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

Tachymenoides harrisonfordi: A new snake species named after Harrison Ford

© Edgar Lehr

High in the Andes Mountains, a team of researchers treks through an alpine swamp. Sifting through tall grass, they search for something priceless in the far reaches of a plateau patrolled by armed gunmen. Each footstep brings the team closer to a snake, coiled in the rushes. Its scales are threaded in copper; it stares through amber eyes. 

If this sounds like a scene from an Indiana Jones movie, you’re not far off — starting with the fact that the snake’s name is Harrison Ford. 

At least, it is now. 

The snake’s actual name is Tachymenoides harrisonfordi, and it is a species new to science. 

Tachymenoides harrisonfordi is a slender snake, measuring a modest 16 inches when fully grown. The well-camouflaged predator is harmless to humans, though it does have an appetite for lizards and frogs. While the diminutive reptile itself is hardly the stuff of adventure films, its discovery took researchers on a pulse-pounding journey worthy of Hollywood.

Tachymenoides harrisonfordi, named in honor of Harrison Ford. © Edgar Lehr, courtesy of Conservation International

A journey to Otishi

Led by biology professor Edgar Lehr of Illinois Wesleyan University, a team of scientists from Peru and the United States were the stars of this real-life expedition into Peru’s Otishi National Park— one of the least explored grasslands on Earth, largely accessible only by helicopter — where they stumbled upon the lone male snake sunbathing on a mountaintop pass. 

The scientists trekked through a dangerous region dubbed “Peru’s cocaine valley,” where they soon realized they had unwittingly made camp near a clandestine cartel landing strip — and were being shadowed by narco-traffickers. 

“I carried a walkie-talkie so we could communicate if the team was separated,” Lehr recounted. “On the ninth day of the trip, I suddenly heard unfamiliar voices coming through the speaker. We were in this incredibly remote location, so we immediately knew that there were other people around who were using the same radio frequency — channel eight. The voices seemed to hear us, too, and they sounded shocked.” 

Each day brought new reminders that they were being watched. One morning, Lehr woke to the sound of buzzing above his tent. Bleary-eyed, he faintly wondered if it was a hummingbird. It turned out to be a drone, surveying them. Later that day, fresh footprints were discovered at the edge of their encampment.

But Lehr and his team persisted in their work. In addition to the discovery of the snake, they also encountered and subsequently named a waterfall, a swamp and a species of lizard. But on daybreak of the 11th day, they heard the unmistakable sound of a plane engine nearby. 

Fearing for their lives, the team made the difficult choice to end the trip a week early. Lehr remembers feeling devastated. “There’s so much left to discover here,” he said. “I worry that further research here won’t be possible now.” 

After four tense days of rainstorms, a Peruvian Air Force helicopter came to their rescue. As it descended toward the team, hovering just above the ground, Lehr remembers collapsing in the mud as he hurried aboard, the force of the churning blades sucking the air from his lungs. The captain welcomed them aboard with a handshake. 

“Was it worth it?” Lehr said. “Yes — discovering new species, including Harrison Ford’s snake, is always worth it.” 

Peru’s Otishi National Park, where the snake was discovered. © Edgar Lehr, courtesy of Conservation International

The snake’s namesake

The team named the new species in honor of Harrison Ford’s decades-long environmental advocacy. As vice chairman of Conservation International, he has been a tireless advocate for nature, whether on the world stage or as the voice of “The Ocean" in the organization’s award-winning “Nature is Speaking” campaign. 

But unlike the fictional Indiana Jones, who was famously ophidiophobic (“I hate snakes, Jock! I hate ’em!”), the actor reportedly likes snakes — and found a quick kinship with this one. 

“The snake’s got eyes you can drown in, and he spends most of the day sunning himself by a pool of dirty water — we probably would’ve been friends in the early ‘60s,” Ford said in a characteristically dry statement. 

“In all seriousness, this discovery is humbling. It’s a reminder that there’s still so much to learn about our wild world — and that humans are one small part of an impossibly vast biosphere. On this planet, all fates are intertwined, and right now, one million species are teetering on the edge of oblivion. We have an existential mandate to mend our broken relationship with nature and protect the places that sustain life.”

Discovering and describing new species is crucial for scientists, helping them identify what requires protection, and where.

But in some cases, species are disappearing before humans even know they exist. Scientists have described around 1.2 million species on Earth — a small fraction of the 8.7 million species that are estimated to exist. There are likely millions more varieties of plants and animals that remain unknown — and at the current rate of discovery and extinction, there is almost no way scientists will find them all or understand their unique role in maintaining Earth’s ecosystems. 

Reptiles are particularly vulnerable. A recent study co-authored by Conservation International researchers determined that more than a fifth of all reptiles are currently threatened with extinction. 

“Only organisms that are known can be protected,” said Lehr, adding that he hopes Tachymenoides harrisonfordi’s discovery will draw attention to the extinction crisis facing species around the world. And having the slender snake share its name with one of the most widely recognized actors of his (or any) generation can’t hurt. 

The snake is not even the first to be species to be named for Ford. 

In 1993, American arachnologist Norman Platnick honored the Hollywood legend, dubbing a newly discovered Californian spider Calponia harrisonfordi. A decade later, the entomologist E.O. Wilson gifted the actor an ant species: Pheidole harrisonfordi

Somehow, though, the fact that it’s a snake feels different — a fitting tribute to one of the world’s most famous conservationists and a nod to his enduring film character.

Will McCarry is a staff writer at Conservation International. Want to read more stories like this? Sign up for email updates. Also, please consider supporting our critical work.

 

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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