Google – AFP, Gerard Aziakou (AFP), 3 November 2012
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Brazil's
Salto Morato Nature Preserve is an area less renowned than the
Amazon forest
but just as biologically diverse (AFP, Yasuyoshi Chiba)
|
GUARAQUECABA,
Brazil — Brazil's Salto Morato Nature Preserve is a haven for scientists
studying the dwindling Atlantic rainforest, an area less renowned than the
Amazon forest but just as biologically diverse and equally threatened by human
encroachment.
The
preserve in Guaraquecaba, in the southeastern state of Parana, covers a corner
of what was once a huge littoral rainforest known as the Mata Atlantica.
The Mata
covered 1.3-million square kilometers, or about a quarter the size of the
Amazon rainforest, when Portuguese colonizers arrived in the 16th century.
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Brazil's
Salto Morato Nature Preserve is
a haven for scientists studying the dwindling
Atlantic rainforests (AFP, Yasuyoshi Chiba)
|
Today less
10 percent of it remains, the result of deforestation for agriculture and
relentless urban sprawl. Sixty-two percent of Brazil's 194-million-strong
population live in the region, including in major cities like Sao Paulo and
Rio.
What is
left extends in fragments along Brazil's coast. Less than two percent of it is
under strict protected status.
Salto
Morato, founded in 1994 by a foundation set up by Brazilian cosmetic giant
Boticario, is home to around 2,200 species of birds, mammals, reptiles and
amphibians -- 60 percent of all of Brazil's threatened animal species.
The nature
preserve, which opened to the public in 1996, is part of a mosaic of public and
private "conservation units" set up to preserve what is left of the
forest.
"In
order to preserve you need to know," reserve administrator Eros Amaral
Ferreira said.
Boticario-funded
scientists are literally having a field day as they conduct research in this
2,253-hectare (5,567-acre) biodiversity paradise.
Marcelo
Silva, a biologist from the Pontifical University of Parana, studies the
reproduction and pollination of the bromelia, an exotic plant characterized by
flowers with a deeply cleft calyx.
"Bromelias
reproduce either sexually or asexually and they provide the nectar that humming
birds use to pollinate other plants. So they play a vital role," Amaral
Ferreira told AFP. "Unfortunately, many people come here to pick them in
an unsustainable and destructive way."
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Trekkers
arrive at Salto Morato Nature
Reserve, in Guaraquecaba, in the
southern state
of Parana, Brazil (AFP,
Yasuyoshi Chiba)
|
Ubiquitous
in the lush, humid reserve are various species of palm and banana trees as well
as the red and yellow heliconia, a close relative of gingers, bananas, and
birds-of-paradise.
Singing
birds are also in abundance, much to the delight of Ricardo Pamplona Campos, an
ornithologist from the Federal University of Parana.
With
funding from the Boticario Foundation, Pamplona Campos has been studying for nearly
two years the interaction between plants and fruit-eating birds, as well as the
impact of forest degradation on local bird species.
On a recent
morning tour of the reserve, the ornithologist showed off his intimate
knowledge of various singing species, including the rufous-capped motmot, the
sabia -- the national bird of Brazil -- and the flame-crested Tanager.
There are
324 different bird species on the nature preserve, including nearly 200 bird
species found only in Brazil. There are also 43 species of frogs, 55 of fish,
36 of reptiles and 58 of mammals.
Salto
Morato researchers have even discovered two new fish species and a previously
unknown species of three-fingered frog.
Amaral
Ferreira said surveillance cameras have established the presence of at least
three pumas on the reserve.
One of his
major headaches is the widespread and illegal harvesting of wild palmitos
inside the reserve, which results in the death of palm tree, as well illegal
hunting and poaching.
Species
most threatened by either hunting or loss of habitat include the ocelot, the
white-lipped pecari, the armadillo, the puma and the black-fronted piping-guan,
a bird noted for its large red throat wattle and large white patch on the
wing-coverts.
Amaral
Ferreira said his staff of 10 is too small to monitor trails, conduct
surveillance and deal with the 5,000-plus visitors, including campers, that
come each year. "I need at last four more people," he said.
He sees
great potential for a growth in ecotourism at the site, but said this would
require a major investment to upgrade access roads, increase surveillance and
open more trails.
The nature
preserve, which runs educational programs in partnership with local schools and
an environment police unit, has a visitors center, a research center, a
training facility and a weather station.
Hailed as a
model in nature reserve management, Salto Morato was named a World Heritage
site by UNESCO in 1999.



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