Helping communities protect nature — for the well-being of us all

 
 

Conservation International-Peru works to protect and restore Peru's critical ecosystems by improving the livelihoods of local communities and Indigenous peoples who live closest to nature. Since 1991, we've worked to halt deforestation in the Peruvian Amazon, protect surf ecosystems and artisanal fishing practices in the country's coastal communities, and conserve a variety of megafauna — including whales, sharks and manta rays — along migratory routes from Costa Rica to Chile.

Working with private and public partners, we help mobilize funding to promote the establishment of protected natural areas. To date, we've helped create a range of protected areas across Peru, including Bahuaja-Sonene National Park, Tambopata National Reserve and Ichigkat Muja – Cordillera del Condor National Park, a heavily forested region with many threatened species.

 

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© CI Peru/Marlon del Águila

Improving livelihoods, protecting forests in Alto Mayo

For more than a decade, Conservation International-Peru has worked to protect the Alto Mayo basin, a large, forested region in northern Peru that provides clean water for surrounding communities and habitats for biodiversity. But the Alto Mayo region has seen some of Peru's highest deforestation rates, threatening both the environment and the livelihoods of local communities, including 16 Awajún Indigenous groups that rely on the forest for survival.

Recently, 27 new species were discovered in the Alto Mayo region, underscoring its rich biodiversity and proving that people and nature can thrive together. Conservation International-Peru is collaborating closely with the Awajún people to conserve forest ecosystems in and around Alto Mayo, restore connectivity between their territories and conservation areas, and promote sustainable development.

Through initiatives like sustainable cacao and medicinal plant cultivation, we are helping the Awajún access new markets, creating economic opportunities while ensuring the long-term protection of Alto Mayo’s biodiversity.

 

Where we work in Peru

 

News from Peru

New protected area a win for Amazonian wildlife, people

© Diego Pérez. Medio Putumayo-Algodón

With support from Conservation International, Peru connects a massive conservation landscape.

Editor’s note: Just days after announcing this protected area, Peru announced the establishment of another one, the Velo de la Novia regional conservation area, in the eastern state of Ucayali. Conservation International was closely involved in supporting the protected area, which conserves almost 15,000 hectares of Amazon rainforest. More details about the Velo de la Novia protected area can be found here.

In Peru’s far north, rivers converge and shape parallel worlds.

Here, along the Colombian border, a rush from the Andes merges with the Algodón, a meandering trickle the color of well-steeped tea. These waters feed floodplains, swamps and forests that support species found nowhere else on Earth.

But for years, illegal logging and mining have threatened both the region’s unique biodiversity — including endangered species like giant otters, pink dolphins and woolly monkeys — and the lives of the Indigenous people who steward it.

Now, after more than a decade of work led by Indigenous communities, this remarkable corner of Amazonia has been officially protected by the Peruvian government.

With support from Conservation International, on June 6 the government established the Medio Putumayo-Algodón Regional Conservation Area, protecting 283,000 hectares (700,000 acres) — roughly four times the size of New York City.

“Every hectare protected here means more space for jaguars to roam, more clean water for river otters, and more security for the Indigenous communities who depend on this forest,” said Luis Espinel, who leads Conservation International-Peru. “This would not have been possible without collaboration.”

As part of the process, 16 Indigenous communities received formal legal recognition — strengthening their territorial rights and ensuring they can continue fishing the rivers, harvesting fruits and gathering medicinal plants as they have for generations. For the nearly 5,000 Indigenous people living within the new protected area, the protections not only preserve their way of life, but also open the door for future opportunities, like ecotourism.

“We hope that this protected area will bring benefits to our communities,” said Gervinson Perdomo Chavez, former chief of the Indigenous Puerto Franco community. “We are going to watch over our forest so that foreign people do not enter our territory, and so we prevent the illegal extraction of wood and gold that harms us a lot.”

The Medio Putumayo is the newest piece in a vast conservation mosaic that connects three existing protected areas and stretches 18,000 square kilometers (7,000 square miles) — an area roughly twice the size of Puerto Rico. These interconnected protected areas enable wildlife to travel freely — and could act as a bulwark against extinction for threatened species.

But the benefits go beyond biodiversity. The new protected area contains one of the largest carbon stocks in Peru — storing the equivalent carbon emissions of 14 million cars driven for one year. Protecting the world’s carbon stocks is critical for staving off the worst consequences of climate change: In a recent study, Conservation International scientists found that protected forests keep an additional 10 billion metric tons of carbon out of the atmosphere. That’s equivalent to one year of global fossil fuel emissions.

Peru has committed to protecting 30 percent of its natural ecosystems by 2030 in line with the global “30 by 30” pledge. Protecting the Medio Putumayo-Algodón is expected to prevent more than 46,000 hectares of deforestation over the next 20 years — helping the country move closer toward that goal, while keeping vast stores of carbon in the ground.

“This protection gives Indigenous communities what they’ve long called for — the ability to keep this forest standing,” said Yadira Díaz, a scientist with Conservation International. “It secures one of the most unique corners of Amazonia — for the benefit of us all.”

The initiative was carried out by the regional government of Loreto, Peru, the Environmental Protection Agency of Peru and local Indigenous communities, and supported by Andes Amazon Fund, Art into Acres through Re:wild, Bezos Earth Fund, Conservation International, Conservation International-Peru, the Instituto del Bien Común and the Peruvian Society of Environmental Law.

Mary Kate McCoy is a staff writer and Will McCarry is the content director 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 Peru, 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