Five hundred years ago, the great Atlantic Forest stretched for thousands of miles — from Argentina in the south to the northeast tip of Brazil. It was one of the most biodiverse places on the planet, second only to the Amazon in biological diversity and endemic species. By the late 1990s, centuries of human activity had left the forest bare and patchy, decimated by deforestation and farming, reduced to just 12% of its previous 133-million-hectare size. Today it’s highly fragmented, putting the flora and fauna in what remains at high risk.
In the rural area of Cachoeiras de Macacu, to the northeast of Rio de Janeiro, it wasn’t just plant and tree life that was affected by shrinking forestlands. Work for people who lived in the region was insecure and low paid, and illegal logging and hunting meant that once abundant brazilwood trees, as well as populations of armadillos, tapirs, and deer, had dwindled to almost nothing.
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This story of decline may be depressingly familiar. What is less common is the optimism that has taken hold in this forest, which contains 7% of the world’s plant species and 5% of vertebrate animal species, as companies like HP, global NGOs, and local nonprofits work to stitch it back together, one acre at a time.
Across once desolate patches of pasture, new seedlings push through the rich undergrowth, winding up against thick foliage and the gnarled roots of fig trees and lush areas with established trees. In the resulting forest corridors, branches and plant life rustle with the calls of elegant mourner birds, while the elusive puma, which came close to extinction, has returned.
“Seeing degraded pasture recover shows how resilient the Atlantic Forest can be and how urgently we need to restore it,” says Daniel Venturi, restoration specialist at WWF-Brasil.
Local knowledge and expertise
Due to local conservation efforts, this region once again holds a range of biodiversity similar to the Amazon, with, for example, 443 tree species identified in a single hectare. And as the plants return, so, too, do the animals. “Who would have thought that the puma would come here?” asks Mauricio Nogueira, 45, a nursery coordinator and plant collector who has been working for REGUA, a local nonprofit helping to protect and restore the Atlantic Forest, for over 20 years. “Or that one day we would see an alligator walking here, or capybaras?”