Amaná National Forest Explained

Amaná National Forest
Alt Name:Floresta Nacional do Amaná
Iucn Category:VI
Map:Brazil
Relief:yes
Nearest City:Jacareacanga, Pará
Coordinates:-5.316°N -57.485°W
Designation:National forest
Created:13 February 2006
Administrator:Chico Mendes Institute for Biodiversity Conservation

Amaná National Forest (Portuguese: Floresta Nacional do Amaná) is a national forest in the state of Pará, Brazil. Most of it has been allocated for use in sustainable forestry or community forestry. Mining is allowed.

Location

The Amaná National Forest is in the Amazon biome.It was created by decree on 13 February 2006 and is administered by the Chico Mendes Institute for Biodiversity Conservation (ICMBio).It has an area of .It covers parts of the municipalities of Jacareacanga and Itaituba in the state of Pará.The forest is in the south west of the state of Pará along the border with the state of Amazonas, between the Madeira River and the Tapajós.To the west it adjoins the Urupadi National Forest in Amazonas, a sustainable use conservation unit created in 2016.

Usage

The Amaná National Forest is classed as IUCN protected area category VI (protected area with sustainable use of natural resources) with the objective of sustainable multiple use of forest resources, maintenance and protection of water resources and biodiversity, and supporting sustainable exploitation of natural resources.Mining is allowed in the forest following the provisions of its management plan.The management plan defined six land usage zones, as follows:

Zone Area (ha) % of Forest
Community forest management 54,926 10.2%
Sustainable forest management 364,449 67.4%
Preservation 34,967 6.5%
Primitive 77.206 14.3%
Conflicting use 8,461 1.6%
Special use 401 0.1%
Total 540,411 100.00%
The 2009 annual plan authorized the grant of five forestry units totalling .

Regional conservation

The national forest was created as part of the planning process for land management and environment protection along the BR-163 trans-Amazon highway.It is in a region that contains 12 sustainable use conservation areas and 6 fully protected areas.The fully protected areas, which cover, are the Amazônia, Jamanxim, Rio Novo and Serra do Pardo national parks, the Nascentes da Serra do Cachimbo Biological Reserve and the Terra do Meio Ecological Station.The sustainable use areas include the Tapajós environmental protection area and the Altamira, Amaná, Jamanxim, Trairão, Itaituba I, Itaituba II and Tapajós national forests, covering a total of .