tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:/xml/amazon_conservation1amazon conservation news from mongabay.com2012-02-08T22:13:35Ztag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/90792012-02-08T18:11:00Z2012-02-08T22:13:35ZMajority of protected tropical forests "empty" due to hunting<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/colombia_2156.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Protected areas in the world's tropical rainforests are absolutely essential, but one cannot simply set up a new refuge and believe the work is done, according to a new paper in Bioscience. Unsustainable hunting and poaching is decimating tropical forest species in the Amazon, the Congo, Southeast Asia, and Oceana, leaving behind "empty forests," places largely devoid of any mammal, bird, or reptile over a few pounds. The loss of such species impacts the whole ecosystems, as plants lose seed dispersers and the food chain is unraveled. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/90662012-02-07T17:39:00Z2012-02-07T17:39:25ZNew rainforest and indigenous reserve established in PeruOn February 4th, the Peruvian government and a small indigenous group created a new Amazon reserve, dubbed the Maijuna Reserve. Located in northeastern Peru, the 390,000 hectare (970,000 acres) reserve is larger than California's Yosemite National Park and over three times the size of Hong Kong. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/90642012-02-07T16:20:00Z2012-02-07T16:21:10ZGuyanese tribe maps Connecticut-sized rainforest for land rights<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://travel.mongabay.com/images/jeremy_hance/150/Guyana_448.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>In a bid to gain legal recognition of their land, the indigenous Wapichan people have digitally mapped their customary rainforest land in Guyana over the past ten years. Covering 1.4 million hectares, about the size of Connecticut, the rainforest would be split between sustainable-use regions, sacred areas, and wildlife conservation according to a plan by the Wapichan tribe that will be released today. The plan says the tribe would preserve the forest from extractive industries. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/90382012-02-01T17:36:00Z2012-02-02T17:55:33ZNew meteorological theory argues that the world's forests are rainmakers<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://travel.mongabay.com/costa_rica/150/costa-rica_0737.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>New, radical theories in science often take time to be accepted, especially those that directly challenge longstanding ideas, contemporary policy or cultural norms. The fact that the Earth revolves around the sun, and not vice-versa, took centuries to gain widespread scientific and public acceptance. While Darwin's theory of evolution was quickly grasped by biologists, portions of the public today, especially in places like the U.S., still disbelieve. Currently, the near total consensus by climatologists that human activities are warming the Earth continues to be challenged by outsiders. Whether or not the biotic pump theory will one day fall into this grouping remains to be seen. First published in 2007 by two Russian physicists, Victor Gorshkov and Anastassia Makarieva, the still little-known biotic pump theory postulates that forests are the driving force behind precipitation over land masses. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/90312012-01-30T20:12:00Z2012-01-30T20:48:41ZSaving the world's biggest river otter<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/giantriverotterinterview.L93_Cierre.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Charismatic, vocal, unpredictable, domestic, and playful are all adjectives that aptly describe the giant river otter (<i>Pteronura brasiliensis</i>), one of the Amazon's most spectacular big mammals. As its name suggest, this otter is the longest member of the weasel family: from tip of the nose to tail's end the otter can measure 6 feet (1.8 meters) long. Living in closely-knit family groups, sporting a complex range of behavior, and displaying almost human-like capricious moods, the giant river otter has captured a number of researchers and conservationists' hearts, including Dutch conservationist Jessica Groenendijk.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/90172012-01-26T18:08:00Z2012-01-26T18:09:08ZPhoto of the Day: Critically Endangered brown spider monkey discovered in park <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/brown-spider-monkey-1.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Researchers with The Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) and Colombia’s National Parks Unit have located at least two individuals of brown-spider monkey (Ateles hybridus) in Colombia's Selva de Florencia National Park. The discovery is important because its the only known population of this particular subspecies (Ateles hybridus brunneus) in a protected area. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/89132012-01-02T17:39:00Z2012-01-02T17:59:36ZEcuador makes $116 million to not drill for oil in Amazon<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/0913yasunifrog.