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                                          Colonso Forest Protected Area

                                          The Colonso Protected Area makes up 10,000 hectares (22,000 acres) of natural forest just west of our main office in Archidona. The land is owned and managed by Ecuador's Ministry of the Environment. In 2007, the Ministry signed an agreement with Fundación Bosques para la Conservación to establish the conservation area. 

                                          Water
                                          The forest is part of the Tena watershed, the main source of drinking water for the city of Tena. It also feeds the Colonso, Shitie, and Inchillaqui rivers that flow into the Napo River. By protecting this forest, we work to protect the drinking water for the city of Tena and other communities downstream. 

                                          Carbon
                                          According to studies performed by Fundación Bosques para la Conservacion, the forest stores an average of 642 tons of carbon/hectare. That totals approximately 6.4 million tons of carbon in the protected area. 

                                          Biodiversity
                                          Conservation International identifies the tropical Andes as a the richest and most biologically diverse region on Earth, containing 1/6th of all plant life while only covering less than 1% of Earth's land area. The Colonso forest is on the eastern edge of this extremely valuable ecosystem.






                                          Project Colonso
                                          As part of our mapping project, we worked with community Santa Rita to produce the maps featured below. Check out our video on the left to hear more about the project.






                                          Our Work

                                          We work with the communities of Alto Tena, Santa Rita, and La Libertad that surround the Colonso Forest Protected Area to map out areas of conservation and production, create strategic buffer zones of reforestation, and design participatory research plots. 

                                          Mapping
                                          We work with indigenous communities to demarcate territorial land to establish zones of production and conservation. We use GIS (Geographic Information Systems) to establish base lines of current extractive processes in order to monitor future trends in deforestation, resource extraction, and agricultural production. See maps below.

                                          Buffer Zones
                                          By creating zones of agroforesty production around conservation areas, local people can rely on the income generated in these zones instead of extracting resources from protected areas. We work with farmers to establish buffer zones of guayusa production. 

                                          Research
                                          We implement participatory research methods to monitor the impact of our work and to constantly search for better methods of achieving high quality guayusa production and increased forest conservation. 


                                          Picture
                                          Map of soil uses
                                          Picture
                                          Map of Santa Rita area
                                          © 2010 Fundación Runa. All material on this site is copyrighted by Fundación Runa Photo used under Creative Commons from kenny barker