportunity for all employment opportunities at the reserve, including the position of caretaker, and temporary employment for construction, trail maintenance, guides, and field assistants. The community has also pledged to respect the no-hunting reserve zone, and to exclude commercial fishermen from the reserve waterways and lakes. In turn, Project Amazonas has pledged assistance to the Sabalillo School and will regularly include the community in medical expeditions organized or sponsored by Project Amazonas. EcologyFund monies are being used to pay for survey work, legal fees and lease payments to expand the Sabalillo and Madre Selva reserves. (Madre Selva is located on the Orosa River and is noted for its floating meadow habitats.) For More Information:
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