By Josh Kruskal | Development and Operations Associate
EcoLogic’s priorities in Honduras are to develop a landscape-level approach to habitat conservation—which aims to increase connectivity between conservation areas—and to facilitate sustainable, community-driven land and water management. Our work involves communities around Pico Bonito National Park (PBNP, established 1987) in northern Honduras’ Nombre de Dios Mountain Range. Spanning 56,400 hectares, PBNP is designated IUCN Management Category II and is an internationally recognized priority area for biodiversity.
EcoLogic’s project works with communities within the southern buffer zone to conserve approximately 33,500 hectares of forest habitat, including critical watershed areas. This work is carried out in partnership with the Pico Bonito Southern Sector Water Council Association (AJAASSPIB). Approximately 30 km west of PBNP lays the 15,900-hectare Texiguat Wildlife Refuge (IUCN Category IV). Our project also works with communities located in the corridor between PBNP and Texiguat. This segment of the project, covering approximately 35,000 hectares of forest, is carried out in collaboration with the Alliance of Municipalities of Atlántida State (MAMUCA).
In addition to abundant biodiversity, these forests provide local inhabitants with clean water, fuel, and protection from natural disasters, as well as economic opportunities via ecotourism. Despite their global ecological importance, only two percent of Central America’s pine-oak forests are conserved within protected areas. In Honduras, the protected area designation often fails to fully prevent infringement, and the Honduran government is not actively enforcing the national park boundaries. Unprotected remnant and forest fragments bordering and lying beyond park boundaries face even greater pressure. Therefore, the onus is on local communities to lead park conservation efforts, with training and financial support from NGOs like EcoLogic.
Within this region, the three primary threats to forest habitats and watersheds which EcoLogic aims to address are: (1) the conversion of forest to farm and pasture lands; (2) the felling of trees for fuel wood and illegal logging; and (3) inadequate management of natural resources. Given these risks, conservation priorities include halting deforestation, protecting remaining tracts of old-growth forest, and coordinating the restoration of degraded areas of land.
Though intensive reforestation has the potential to slow biodiversity loss, alone, it is not a substitute for the preservation of original forest cover. A strategy that combines restoration and protection with sustainable use has the strongest chance to flourish in the long run with local community acceptance and leadership.
This year, across our project sites in Honduras, EcoLogic will:
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