WCS Brasil

Brasil is the most biologically rich country in the world, encompassing numerous ecological zones and natural wonders. Standouts include the Pantanal in the country’s southwest, the world’s largest freshwater wetland; the Amazon, the largest tropical forest and most pristine wild place on the planet; the cerrado, a unique type of savanna; the semi-arid caatingas where Spix’s macaws once abounded; and the endangered Atlantic Forest, home to the largest New World monkey, the endemic muriqui.


Monkey in a tree   White lipped peccary close up   Tamandua eating


These landscapes also shelter jaguars, caimans, anacondas, red-faced white uakari monkeys, pirarucus, giant otters, and giant anteaters.  Brazil’s amazing biodiversity is in peril however, with large tracts of land being deforested or ecologically degraded, putting habitats and wildlife at risk. In the early 1970s, WCS began supporting wildlife research and conservation efforts in Brazil’s Amazon basin with several field expeditions. The Brazil program has expanded significantly since then with well stablished sites and ongoing projects in the Amazon, Pantanal and Atlantic Forest. 

We are also continuing to explore little-known wild places, particularly in the Amazon, in order to set conservation priorities and make new contributions to science. Our exploration team—the country’s best experienced—recently discovered several new species, including two new primates.

One of the main contributions of WCS Brasil to the way conservation is carried out world wide was the idealization and subsequent creation of sustainable development reserves by its former director and late Jose Marico Ayres.  Today, WCS Brazil conserves wildlife and wild places by understanding critical issues, crafting science-based solutions, building partnerships, and taking conservation actions that benefit nature and humanity. We envision a country in which people live in harmony with nature and value the diversity of life.

 

Contact Us

Wildlife Conservation Society Brazil - WCS Brasil
Rua Jardim Botânico 674/sala 210
Rio de Janeiro, RJ 22461-000 Brasil
Phone/Fax: (+55) (21) 2259-2989
Email: wcsbrasil@wcs.org

 


Latest News

Project “Queixada Pecarídeo”

Project "Queixada Pecarídeo"In Novemeber 2009,  we were extremely excited because for the first time, we were able to catch some very elusive white-lipped peccaries (in the Pantanal's Cerrado plateau).

This will give us the opportunity to see if the population moves back and forth from the highlands to the Pantanal, show whether the highland populations are different genetically from the Pantanal pop., and define ecological corridors in this very unique region that is  threatened by deforestation.
  
 

Feature on Cerrado, the maned wolf and Serra da Canastra

Globo Ecologia feature on Cerrado species threatened with extinction. The program team visited Serra da Canastra to talk about the situation of the maned wolf and checked out the Canastra Maned Wolf Project, which performs monitoring, collection of samples, mapping and environmental awareness actions with the community through the production of primers and educational videos.



 

National Geographic and WCS Brasil will film capuchin monkey

Capuchin monkeyNational Geographic grantee and WCS-Brasil Conservation Scientist Jean Boubli travels to Brazil’s Rio Negro in Amazon rain forest to search for a wedge-capped capuchin, a primate that historically is not known to inhabit the region.

The primatologist is able to document the monkey on film for the first time ever and collect genetic samples to help determine if this is a new taxon.



WCS-Amazon researchers start field activities on BR-19

From 21 to 29 July 2009, the WCS-Brazil/Amazon team started the field work for the project “Effects of the repaving of BR-319 on the medium- and large-sized mammals”. With the help of six local field assistants, they managed to set up one of the six sampling plots planned.

Each plot is made up of four trails each 4 kilometers long, destined to sample medium- and large-sized mammal species. Due to the bad road conditions and the type of vegetation in the area, field activities took longer than expected.


Eighty kilometers more of trails are opened up on BR-19

Cutting tressA month after the end of the first phase of trail openings on BR-319, the WCS-Brazil/Amazon team returns to the road to conclude the opening up of the sampling plots.

From Aug 29 to Sep 12, researchers Eduardo Venticinque, Fabio Rohe, Marcelo dos Santos Jr and Maíra Benchimol, together with 11 local field assistants, opened up 80 kilometers of trails (5 plots) along the road connecting Manaus to Porto Velho.

With this, the sampling system tha will enable an assessment of the impact of repaving the road on the populations of medium- and large-sized mammals is already in place.


 

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