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>A possibly ground-breaking idea has been kept on life support after Ecuador revealed its Yasuni-ITT Initiative had raked in $116 million before the end of the year, breaking the $100 million mark that Ecuador said it needed to keep the program alive. Ecuador is proposing to <i>not</i> drill for an estimated 850 million barrels of oil in the Ishpingo-Tambococha-Tiputinin (ITT) blocs of Yasuni National Park if the international community pledges $3.6 billion to a United Nations Development Fund (UNDF), or about half of what the oil is currently worth. The Yasuni-ITT Initiative would preserve arguably the most biodiverse region on Earth from oil exploitation, safeguard indigenous populations, and keep an estimated 410 million tons of CO2 out of the atmosphere. However, the initiative is not without its detractors, some arguing the program is little more than blackmail; meanwhile proponents say it could prove an effective way to combat climate change, deforestation, and mass extinction.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/88892011-12-22T16:31:00Z2011-12-22T17:42:42ZTop 10 Environmental Stories of 2011<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/Sunny_Skies_over_the_Arctic_in_Late_June_2010.NASA.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Many of 2011's most dramatic stories on environmental issues came from people taking to the streets. With governments and corporations slow to tackle massive environmental problems, people have begun to assert themselves. Victories were seen on four continents: in Bolivia a draconian response to protestors embarrassed the government, causing them to drop plans to build a road through Tipnis, an indigenous Amazonian reserve; in Myanmar, a nation not known for bowing to public demands, large protests pushed the government to cancel a massive Chinese hydroelectric project; in Borneo a three-year struggle to stop the construction of a coal plant on the coast of the Coral Triangle ended in victory for activists; in Britain plans to privatize forests created such a public outcry that the government not only pulled back but also apologized; and in the U.S. civil disobedience and massive marches pressured the Obama Administration to delay a decision on the controversial Keystone XL pipeline, which would bring tar sands from Canada to a global market.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/87302011-11-23T18:28:00Z2011-11-23T18:37:27ZEcotourism isn't bad for wildlife in the AmazonEcotourism doesn't hurt biodiversity, and in some cases may even safeguard vulnerable areas, concludes a new study from the Amazon in Mammalian Biology. Surveying large mammals in an ecotourism area in Manu National Biosphere, the researchers found that ecotourists had no effect on the animals. However, the researchers warn that not all ecotourism is the same, and some types may, in fact, hurt the very animals tourists come to see. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/85862011-10-23T18:06:00Z2011-10-23T18:31:50ZBolivian road project through Amazon reserve canceledFollowing a violent crackdown on protestors which deeply embarrassed the Bolivian government, president Evo Morales has thrown-out plans to build a road through an indigenous reserve, reports the BBC. Protestors marched 310 miles (498 kilometers) from the Amazon to La Paz to show their opposition to the road, saying that the project would destroy vast areas of biodiverse rainforest and open up their land to illegal settlers.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/83812011-09-11T17:41:00Z2011-09-11T18:47:36ZLoving the tapir: pioneering conservation for South America's biggest animal<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/Tapir_04_Zupanc.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Compared to some of South America's megafauna stand-out species—the jaguar, the anaconda, and the harpy eagle come to mind—the tapir doesn't get a lot of love. This is a shame. For one thing, they're the largest terrestrial animal on the South American continent: pound-for-pound they beat both the jaguar and the llama. For another they play a very significant role in their ecosystem: they disperse seeds, modify habitats, and are periodic prey to big predators. For another, modern tapirs are some of the last survivors of a megafauna family that roamed much of the northern hemisphere, including North America, and only declined during the Pleistocene extinction. Finally, for anyone fortunate enough to have witnessed the often-shy tapir in the wild, one knows there is something mystical and ancient about these admittedly strange-looking beasts. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/82892011-08-17T15:49:00Z2011-08-17T15:59:20ZCameratraps take global snapshot of declining tropical mammals<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/cameratrap.chimps.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>A groundbreaking cameratrap study has mapped the abundance, or lack thereof, of tropical mammal populations across seven countries in some of the world's most important rainforests. Undertaken by The Tropical Ecology Assessment and Monitoring Network (TEAM), the study found that habitat loss was having a critical impact on mammals. The study, which documented 105 mammals (nearly 2 percent of the world's known mammals) on three continents, also confirmed that mammals fared far better—both in diversity and abundance—in areas with continuous forest versus areas that had been degraded. