Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumAnimals Suddenly Protected in Peru Paradise: Photos
Animals Suddenly Protected in Peru Paradise: Photos
Nov 13, 2015 09:30 AM ET // by Jennifer Viegas
This week, Peruvian President Ollanta Humala approved the creation of a 3.3-million-acre national park at Sierra del Divisor, where at least 3,000 species of plants and animals are known to live.
Larger than Yosemite and Yellowstone National Parks combined, Sierra del Divisor forms one of the largest contiguous blocks of protected land in the Amazon, protecting one of the planet's final remaining strongholds for wildlife and indigenous communities.
The U.S. nonprofit organization Rainforest Trust collaborated with the Center for the Development of an Indigenous Amazon (CEDIA), as well as local indigenous peoples and Peru's government, to create the new national park.
Conservationists hope that the tropical paradise will improve the prospects of the many endangered animals, such as jaguars, which live within the lush park's boundaries and are the biggest cats in the Americas.
More:
http://news.discovery.com/animals/animals-suddenly-protected-in-peru-paradise-photos-151113.htm#mkcpgn=rssnws1
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'El Cono' at Sierra del Divisor National Park
Cerro "El Cono" is a 1,608-foot mountain peak in Ucayali, Peru, at the new national park. It ranks as the 12th highest mountain in Ucayali.
Salaman said that this iconic peak towers "above the vast plain of Amazon forest surrounding it."
Because of so much rainforest, Sierra del Divisor and adjacent White-Sands National Reserve are estimated to store approximately 1 billion tons of carbon, which is an amount equal to the average annual emissions of all vehicles on the road in the U.S.
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Judi Lynn
(160,515 posts)From Yucatan to Arizona, from Sonora to New Mexico: the return of the jaguar
Kent Paterson
13th November 2015
Mexico is determined to restore populations of its largest native predator, the jaguar, to long term viability, writes Kent Paterson. That means creating millions of acres of ecological corridors across the country, and joining with US colleagues to secure large areas of habitat in southwestern states, where recent sightings give hope that jaguars are returning to their former range.
In twists and turns, efforts are mounting to protect the Americas' biggest wild cat.
A Mexican initiative, the National Alliance for Jaguar Conservation, unites non-governmental and governmental organizations in a new and "ambitious" program aimed at saving an emblematic creature.
"We think we will have a strong impact on jaguar conservation", says Dr. Gerardo Ceballos, Alliance member and coordinator of the National Autonomous University of Mexico's (UNAM) Ecology Institute.
More:
http://www.theecologist.org/campaigning/2986285/from_yucatan_to_arizona_from_sonora_to_new_mexico_the_return_of_the_jaguar.html
hatrack
(59,583 posts).
Nihil
(13,508 posts)The criminals will simply buy enough politicians, lawyers and judges to allow them to ignore them.