Jutaí-Solimões Ecological Station

Jutaí-Solimões Ecological Station
Estação Ecológica de Jutaí-Solimões
Map showing the location of Jutaí-Solimões Ecological Station

Location in Brazil

Coordinates 3°19′59″S 67°54′58″W / 3.333°S 67.916°W / -3.333; -67.916Coordinates: 3°19′59″S 67°54′58″W / 3.333°S 67.916°W / -3.333; -67.916
Area 289,511 hectares (715,400 acres)
Designation Ecological station
Created 21 June 1983

Jutaí-Solimões Ecological Station (Portuguese: Estação Ecológica de Jutaí-Solimões) is an ecological station in the state of Amazonas, Brazil.

Location

The Ecological Station covers 289,511 hectares (715,400 acres) in the Amazonia biome.[1] The station lies between the Jutaí and Solimões rivers.[2] It covers parts of the municipalities of Amaturá, Jutaí, Santo Antônio do Içá and Tonantins in the state of Amazonas.[3] It is bounded to the east by the Rio Jutaí Extractive Reserve, on the opposite side of the Jutaí River, and to the west by the Javari-Buriti Area of Relevant Ecological Interest. The Betânia Indigenous Territory overlaps the western part of the ESEC and the São Domingos do Jacapari e Estação Indigenous Territory overlaps the northern part.[4]

History

The Jutaí-Solimões Ecological Reserve by federal decree 88.541 of 21 July 1983. Ordnance 375 of 11 October 2001 recategorized the ecological reserve as an ecological station with the present name.[5] The Ecological Station is a "strict nature reserve" under IUCN protected area category Ia. The purpose is to conserve nature and conduct scientific research.[3] It is administered by the Chico Mendes Institute for Biodiversity Conservation.[1] It became part of the Central Amazon Ecological Corridor, created in 2002.[6] The consultative council was created on 2 September 2011.[5]

Environment

The whole area is flat and subject to constant flooding. Altitudes vary from 20 to 100 metres (66 to 328 ft). Average annual rainfall is 1,200 millimetres (47 in). Temperatures vary from 20 to 37 °C (68 to 99 °F) with an average of 25 °C (77 °F). Vegetation types are typical of the igapó, floodplain and land environments in Amazonia.[3] The bald uakari (cacajao calvus rubicundus) is protected in the station.[1] The station contains what may be the world's largest palm grove, with over 30,000 hectares (74,000 acres) of Mauritia flexuosa (buriti palm) trees growing in swamp conditions. The ecosystem is threatened by overfishing and illegal deforestation.[2]

References

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.