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/82822011-08-15T17:04:00Z2011-08-15T21:59:15ZLessons from the world's longest study of rainforest fragments<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/BDFFP-aerial-view3.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>For over 30 years, hundreds of scientists have scoured eleven forest fragments in the Amazon seeking answers to big questions: how do forest fragments' species and microclimate differ from their intact relatives? Will rainforest fragments provide a safe haven for imperiled species or are they last stand for the living dead? Should conservation focus on saving forest fragments or is it more important to focus the fight on big tropical landscapes? Are forest fragments capable of regrowth and expansion? Can a forest—once cut-off—heal itself? Such questions are increasingly important as forest fragments—patches of forest that are separated from larger forest landscapes due to expanding agriculture, pasture, or fire—increase worldwide along with the human footprint. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/82262011-07-31T21:04:00Z2011-08-03T00:54:16ZIndigenous peoples in Suriname still wait for land rights<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/suriname_2653.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Legal rights and recognition for the diverse indigenous peoples of Suriname have lagged behind those in other South American countries. Despite pressure from the UN and binding judgments by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Suriname has yet to recognize indigenous and tribal land rights, a situation that has disconnected local communities from decisions regarding the land they have inhabited for centuries and in some cases millennia. A new report, Securing Indigenous Peoples’ Rights in Conservation in Suriname: A Review outlines how this lack of rights has alienated indigenous communities from conservation efforts in Suriname. Instead of having an active say in the creation of conservation reserves, as well as their management, decisions on indigenous lands have traditionally been imposed from the 'top-down' either by government officials or NGOs. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/80122011-06-13T22:33:00Z2011-06-15T15:31:24ZGermany backs out of Yasuni deal<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/0913yasunifrog.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Germany has backed out of a pledge to commit $50 million a year to Ecuador's Yasuni ITT Initiative, reports Science Insider. The move by Germany potentially upsets an innovative program hailed by environmentalists and scientists alike. This one-of-a-kind initiative would protect a 200,000 hectare bloc in Yasuni National Park from oil drilling in return for a trust fund of $3.6 billion, or about half the market value of the nearly billion barrels of oil lying underneath the area. The plan is meant to mitigate climate change, protect biodiversity, and safeguard the rights of indigenous people. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/73882011-02-02T23:37:00Z2011-02-03T00:06:43ZParadise & Paradox: a semester in Ecuador<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/michael.marine.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>A semester abroad is an opportunity to live a sort of compacted life. In a few short months you seem to gain the experience of a much longer time and make enough memories to fill years. I recall a weeklong trip to the Alvord Desert with a field biology class from Portland Community College: the adventure of living out of a van, conducting research, and experiencing a place with classmates turned colleagues and professors turned friends who knew the desert like the backs of their hands. In that regard, it had a lot in common with my semester in Ecuador, but I can't think of anything that could have prepared me for a four month stay in a small South American country that I knew very little about. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/71232010-11-30T16:54:00Z2010-11-30T16:59:27ZConsumer goods industry announces goal of zero deforestation in CancunWhile governments continue to stall on action to cut greenhouse gas emissions worldwide, global corporations are promising big changes to tackle their responsibilities. The Board of Consumer Goods Forum (BCGF) has approved a resolution to achieve net zero deforestation by 2020 in products such as palm oil, soy, beef, and paper. Announced yesterday at the UN Climate Summit in Cancun, the BCGF has stated the goal will be met both by individual actions within companies and collective action, including partnerships with NGOs, development banks, and governments. With such giants as Walmart, Unilever, Carrefour, and General Mills, BCGF is made up of four hundred global consumer goods manufacturers and retailers totaling over $2.8 trillion in revenue. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/70932010-11-23T01:17:00Z2010-11-30T00:05:43ZOil, indigenous people, and Ecuador's big idea<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/yasuni_359.