Galapagos Bird Ecuador
Status
Funded

Protect Rainforest in Ecuador from Deforestation

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Project Overview

The Chocó in Ecuador experienced some of the highest deforestation rates in the country – 98% of this rainforest has been cleared.

  • Species at Risk

    6 Species

  • Carbon stored

    80,963 mT*

    *(metric tons of CO2 equivalents)
  • Partner

    Fundación para la Conservación de los Andes Tropicales (FCAT)

  • 398 Proposed Acres Conserved by

    Purchase

Project Cost: $276,077
Funding Raised: $276,077

Please note that your donation may not be immediately reflected in the funding thermometer above.

Ecuador
Proposed Acres

398

Project Overview

The Chocó in Ecuador experienced some of the highest deforestation rates in the country – 98% of this rainforest has been cleared.

  • Species at Risk

    6 Species

  • Carbon stored

    80,963 mT*

    *(metric tons of CO2 equivalents)
  • Partner

    Fundación para la Conservación de los Andes Tropicales (FCAT)

  • 398 Proposed Acres Conserved by

    Purchase

Project Cost: £201,495
Funding Raised: £201,495

Please note that your donation may not be immediately reflected in the funding thermometer above.

Ecuador
Proposed Acres

398

Save rainforest and coastal wilderness in Ecuador

The Tumbes-Chocó-Magdalena biodiversity hotspot extends along the Pacific coast, all the way from Panama to the tip of Peru. This expansive region includes a range of habitats from mangroves, beaches, and rocky shorelines to coastal wilderness and, in Ecuador, some of the world’s wettest rainforests.

The Chocó in Ecuador experienced some of the highest deforestation rates in the country – 98% of this rainforest has been cleared. With escalating rates of deforestation from unsustainable development and agriculture, it is only a matter of time before this critical forest is lost forever and the unique species that rely on it are faced with extinction.

Explore Ecuador

Banded Ground Cuckoo
1 of 3

Banded Ground Cuckoo, by Agami Photo Agency

2 of 3

A species of frog from the genus Pristimantis, by Juan Pablo Reyes

Mache Cochran Frog
3 of 3

Mache Cochran Frog (NT)

Create a corridor of protection

In order to halt habitat destruction and preserve what remains of the Chocó, Rainforest Trust and our local partner Fundación para la Conservación de los Andes Tropicales (FCAT) are working to safeguard 398 acres of rainforest to create a corridor of protection between two existing protected areas: the Mache Chindul National Ecological Reserve and the Cube Lagoon Conservation Area.

The new protected area will not only provide connectivity for wildlife, but also increase the security of the existing reserves and the local communities’ land from encroachment. This project is of national significance, because it would improve the ability to manage and patrol one of the most threatened habitats of Ecuador.

Safeguard threatened birds

The new site is within an Important Bird Area that will help support the Chocó’s more than 360 bird species—of which 23 are endemic, and 14 are on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species such as the Endangered Banded Ground-cuckoo.

Your support will help protect critical habitat for several threatened amphibians, including the Endangered Mache Cochran Frog, Coastal Ecuador Smoky Jungle Frog, Greater Dwarf-gecko (Lepidoblepharis grandis) and the Rosado’s Robber Frog.

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