BirdLife: The Magazine Oct - Dec 2019 | Page 27

IRREPLACEABLE The Atlantic Forest is home to nearly 100 endemic reptiles Photo Carlos Gussoni ust a hundred years ago, the Atlantic Forest of South America was one of the largest in the world – spanning more than one million square kilometres. Today, however, this crucial habitat is a mere sliver of what it once was - with only eight percent of the original forest remaining, in sparse and isolated fragments. As a result of logging, urban development and the spread of invasive species, the once-imposing Atlantic Forest has become a fragile ecosystem that we are in grave danger of losing forever. Stretching across the eastern coastlines of Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay, the Atlantic Forest, even in its current impoverished state, remains an incredible collection of eco-regions that house biodiversity to rival the Amazon. Inside its boundaries are species not found anywhere else on the planet: roughly 8,000 species of plants, 90 mammals, 94 reptiles, 286 amphibians and 133 species of freshwater fish. J The destruction of this incredible forest began centuries ago, when European colonists began cutting down the forest for timber and converting land to cultivate sugar cane, chocolate and coffee. And human activity has only increased: currently, the Atlantic Forest coexists alongside a population of more than 148 million people. Two of the largest cities in the world – San Pablo and Rio de Janeiro – are located right in the heart of this forest, and to accommodate this, large swathes of surrounding forest have been converted into soya plantations, pineapple farms and ranchlands where cattle graze. Its vegetation has been felled indiscriminately and many of the OCT-DEC 2019 • BIRDLIFE Yellow-fronted Woodpecker Melanerpes flavifrons Photo Emilio White plants and animals within the forest have been exploited to the point where they now teeter on the border of extinction. The few fragments of forest which remain continue to deteriorate due to illegal logging, urban expansion and the illegal trafficking of wildlife. These threats are the same in every country which houses the Atlantic Forest, although the local pressures for each country are unique. But in unity there is strength, and BirdLife Partners in all three countries have banded together to protect what remains of this irreplaceable forest and restore parts thought to be lost forever. In 2018, the Aage V. Jensen Charity Foundation, who have kindly funded local work in Brazilian and Paraguayan sections of the Atlantic Forest since 2004, awarded BirdLife International a grant to assist with the long-term conservation and restoration of the Atlantic Forest. This investment will considerably scale up our Partners’ activities over the following four years, and will centre around two main strategies. The first is to create buffer zones of sustainable habitat management around the forest. The second is to focus on protecting 13 threatened bird species – of which six are Critically Endangered, two are Endangered and five classified as Vulnerable. This cross-border partnership has the potential to protect over one million hectares of IBAs. ARGENTINA: PROTECTING THE PROVINCE THAT HOUSES NEARLY HALF THE ATLANTIC FOREST Defined by its red earth and stunning waterfalls, the rugged Misiones Province is home to over 27