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Ecuador's big idea—potentially Earth-rattling—goes something like this: the international community pays the small South American nation <i>not</i> to drill for nearly a billion barrels of oil in a massive block of Yasuni National Park. While Ecuador receives hundred of millions in an UN-backed fund, what does the international community receive? Arguably the world's most biodiverse rainforest is saved from oil extraction, two indigenous tribes' requests to be left uncontacted are respected, and some 400 million metric tons of CO2 is not emitted from burning the oil. In other words, the international community is being asked to put money where its mouth is on climate change, indigenous rights, and biodiversity loss. David Romo Vallejo, professor at the University of San Francisco Quito and co-director of Tiputini research station in Yasuni, recently told mongabay.com in an interview that this is "the best proposal so far made to ensure the protection of this incredible site." Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/69642010-10-28T10:20:00Z2010-10-30T21:48:07ZUndergrads in the Amazon: American students witness beauty and crisis in Yasuni National Park, Ecuador <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/trevor.undergrad.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Although most Americans have likely seen photos and videos of the world's largest rainforest, the Amazon, they will probably never see it face-to-face. For many, the Amazon seems incredibly remote: it is a dim, mysterious place, a jungle surfeit in adventure and beauty—but not a place to take a family vacation or spend a honeymoon. This means that the destruction of the Amazon, like the rainforest itself, also appears distant when seen from Oregon or North Carolina or Pennsylvania. Oil spills in Ecuador, cattle ranching in Brazil, hydroelectric dams in Peru: these issues are low, if not non-existent, for most Americans. But a visit to the Amazon changes all that. This was recently confirmed to me when I traveled with American college students during a trip to far-flung Yasuni National Park in Ecuador. As a part of a study abroad program with the University of San Francisco in Quito and the Galapagos Academic Institute for the Arts and Sciences (GAIAS), these students spend a semester studying ecology and environmental issues in Ecuador, including a first-time visit to the Amazon rainforest at Tiputini Biodiversity Station in Yasuni—and our trips just happened to overlap.
Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/69062010-10-13T21:28:00Z2010-10-13T21:39:25ZSatellites show fragmented rainforests significantly drier than intact forest<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://travel.mongabay.com/brazil/150/brasil_128.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>A new study in Biological Conservation has shown that edge forests and forest patches are more vulnerable to burning because they are drier than intact forests. Using eight years of satellite imagery over East Amazonia, the researchers found that desiccation (extreme dryness) penetrated anywhere from 1 to 3 kilometers into forests depending on the level of fragmentation. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/68942010-10-11T18:37:00Z2010-10-12T18:39:47ZCan 'boutique capitalism' help protect the Amazon?<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/ecostasy.plainer.150.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>Most companies talk green, but few—almost none in fact—actually walk the walk. Sustainable design company, Ecostasy, not only walks the walk, but actually seeks out among the most challenging places to work: the imperiled Brazilian Amazon. Specializing in hand-crafted products by indigenous groups—such as jewelry, pots, and furniture—Ecostasy seeks to balance smart economics, environmental protection, and community development. Make no mistake, however, Ecostasy is not a non-profit, but a rare and refreshing example of a company truly dedicated to changing the world for the better. "In my mind, a virtuous company does not compromise ethical principles for economic interests. For me, being ethical is comprised of conducting oneself with honesty and responsibility to one’s constituencies (customers, employees, suppliers), society and the environment," Katherine Ponte, founder of Ecostasy, told mongabay.com in an interview.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/68612010-10-04T17:33:00Z2010-10-04T21:35:48ZYasuni on film: could a documentary save the world's most biodiverse ecosystem?<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/yasuni_man.thumb.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>How do you save one of the most biologically and culturally diverse places in the world if most people have never heard of it? If you want a big audience—you make a film. This is what wildlife-filmmaker Ryan Killackey is hoping to do with his new movie Yasuni Man. Killackey says the film will show-off the wonders of Yasuni National Park while highlighting the complexity of its biggest threat: the oil industry. "Conceptually, the film resembles a true-life cross between the documentary Crude and the blockbuster Avatar—except it's real and it's happening now," Killackey told mongabay.com.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/67782010-09-20T16:39:00Z2010-10-31T18:00:39ZHow the overlooked peccary engineers the Amazon, an interview with Harald Beck <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/beck.