Serra do Mar Ecological Corridor explained

Serra do Mar Ecological Corridor
Alt Name:Corredor Ecológico da Serra do Mar
Map:Brazil
Relief:yes
Coordinates:-25.5108°N -48.3432°W
Designation:Ecological corridor

The Serra do Mar Ecological Corridor (pt|Corredor Ecológico da Serra do Mar or Corredor de Biodiversidade da Serra do Mar) is a large collection of protected areas in the states of Rio de Janeiro, Minas Gerais, São Paulo and Paraná in southern Brazil that form an ecological corridor connecting areas of Atlantic Forest.

Extent

The Serra do Mar Ecological Corridor extends from Paraná to Rio de Janeiro and covers about .It encompasses some of the most densely populated areas of Brazil, within which there are several important fragments of Atlantic Forest.The corridor is one of the areas with the richest biodiversity in the Atlantic Forest.

Purpose

An ecological corridor is an area of great biological importance that consists of a network of protected areas interspersed with varying levels of human occupation and different forms of land use.The corridor provides integrated management to ensure the survival all species, maintain ecological and evolutionary processes, and develop a strong regional economy based on sustainable use of natural resources.It allows for the flow of plant and animal genes between the protected areas, thus maintaining genetic diversity.

Mosaics

Protected area mosaics have the potential to strengthen ecological corridors by expanding the scale of conservation planning and increasing the chances of reconnecting natural areas within and between the mosaics.The Serra do Mar Ecological Corridor contains several protected area mosaics.The Lagamar Mosaic, covering, was created in May 2006.It has great importance in conserving Atlantic Forest, and is supported by SOS Mata Atlântica and by the Atlantic Forest Biosphere Reserve.It was the second mosaic to be created in Brazil, after the Piauí Mosaic, created in March 2005.

A project to create three new protected area mosaics began in December 2005, coordinated by the National Council of the Atlantic Forest Biosphere Reserve.These were the Bocaina Mosaic, Central Rio de Janeiro Atlantic Forest Mosaic and Mantiqueira Mosaic.Funding was provided by Conservation International, the Fund for the Global Environment Facility (GEF), the Government of Japan, the MacArthur Foundation and the World Bank.The Ministry of the Environment gave the mosaics formal structure in March 2007.Their purpose is to give integrated management of different conservation units in a region, including federal, state, municipal and private units, which may be different form of strictly protected or sustainable use unit.

Together the three new mosaics included 51 units covering over in the states of Rio de Janeiro, Minas Gerais and São Paulo.The Bocaina Mosaic has an area of and contains 10 conservation units and their buffer zones on the southern coast of Rio de Janeiro and the northern coast of São Paulo.The Central Coastal Atlantic Forest Mosaic has an area of and contains 22 conservation units and their buffer zones in Rio de Janeiro. The Mantiqueira Mosaic has an area of and contains 19 conservation units and their buffer zones in Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Minas Gerais.