Reforestation
Restoring degraded land in Brazil
Why support Atlantic Forest restoration?
Brazil is home to six terrestrial biomes, including the famous Amazon rainforest. Second to its biggest brother, the Atlantic Forest once covered over 1.2 million square kilometres (about a quarter of the size of the Amazon). It stretched up and down Brazil’s coastline, and covered parts of Paraguay, Uruguay, and Argentina. Being isolated from the Amazon, and located where the majority of historical human development took place, around 25% of original forest cover remains, mainly in small degraded patches and protected areas. No other large tropical forest ecosystem has suffered as much loss as the Atlantic Forest. Timber exploitation, sugar cane and coffee plantations, cattle ranching, and urban sprawl are the main drivers of forest loss here. Even though the rate of loss has significantly dropped in the past decades, the Atlantic Forest continues to suffer from deforestation.
However, public authorities are acknowledging the crucial need to preserve the remaining forest: no less than 70% of the Brazilian population, as well as the remarkably rich biodiversity including many species threatened with extinction, rely on the standing forest and restoration efforts. Over 23,000 plant species, 40% of which are endemic to the Atlantic Forest, have been recorded in the ecosystem, as well as 264 mammal species, nearly 1,000 birds, 456 amphibians, over 300 reptiles, and 350 freshwater fish. A third of those species cannot be found anywhere else in the world.
Environmental organisations are strongly pushing for more ambitious action to conserve and restore degraded areas of the Atlantic Forest. And the potential for improvement is huge, especially on degraded pasture land.
How Ecologi is monitoring biodiversity of this project
At Ecologi we're using the SEED Biocomplexity Index to track biodiversity. SEED is the world’s most comprehensive, integrative, and globally-standardised biodiversity monitoring framework, integrating 100+ measures of biodiversity to provide a holistic measure of biocomplexity, relative to minimally modified reference areas in the same ecoregion.
This restoration project in Brazil has a SEED index of 13%, scoring well on connectivity and microbial species diversity.
However, this low score awarded by the index is expected, as heavily degraded land in Brazil will have lost the majority of its original species, genetic diversity, and ecological function. A low baseline score on a restoration project of this kind signals high potential rather than poor performance. The greater the degradation, the greater the biodiversity uplift that successful restoration can deliver.
As native forest cover is re-established and ecological processes recover, SEED scores across genetic, species, and ecosystem diversity would be expected to improve substantially over time.
How do we rate this project?
This project is contributing to a range of UN SDGS supporting our planet and people locally.
End poverty in all its forms everywhere
Rethink how we grow, share and consume our food. We can provide nutritious food for all.
Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls.
Ensure sustainable consumption and production patterns
Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts.
The project aligns with this SDG by contributing to the recovery of the Atlantic Forest – one of the world’s hotspots due to its high biodiversity and state of threat.
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Forest restoration
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