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>When people think of the Amazon rainforest, they likely think of roaring jaguars, jumping monkeys, marching ants, and squeezing anacondas. The humble peccary would hardly be among the first animals to cross their mind, if they even know such pig-like animals exists! Yet new research on the peccary is proving just how vital these species are to the world's greatest rainforest. As seed dispersers and seed destroyers, engineers of freshwater habitats and forest gaps, peccaries play an immense, long overlooked, role in the rainforest. "Peccaries have the highest density and biomass of any Neotropical mammal species. Obviously these fellows have quite an appetite for almost anything, but primarily they consume fruits and seeds. Their specialized jaws allow them to crush very hard seeds. The cracking sounds can be heard through the thick vegetation long before we could see them. As peccary herds bulldoze through the leaf litter in search for insects, frogs, seeds, and fruits, they destroy (i.e. snap and trample) many seedlings and saplings, sometimes leaving only the bare ground behind," Harald Beck, assistant professor at Towson University in Maryland, told mongabay.com in an interview. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/65852010-08-05T21:35:00Z2010-08-06T15:02:11ZHunting threatens the other Amazon: where harpy eagles are common and jaguars easy to spot, an interview with Paul Rosolie<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/jaguar.thumb.JPG " align="left"/></td></tr></table>If you have been fortunate enough to visit the Amazon or any other great rainforest, you've probably been wowed by the multitude and diversity of life. However, you also likely quickly realized that the deep jungle is not quite what you may have imagined when you were a child: you don't watch as jaguars wrestle with giant anteaters or anacondas circle prey. Instead life in the Amazon is small: insects, birds, frogs. Even biologists will tell you that you can spend years in the Amazon and never see a single jaguar. Yet rainforest guide and modern day explorer Paul Rosolie says there is another Amazon, one so pristine and with such wild abundance that it seems impossible to imagine if not for Rosolie's stories, photos, and soon videos. This is an Amazon where the big animals—jaguars, tapir, anaconda, giant anteaters, and harpy eagles—are not only abundant but visible. Free from human impact and overhunting, these remote places—off the beaten path of tourists—are growing ever smaller and, according to Rosolie, are in danger of disappearing forever. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/64702010-07-08T20:55:00Z2010-12-06T03:42:18ZControversial changes to Brazilian forest law passes first barrierAn amendment to undermine protections in Brazil's 1965 forestry code has passed it first legislative barrier, reports the World Wide Fund for Nature-Brasil (WWF). Yesterday the amendment passed a special vote in the Congress's Special Committee on Forest Law Changes.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/64132010-07-01T16:55:00Z2010-12-06T03:43:38ZAmazon and Atlantic Forest under threat: politicians press to dilute Brazil's forestry law<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/brazil_0545.thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>A group of Brazilian legislatures, known as the 'ruralistas', are working to change important aspects of the Brazil's landmark 1965 forestry code, undermining forest protection in the Amazon and the Mata Atlantica (also known as the Atlantic Forest) and perhaps heralding a new era of booming deforestation. The ruralistas, linked to big agribusiness and landowners, are taking aim at the part of the forestry code that requires landowners in the Amazon to retain 80 percent of their land area as legal reserves, arguing that the law threatens agricultural development.
Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/63072010-06-21T03:43:00Z2010-06-21T03:59:13ZEnvironmentalists and indigenous groups condemn plan for six dams in Peruvian AmazonEnvironmentalists and indigenous groups have come together to condemn a 15 million US dollar plan for six hydroelectric dams in the Peruvian Amazon, signed last week by Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and Peruvian President, Alan Garcia. While the six dams would produce over 6,000 megawatts, mostly for Brazil, critics say the dams will flood tens of thousands of hectares of rainforest, devastate the lifestyles of a number of indigenous groups, and only serve big Brazilian corporations. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/62862010-06-16T16:40:00Z2010-06-17T02:32:38ZMalaria increases 50 percent following deforestation in the AmazonA new study shows that deforestation in the Amazon helps spread disease by creating an optimal environment for malaria-carrying mosquitoes. The study, published in the online issue of the CDC journal Emerging Infectious Diseases, found that clearing forests in the Brazilian Amazon raised incidences of malaria by almost 50 percent. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/62652010-06-14T23:52:00Z2010-06-15T02:38:18ZDeforestation on the rise again in BrazilDeforestation in the Brazilian Amazon may be on the rise again after reaching record-low levels last year, reports Brazil's National Space Research Institute, INPE.