
While the traditional approach to conservation usually excludes the participation
of local and indigenous peoples, Rainforest2Reef’s approach is effective
precisely because it places these communities at the heart of our work.
By building a vibrant alliance between indigenous communities, scientists,
conservationists and everyday nature lovers in the US and Mexico, we have
already protected more than 300,000 acres of threatened rainforest.
As our name indicates, we focus on both the protection
of rainforest
and marine habitats.
Here’s how it works…
Land protection.
During our first seven years of working to save rainforest
lands, Rainforest2Reef’s work focused on the protection of a particular
area of the Mesoamerican hotspot – the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve.
It was through our work within the Calakmul that we developed
a uniquely effective approach to land protection, and eventually protected
over 300,000 acres of rainforest habitat.
A new approach is born in the
Calakmul.
Deep in the heart of the Yucatan Peninsula, the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve
shelters nearly 1.8 million acres of lush rainforest. Despite its distinction
as a “Reserve” however, only one third of this land was
originally given government protection. This protected area is known
as the “Core Zone.”
Over seven years, Rainforest2Reef worked with local
communities to protect the remaining two thirds of the Reserve known
as the “Buffer Zone.”
Working with the ejidarios
of Calakmul.
Across the 1.2 million acres of the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve’s
“Buffer Zone”, a majority of the unprotected land is divided
up into over 800 plots called forest extensions, and these are owned
by communal groups called ejidos. Indigenous members
of these ejidos are known as ejiditarios.
Due to economic pressure, many ejidos must consider environmentally
destructive activities in order to make a living within the rainforest.
Slash and burn agriculture is commonplace, and there is also substantial
pressure on ejidarios to sell their land to timber companies
as well.
An alternative to logging:
Long-term conservation leases.
The reality is that ejidos must have income to survive. In order to
provide a viable alternative to leasing their land for logging, Rainforest2Reef
began signing binding permanent conservation lease agreements with the
ejidos.
These conservation leases begin when the ejiditarios
unanimously vote to enter binding agreements with Rainforest2Reef. Once
signed, these agreements allow the ejiditarios to maintain
ownership of their forest lands but require the ejiditarios
to refrain from engaging in logging and other destructive activities.
In return, the ejido recieves annual compensation equivalent
to 2.5 times what they would get paid from a logging company.
Before the annual payment is distributed, yearly surveys of the protected
areas are performed by the Rainforest2Reef vigilance committee to ensure
that the ejiditarios are keeping their side of the conservation
obligation. Only after the yearly inspection do ejiditarios
receive their annual lease payment.
A
uniquely effective approach expands.
In just seven years, Rainforest2Reef has signed agreements on
more than 300,000 acres of previously unprotected rainforest. In this
time alone, we have achieved our original goal of signing conservation
contracts on all unprotected land within the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve.
Due to this phenomenal success, Rainforest2Reef has recently
expanded our mission to include the protection of a larger biological
corridor within the Mesoamerican hotspot – the area extending from
the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve, to the Sian Ka’an Biosphere Reserve,
to the Mesoamerican Reef. In the coming years, we plan to use our conservation
lease approach to protect an ever larger amount of this rainforest.
Coral reef protection.
Off the shores of the Yucatan, the Mesoamerican Reef is facing
threats just as catastrophic as those facing the neighboring rainforests.
The coastal and marine ecosystems along the east coast of the Yucatan
Peninsula are home to a tremendous diversity of life forms including coral
reefs, mangrove forests, sea turtles and whale sharks. However, due to
rising water temperatures, pollution, and other anthropogenic causes,
as much as 70% of these reefs may be lost by the year 2050.
Like our land protection efforts, Rainforest2Reef’s
approach to protecting the Mesoamerican Reef is rooted in developing partnership
with local communities.
While much of the decline in water quality is caused by nutrient run-off
from development and local agriculture, it is simply not an option for
local communities to abandon building and farming altogether. Instead,
Rainforest2Reefs is developing a program to work with local communities
on the use of more environmentally friendly techniques and materials.
Through these efforts, we are beginning to help local communities become
stewards of their coastal and marine environment as well as the rainforests.
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