Protecting nature to support biodiversity and livelihoods

 
 

From offices in Mexico City, Oaxaca and Chiapas, Conservation International-Mexico works with local and national partners to promote the sustainable management of nature for the benefit of Mexico.

In Oaxaca and Chiapas, we are helping restore thousands of hectares of forests by strengthening incentives for local communities to keep trees standing. We are also helping improve management of the region's biodiversity, implementing monitoring for at-risk species and expanding protected areas. And throughout Oaxaca, Chiapas and the Yucatan Peninsula, we are developing sustainable financial models for the agroforestry sector that benefit small-scale growers and drive investment in projects that reduce deforestation.

 

Highlight project

© Conservation International/photo by Sterling Zumbrunn

Protecting threatened species in southern Mexico

In the southern states of Oaxaca and Chiapas, Conservation International-Mexico is working to combat species loss in some of the country's most remarkable ecosystems.

Our conservation efforts are focused on 15 species of plants and animals — including the endangered Mexican spider monkey — which face threats from agricultural development, a warming climate and the illegal wildlife trade. We're helping to protect these at-risk species by expanding protected areas, establishing systems to monitor species health and population, building out environmental education programs that link biodiversity and human well-being, and working with stakeholders to reduce the impact of agriculture on vital ecosystems.

Our work in Oaxaca and Chiapas is part of a “sustainable landscapes approach” that seeks to uplift local communities while protecting biodiversity, ultimately helping to conserve one-fifth of the region's globally important species.

 

Where we work in Mexico

 

News from Mexico

To save the axolotl, Mexico looks to the past

© Francis McKee/Creative Commons

Axolotls are having a moment.

They’re cute-looking. They’re in video games. They even grace one of the most beautiful banknotes in the world.

And they’re extremely endangered.

Over the years, the only place on Earth where these salamanders live — a Mexico City lake and its sundry canals — has been drained, polluted and crowded with predatory invasive species.

But a new attempt is under way to protect this habitat, Jennie Erin Smith reported this week for The New York Times. Led by ecologist Luis Zambrano, the effort looks to history — specifically, historical ways of farming. Smith writes:

The only way to save and study the wild axolotl, Dr. Zambrano and his colleagues determined, was to promote a renaissance of ancestral farming practices, and then convert segments of the farmers’ canals into axolotl sanctuaries, with the hope that one day they could be linked together.

Conservation International is assisting with the project, having secured a grant to help clean the water in the axolotl’s habitat using biofilters.

“You cannot think about saving a species without saving the habitat,” Esther Quintero, a biologist with Conservation International-Mexico, told The New York Times:

In a country like Mexico, Dr. Quintero stressed, you can have all the laws you want on paper, but the only conservation strategies that work are practical ones that put people at their center. “Here you cannot conserve anything if you’re not going to use it at the same time,” she said. “Under this model, you’re using the soil, you’re using the land, and by using it properly you’re conserving an ecosystem in which the axolotl co-evolved.”

Read the full story here.

Bruno Vander Velde is the managing director of content at Conservation International. Want to read more stories like this? Sign up for email updates. Also, please consider supporting our critical work.

 

Learn more

Hear directly from Conservation International employees on the ground in Mexico, in Spanish.

 

References

  1. Fedele, G., Donatti, C. I., Bornacelly, I., & Hole, D. G. (2021). Nature-dependent people: Mapping human direct use of nature for basic needs across the tropics. ScienceDirect, 71. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2021.102368
  2. Conservation International (2021, November). Irrecoverable Carbon. Retrieved January 2025, from https://www.conservation.org/projects/irrecoverable-carbon
  3. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. (2024). Table 8a: Total, threatened, and EX & EW endemic species in each country [Fact sheet]. https://www.iucnredlist.org/resources/summary-statistics#Summary%20Tables