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/62582010-06-14T16:26:00Z2010-06-14T16:39:49ZInga alley cropping: a sustainable alternative to slash and burn agricultureIt has been estimated that as many as 300 million farmers in tropical countries may take part in slash and burn agriculture. A practice that is environmentally destructive and ultimately unstable. However, research funded by the EEC and carried out in Costa Rica in the late 1980s and early 1990s by Mike Hands offers hope that it is possible to farm more successfully and sustainably in these tropical regions.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/61262010-05-26T20:35:00Z2010-05-26T20:49:18ZNew bird discovered in Colombia—and released alive<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/fenwicks.antpitta.thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>Researchers have discovered a new species of antpitta in the montane cloud forests of the Colibri del Sol Bird Reserve in western Colombia. A thrush-like bird, the new cinnamon and gray species was, according to a press release by the American Bird Conservancy (ABC), "captured, banded, measured, photographed, sampled for DNA, and then released alive back into the wild". This is one of only a few incidences in which a new species has been described without 'collecting' an individual (i.e. killing) to provide a model of the species in a museum. The new bird has been named Fenwick's antpitta (Grallaria fenwickorum) after the President of ABC, George Fenwick, and his family. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/61162010-05-24T18:02:00Z2010-05-25T14:15:24ZMore of the Amazon opened to oil development <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/09/0803.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Perupetro, the Peruvian government's oil and gas corporate leasing body, announced last week that it will open an additional 25 lots for oil and gas exploration in the Amazon covering an area of 10 million hectares (nearly 25 million acres). Peru's national Amazon indigenous group, AIDESEP, criticized the move calling it a 'new threat' to Peru's indigenous group. According to Amazon Watch these new lots mean that 75 percent of the Peruvian Amazon is now open to oil and gas exploration and drilling. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/61152010-05-24T15:48:00Z2010-05-25T13:50:11ZLong-distance seed dispersal and hunting, an interview with Kimberly Holbrook<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/K.Holbrook-Cameroon.thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>Scientists are just beginning to uncover the complex relationship between healthy biodiverse tropical forests and seed dispersers—species that spread seeds from a parent tree to other parts of the forest including birds, rodents, primates, and even elephants. By its very nature this relationship consists of an incredibly high number of variables: how abundant are seed dispersers, which animals spread seeds the furthest, what species spread which seeds, how are human impacts like hunting and deforestation impacting successful dispersal, as well as many others. Dr. Kimberly Holbrook has begun to answer some of these questions.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/58892010-03-29T17:03:00Z2010-03-29T17:16:07ZMore research and conservation efforts needed to save Colombia's monkeysApproximately thirty monkey species inhabit the tropical forests of Colombia with at least five found no-where else in the world. A new review appearing the open access journal <i>Tropical Conservation Science</i> of Colombia's primates finds that a number of these species, including some greatly endangered species, have been neglected by scientists. The researchers looked at over 3,500 studies covering over a century of research by primatologists. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/58112010-03-10T21:39:00Z2010-03-11T15:26:50ZSecrets of the Amazon: giant anacondas and floating forests, an interview with Paul Rosolie<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/rosolie.thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>At twenty-two Paul Rosolie has seen more adventure than many of us will in our lifetime. First visiting the Amazon at eighteen, Rosolie has explored strange jungle ecosystems, caught anaconda and black caiman bare-handed, joined indigenous hunting expeditions, led volunteer expeditions, and hand-raised a baby giant anteater. "Rainforests were my childhood obsession," Rosolie told Mongabay.com. "For as long as I can remember, going to the Amazon had been my dream […] In those first ten minutes [of visiting], cowering under the bellowing calls of howler monkeys, I saw trails of leaf cutter ants under impossibly large, vine-tangled trees; a flock of scarlet macaws crossed the sky like a brilliant flying rainbow. I saw a place where nature was in its full; it is the most amazing place on earth." Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/57982010-03-07T20:52:00Z2010-09-28T22:30:34ZWhy seed dispersers matter, an interview with Pierre-Michel Forget, chair of the FSD International Symposium<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/DSC09613.thumb.JPG " align="left"/></td></tr></table>There are few areas of research in tropical biology more exciting and more important than seed dispersal. Seed dispersal—the process by which seeds are spread from parent trees to new sprouting ground—underpins the ecology of forests worldwide. In temperate forests, seeds are often spread by wind and water, though sometimes by animals such as squirrels and birds. But in the tropics the emphasis is far heavier on the latter, as Dr. Pierre-Michel Forget explains to mongabay.com. "[In rainforests] a majority of plants, trees, lianas, epiphytes, and herbs, are dispersed by fruit-eating animals. […] As seed size varies from tiny seeds less than one millimetres to several centimetres in length or diameter, then, a variety of animals is required to disperse such a continuum and variety of seed size, the smaller being transported by ants and dung beetles, the larger swallowed by cassowary, tapir and elephant, for instance."Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/57422010-03-01T02:57:00Z2010-03-01T16:28:32ZGuyana bans gold mining in the 'Land of the Giants'<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/tapirbig.thumb.bmp " align="left"/></td></tr></table>Guyana has banned gold dredging in the Rewa Head region of the South American country after pressure from Amerindian communities in the area. A recent expedition to Rewa Head turned up unspoiled wilderness and mind-boggling biodiversity. The researchers, in just six weeks, stumbled on the world's largest snake (anaconda), spider (the aptly named goliath bird-eating spider), armadillo (the giant armadillo), anteater (the giant anteater), and otter (the giant otter), leading them to dub the area 'the Land of the Giants'. "During our brief survey we had encounters with wildlife that tropical biologists can spend years in the field waiting for. On a single day we had two tapirs paddle alongside our boat, we were swooped on by a crested eagle and then later charged by a group of giant otters."Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/56732010-02-16T21:59:00Z2011-01-05T18:45:40ZUnder siege: oil and gas concessions cover 41 percent of the Peruvian Amazon <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/09/0803.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>A new study in the <i>Environmental Research Letter</i> finds that the Peruvian Amazon is being overrun by the oil and gas industries. According to the study 41 percent of the Peruvian Amazon is currently covered by 52 separate oil and gas concessions, nearly six times as much land as was covered in 2003. "We found that more of the Peruvian Amazon has recently been leased to oil and gas companies than at any other time on record," explained co-author Dr. Matt Finer of the Washington DC-based Save America’s Forests in a press release. The concessions even surpass the oil boom in the region during the 1970s and 80s, which resulted in extensive environmental damage. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/56152010-02-04T19:59:00Z2010-02-04T21:01:58ZBirder captures first footage ever of long whiskered owlet, one of the world's rarest birdsIt was any birders dream come true: not only to see one of the world's rarest birds, but to discover a new unknown population. Israeli birder, Shachar Alterman, was surveying birds with the UK organization <a href="http://neoprimate.org/lang/en/">Neotropical Primate Conservation</a> in Peruvian cloud forest when he heard and then saw the long whiskered owlet. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/54832010-01-19T17:59:00Z2010-01-19T23:04:47ZPhotos: park in Ecuador likely contains world’s highest biodiversity, but threatened by oil<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/0064527_IMGP9104thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>In the midst of a seesaw political battle to save Yasuni National Park from oil developers, scientists have announced that this park in Ecuador houses more species than anywhere else in South America—and maybe the world. "Yasuní is at the center of a small zone where South America's amphibians, birds, mammals, and vascular plants all reach maximum diversity," Dr. Clinton Jenkins of the University of Maryland said in a press release. "We dubbed this area the 'quadruple richness center.'"Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/53532009-12-23T23:00:00Z2009-12-24T00:18:54ZEcuador to be paid to leave oil in the groundEcuador will establish a trust fund for receiving payments to leave oil reserves unexploited in Yasuni National Park, one of the world's most biodiverse rainforest reserves, reports the UN Development Programme, the agency that will administer the fund.
Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/53522009-12-23T20:29:00Z2009-12-23T22:16:07ZBrazil establishes 20,000 sq mi of new indigenous reserves in the Amazon<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/09/1223brazil_reserves150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>On Monday, Brazil decreed nine new indigenous reserves covering 51,000 square kilometers (19,700 square miles) of the Amazon rainforest, an areas larger than Denmark or Switzerland, reports the <i>AFP</i>. Five of the reserves are located in the state of Amazonas, two are in Pará, one is in Roraima, and another is in Mato Grosso do Sul. The protected areas house about seven thousand Indians from 29 ethnic groups, according to FUNAI (Fundação Nacional do Índio), Brazil's indigenous affairs agency.