Chattanooga Times Free Press

Saving Brazil’s golden monkey, one green corridor at a time

- BY DIANE JEANTET

RIO DE JANEIRO — Dozens of young people kneeled under the scorching sun this week in Rio de Janeiro’s rural interior, planting a green corridor that will be a future safe passageway for the region’s most emblematic and endangered species, the golden lion tamarin.

The 300 tree seedlings they planted this week — only inches tall at present — will eventually connect two patches of forest together. It is the latest in a series of incrementa­l forest growth initiative­s driven by environmen­talists, providing an ever-larger habitat for the monkey.

Until recently, the bare and dry land they were replanting belonged to a ranch owner who had torn down its trees for cattle pasture.

Rampant deforestat­ion over centuries has decimated this part of Brazil’s Atlantic Forest, the only place in the world where the small, copper-colored monkey whose face is framed by a silken mane can be found. With fewer than 5,000 individual­s, it is considered an endangered species.

“One of the biggest problems is the fragmentat­ion of the forest,” said Luís Paulo Ferraz, executive director of the Golden Lion Tamarin Associatio­n, known by its Portuguese acronym AMLD. “Otherwise the monkeys start mating within their own families.”

Ferraz said monkeys are too scared to cross the few hundred meters of bare land that sometimes separate two isles of green vegetation, fearing they might become the prey of larger predators, such as big cats. Hence the need for green corridors.

Applauding their effort Friday was Sarah Darwin, the great-greatgrand­daughter of Charles Darwin. The British botanist was joined by a handful of young naturalist­s who are retracing the sailboat expedition taken by Charles Darwin nearly 200 years ago that led to his theory of evolution, part of a project called Darwin200.

“He arrived in the Brazilian Mata Atlantica forest and had a moment of clarity … a peak experience, where he felt at one with nature,” Darwin said as she entered the forest, known for its astonishin­g diversity of mosses, ferns and other vegetation. In the canopy above, the small golden monkeys with long tails were jumping from one branch to another. “One of the most enduring experience­s of his life,” she added.

Before colonizati­on by the Portuguese in the 16th century, the Atlantic forest biome covered more than 500,000 square miles near and along Brazil’s coast. Less than 15% of that remains today, according to The Nature Conservanc­y.

In the specific region of the Atlantic forest where golden lion tamarins can be found, the forest is down to just 2% of its original size, Ferraz said.

Sugar cane and coffee plantation­s were the main driver of early deforestat­ion. Then came urban developmen­t and cattle pastures. In the 1970s, when scientists began efforts to save the species, there were just 200 golden lion tamarins left, according to AMLD.

 ?? AP PHOTO/BRUNA PRADO ?? Golden lion tamarins watch Friday as students plant trees that will form an ecological corridor to allow safe passageway for wildlife in the rural interior of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
AP PHOTO/BRUNA PRADO Golden lion tamarins watch Friday as students plant trees that will form an ecological corridor to allow safe passageway for wildlife in the rural interior of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

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