Connecting forests, saving species: conservation group plans extensive wildlife corridor in Panama

16 May 2014, Mongabay news - Soon, hard rains will hit the steep hillsides of the Azuero Peninsula in Panama,  sluicing soil into the rivers and out to the sea. Centuries of slash and burn  agriculture have left fewer trees to stand against the annual deluge of water  during the rainy season. The erosion makes it harder for ranchers to grow good  pasture for their cattle and food for themselves on the land that's left behind.  But an ambitious plan led by the Azuero Earth Project (AEP), an international  nonprofit organization based in New York and Panama, may help reverse that  pattern.

By enlisting the cooperative efforts of hundreds of ranchers  and researchers, AEP aims to replant a swath of tropical dry forest, connecting  the dry tropical Achotines Forest on the Pacific coast to the cloud forest in  the Cerro Hoya National Park. The trees along the 140-kilometer (80-mile)  wildlife corridor will create a continuous habitat for the Critically Endangered  Azuero spider monkey (Ateles geoffroyi azuerensis) and improve the soil  for people who farm and ranch along the way.

"We've focused on  reforestation because it's a key environmental and economic issue," said Roman  Yavich, the development director for AEP. "Deforestation has led to less habitat  for the spider monkeys, but it's also led to less productive soil."

Sometimes called "the heartland" of Panama, the Azuero Peninsula is about 100 kilometers (60  miles) wide and 80 kilometers (50 miles) long, and lies along the Pacific Coast  of the country. Just four hours south of the bustling capital of Panama City,  the area is touted for a slower pace of life rooted in its 17th century Spanish  origins. In many ways, the cattle ranching and subsistence farming hasn't  changed much since the Peninsula was settled. But traditional ranching methods  have almost wiped out much of the tropical dry rainforest.

Five hundred  years ago, there were 500,000 square kilometers (200,000 square miles) of  tropical dry forest, stretching from western Mexico down to Panama, according to  biologist Daniel Janzen, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania. Now, dry  forests are considered one of the rarest tropical ecosystems. "If there is to be  a conserved neotropical dry forest wildland large enough to maintain the  organisms and the habitats that were present when the Spaniards arrived...then  we will have to grow it," wrote Janzen, twenty-five years ago. It's even more  true today.

In the area the AEP has designated for the wildlife corridor,  less than five percent of the original forest cover remains. Of the trees that  still stand, few are old growth native species such as mahogany, cedar, or teak.  Dry tropical forest isn't known for the concentrated biodiversity of its  rainforest counterpart. Its ecosystem alternates between drought conditions,  when deciduous trees shed their leaves, and deluges of rain. Because of these  harsh conditions, plant species grow more slowly.

The farming cycle coincides with the rainy  season. December through April is dry, with rain beginning in earnest in June  and July. Farmers burn their fields when they believe rains are on the way, said  Jonathan Clay, the education programs director for AEP. Without vegetation to  blunt the force of the rains or soak up the moisture, the barren hillsides  funnel the ash-laden water into narrow rivers, leaving the soil depleted of  nutrients.

"Slash and burn can be sustainable at low population density  levels," said Clay. "But we've exceeded those thresholds here and the land  doesn't have enough time to recuperate."

To improve land use – and crop  yields – much of AEP's efforts go toward sharing new strategies to improve soil  performance. They've developed a series of eco-guides about improving soil  resilience without resorting to pesticides and fertilizers. One way to return  nutrients to the soil is silvo-pastoralism, which combines trees with  pastureland. Or, instead of barbed wire, farmers can plant "live fences" using  tree stumps that flower in the rainy season and benefit pollinators and other  wildlife. Initial reforestation efforts focus on rebuilding multi-story tree  canopies along rivers.

Forest fragmentation is a big problem in Azuero  Peninsula. Agricultural and other human developments have whittled what dry  forest is left into scattered islands, barring the natural movements of many  wildlife populations. To figure out how to close the gaps between the forest  fragments, researchers made a series of layered maps that accounted for  resources such as water, nearby villages, interested landowners, and wildlife  sightings. With the maps, they developed an algorithm to plot the arc of the  corridor. But the route isn't written in stone. More than 400 landowners live  along the borders, and some are more conducive to reforestation than others.

Collaboration is key to the project's success. Unlike the creation of  wildlife corridors in other countries, no one is buying parcels of land to make  this project work. Instead, AEP is relying on landowners to voluntarily permit  the rewilding of their land.

"It will be a challenge to build the  consensus that we need," said Yavich.

Community outreach is a big part  of the effort to garner support. An upcoming conference at the end of May, "Options for Productive Sustainable Landscapes Across the Azuero: learning from  experts and local experience," will bring together experts from all over the  world along with local farmers and ranchers. The conference will also include  programs for the children who will one day inherit the land.

However,  even if every stakeholder gets on board with the project immediately, it will  still take time to grow a forest – about eight to 15 years to see trees with  significant canopy cover. In the meantime, AEP is eager to work with researchers  as well as citizen scientists.

"We need surveys of wildlife, flora, and  fauna to develop baselines and determine the impact of this project," Yavich  said. "A lot of information is simply not known about this area."

Jessica  Fort is a researcher who worked with AEP during her Peace Corps service in  Panama. Now she's returned to study jaguars as part of her master's degree work  at Southern Illinois University. Along with her advisor, Clayton Nielsen,  they've nearly finished conducting their first large field season, placing  around 30 remote sensor cameras along trails and areas that wildlife frequent in  Cerro Hoya National Park. They'll do similar surveys during next year's dry  season. Will the jaguars use the corridor when it's complete? "We hope so," said  Nielsen.

Although the wildlife corridor is a major undertaking, it's not  without precedent. Since 1987, Costa Rica has been working to protect the  50-kilometer (30-mile) "Path of the Tapir" that covers more than 30 major rivers  and habitats that range from marine sanctuaries to forest preserves. But nothing  compares to the Mesoamerican Biological Corridor, an initiative that looks to  incorporate 900 square kilometers (350 square miles) for wildlife migrating  between Mexico and Colombia.

"Just think, someday we could be connected  to that," said Yavich.

Source: http://news.mongabay.com/2014/0516-devitt-panama-corridor.html?n3ws1ttr