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/53502009-12-22T23:31:00Z2010-02-02T15:34:42ZThe real Avatar story: indigenous people fight to save their forest homes from corporate exploitation<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/09/0619peru150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>In James Cameron's newest film <i>Avatar</i> an alien tribe on a distant planet fights to save their forest home from human invaders bent on mining the planet. The mining company has brought in ex-marines for 'security' and will stop at nothing, not even genocide, to secure profits for its shareholders. While Cameron's film takes place on a planet sporting six-legged rhinos and massive flying lizards, the struggle between corporations and indigenous people is hardly science fiction. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/52012009-12-03T23:11:00Z2009-12-04T05:58:56ZBrazil could halt Amazon deforestation within a decade<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/09/1203amazon_protected_areas150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Funds generated under a U.S. cap-and-trade or a broader U.N.-supported scheme to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from deforestation and degradation ("REDD") could play a critical role in bringing deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon to a halt, reports a team writing in the journal <i>Science</i>. But the window of opportunity is short — Brazil has a two to three year window to take actions that would end Amazon deforestation within a decade.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/51762009-11-29T22:19:00Z2009-12-01T15:19:58ZGuyana expedition finds biodiversity trove in area slated for oil and gas development, an interview with Robert Pickles<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/IMG_0640small.JPG" align="left"/></td></tr></table>An expedition deep into Guyana's rainforest interior to find the endangered giant river otter—and collect their scat for genetic analysis—uncovered much more than even this endangered charismatic species. "Visiting the Rewa Head felt like we were walking in the footsteps of Wallace and Bates, seeing South America with its natural density of wild animals as it would have appeared 150 years ago," expedition member Robert Pickles said to Mongabay.com. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/51462009-11-19T23:49:00Z2009-11-20T16:34:31ZDeforestation emissions should be shared between producer and consumer, argues study<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://travel.mongabay.com/brazil/150/brazil_1495.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Under the Kyoto Protocol the nation that produces carbon emission takes responsibility for them, but what about when the country is producing carbon-intensive goods for consumer demand beyond its borders? For example while China is now the world's highest carbon emitter, 50 percent of its growth over the last year was due to producing goods for wealthy countries like the EU and the United States which have, in a sense, outsourced their manufacturing emissions to China. A new study in <i>Environmental Research Letters</i> presents a possible model for making certain that both producer and consumer share responsibility for emissions in an area so far neglected by studies of this kind: deforestation and land-use change. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/50582009-10-28T00:21:00Z2009-10-28T00:25:34ZCrisis averted for now, Peruvian natives will meet with Hunt OilIndigenous groups in a dispute with Hunt Oil, over the company performing seismic tests their land, have scheduled a meeting with the Texas based oil corporation, according to Reuters. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/50572009-10-27T19:18:00Z2009-10-27T20:26:52ZWill Ecuador's plan to raise money for not drilling oil in the Amazon succeed?Ecuador's Yasuni National Park is full of wealth: it is one of the richest places on earth in terms of biodiversity; it is home to the indigenous Waorani people, as well as several uncontacted tribes; and the park's forest and soil provides a massive carbon sink. However, Yasuni National Park also sits on wealth of a different kind: one billion barrels of oil remain locked under the pristine rainforest. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/50532009-10-25T22:31:00Z2009-10-27T15:01:33ZAmazonian natives say they will defend tribal lands from Hunt Oil with "their lives"<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/09/0803.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Indigenous natives in the Amazon are headed to the town of Salvacion in Peru with a plan to forcibly remove the Texas-based Hunt Oil company from their land as early as today. Peruvian police forces, numbering in the hundreds, are said to be waiting in the town. The crisis has risen over an area known as Lot 76, or the Amarakaeri Communal Reserve. The 400,000 hectare reserve was created in 2002 to protect the flora and fauna of the area, as well as to safeguard watersheds of particular importance to indigenous groups in the region. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/50222009-10-07T19:17:00Z2009-10-07T19:42:47ZBrazilian beef giants agree to moratorium on Amazon deforestationFour of the world's largest cattle producers and traders have agreed to a moratorium on buying cattle from newly deforested areas in the Amazon rainforest, reports Greenpeace.
Rhett Butler