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Tambopata-Candamo is a
nature reserve in the Peruvian Amazon Basin south of the
Madre de Dios River in Tambopata Provinces Inambari and
Tambopata districts. It was created on January 26, 1990,
to protect the forests adjacent to the rivers Heath and
Tambopata that have two important ecosystems and are
noted for its biodiversity, representing native flora
and fauna with 165 species and 41 families of trees, 103
species of mammals, 1300 species of butterflies and 90
species of amphibians.
The reserve is located across the regions of Madre de
Dios and Puno:
- Tambopata is the 40% of the reserve in the department
of Madre de Dios.
- Carabaya and Sandia are the 60% of the reserve in the
department of Puno.
Access is from Puerto Maldonado, where one can get to the preserve via the Tambopata River; or by car via the Puerto Maldonado–Cuzco Road.
Geography
It has a superface area of 1,478,942 hectares
(3,654,550 acres).
The Sandoval Lake is located in this area. There is also
a circuit of canoeing which is considered one of the
most exciting and beautiful circuit of Peru.
The protected area features eight life zones:
subtropical humid forest, tropical humid forest,
subtropical high-humidity forest, subtropical high-humidity
foothills cloud forest, subtropical rainforest, tropical
cloud forest foothills, subtropical lower foothills
cloud forest and semi-flooded subtropical cloud forest.
Average annual temperature is 26°C, ranging from
10-38°C; with average annual rainfall of 1600–2400 mm.
Rainfall in the protected area is typical of most areas
in the Peruvian Amazon. The climate is humid and (3000
mm and 25°C on average), sub-level humidity and semi-warm
(1700 mm and 26°C on average), high-level semi-warm
(4000 mm and 23°C).
History
A conservation process in the Tambopata Province (Madre
de Dios) was initiated in Tambopata, where a group of
naturalists and biologists proposed the conservation of
10,000 hectares of rainforests in the middle Tambopata
River (January 3, 1977). This was established as "Zona
Reservada Tambopata" in the territory of the traditional
tribe Eseeja. It was created for the conservation of the
Amazon forest and for scientific research, as well as
for tourism. In July 1977, the government had an
arrangement with the Peruvian Safaris, owner of
Explorer's Inn. This operator got an agreement for only
five years. Differently, in 1983, the Santuario Nacional
Pampas Del Heath was established, with a surface area of
105.957 hectares (261.83 acres). The purpose was to
protect the unique territory of Sabana Húmeda Tropical
in Peru.
The Tambopata National Reserve was declared by means of the Supreme Law # 048-2000-AG by the area's committee planner. This proposition was elaborated in the background of the "Conservation of the Tropical Ecosystems Project and the sustainable use of the natural resources inside the Candamo Tambopata Reserve Area". Also, a damp area of the Tambopata National Reserve was determined as the Bahuaja Sonene National Park, formed by 271,582 hectares (671,090 acres) exclusive of the Tambopata – Candamo Reserve.
Population
There is a tribe called the Ess Ejja or Huarayos
that live in the reserve, next to the Quechuas and
Aymaras. They have activities such as agriculture (coffee),
hunting, fishing and foraging.
The limited presence of humans had done a wonderful conservation of different ecosystems. There are so many species that surprise any scientist: 1,234 types of different butterflies, 592 of birds, 127 of amphibians, 103 of mammals, 74 reptiles and a lot of varieties.
Flora
The Tambopata River is one of the exclusive habitats
of birds and mammals. Flora in the national reserve is
fairly typical of the southwest Amazon Basin. The Heath
River and surrounding plains are a unique ecosystem in
Peru. The pampas are periodically flooded, and small
groves of trees with varied plant life grow in isolated
clumps on the plain.
The protected area is home of a wide diversity of plants, including exploited forest species such as cedar, mahogany, tornillo, Brazil nut, palm trees such as the pona, aguaje, huasaí and ungurahui.
Fauna
Researchers have discovered in the protected area
large numbers of species that are now rarely found
elsewhere in the Amazon jungle due to poaching,
particularly tapirs and spider monkeys, but also jaguars,
white-lipped peccary, medium-sized and large monkeys and
caiman.
Within the reserve, the lower elevation zone is dominated mostly by Amazonian bird species, the ones that are at or near their upper elevation limits, and by species that are restricted (or partially restricted) to the narrow band of rain forest found on the lower slopes of the Andes. Because of the growing deforestation rate along this latitudinal border in other parts of the Andes, this ecosystem is one of these most threatened in all of South America. A relatively large portion of this ecosystem is found within the Bahuaja-Sonene National Park.
Economic activities
The economic activities of that area are fishing,
hunting, agriculture and foraging. But the most
important is the tourism. Madre de Dios is home of 25
registered tourist lodges, 11 of which lie within the
buffer zone and two within the reserve.
Tourism in the protected area is concentrated around the Tambopata River and the lower Madre de Dios. Ever year, 7-8,000 tourists visit the area mainly from abroad.
Tourists are charged an entry fee to visit, and the amount depends on the activity: whether the tourist is spending the night, visiting the macaw clay lick or whitewater river rafting. The area features a rafting circuit which runs down the Tambopata River from Putina Punco crossing the entire national park down to Puerto Maldonado.
The best period of the year to visit it is between June and October. Because in those months the weather is very dry. In order to enjoy your trip, you should have to follow a tourist guide, who has the knowledge of that natural reserve.
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