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Community
Based Conservation
Located high
on the Caribbean slopes of the Cordillera de Tilarán (5, 600 feet,
1,700 m), the Continental Divide of Costa Rica, the Santa
Elena Cloud Forest Reserve is one of the
first community managed reserves in the country. With the help of
Youth
Challenge International, a Canadian Non-profit
Organization, the Costa Rican government, and the
Santa Elena Community,
the Reserve officially opened in March 1992.
The philosophy of the Reserve is unique in that long term sustainability
is not only a concern of the Reserve, but of the community as a whole.
Proceeds from entrance fees, guided tours and the souvenir shop are either
reinvested in the management of the reserve or are channeled to a local
high school to help upgrade technology, and fund courses in environmental
education, biology,
agriculture, languages and tourism. In using the Reserve as a natural
classroom, students and teachers harness an unlimited educational resource
that can be used for anything from studying tropical plant ecology to leading
tours.
The
Santa Elena Reserve comprises
an area of 310 hectare or 765 acres, and together with the Children's Eternal
Rainforest, the Arenal Conservation Area and the Monteverde Cloud Forest
Preserve constitute a contiguous conservation area of approximately 28,000
hectares or 69,000 acres. Plans are underway to raise funds to
buy and restore adjacent farmlands for future inclusion into the Santa
Elena Reserve. Conservation
efforts in the area are concentrating on establishing forest corridors
radiating from the central conservation area down to lower altitudes as
many of the forest fauna, such as the Resplendent Quetzal, American Pumas,
Jaguars, Ocelots, and Red Brocket Deer require large territories in which
to forage and breed. |