Skip to content
Wild Hope, by HHMI Tangled Bank Studios
  • Watch
  • Engage
  • Search
  • More
    • About Us
    • Education
    • En Español
    • Conservation Comebacks
    • Request a Screening
    • Newsletter
  • Instagram
  • Join Us

Subscribe to our newsletter and become a Wild Hoper.

* indicates required
All Episodes

Episode 18: Rewilding Rio

Next: Episode 19: The Frog Ark
Episode Location
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Copied!

Transcript

Credits

Rewilding Rio - Educator Guide

Topics

Mammals Plants & Fungi Reptiles & Amphibians Rewilding & Reforestation Technology Urban Wilderness South America

In the middle of Rio de Janeiro sits the world’s largest urban rainforest: Tijuca National park. To combat a century of deforestation and hunting, a team of researchers are repairing the forest’s forgotten web of life, one species at a time.

Trees and habitat are often the focal point of any conservation strategy, but here in Brazil, the missing link to a thriving forest is the animals.

After withstanding a century of deforestation and hunting, Tijuca is incomplete without its animals and needs researchers to identify what’s missing in the secret web of life. From a canopy of swinging howler monkeys to the nut-cracking jaws of the lovable agouti, researchers are using breakthrough science to bring fauna back. New seedlings are one of many signs that the reintroductions are working, restoring the forest to its full potential and reconnecting the life sustaining bonds between plants and animals.

Engage

Help Protect Brazil’s Wild Spaces

Explore

Highlights

In this Episode

Related Content

August 21, 2023

Episode 4: Does Nature Have Rights?

Ecuador is one of the most biodiverse places on the planet— and the first country in the world to enshrine the “rights of nature” in its constitution.
August 21, 2023
From The Associated Press

Ecuadorians reject oil drilling in the Amazon, ending operations in protected area

Ecuadorians voted against drilling for oil in a protected area of the Amazon, an important decision that will require the state oil company to end its operations in a region that’s home to two uncontacted tribes and is a hotspot of biodiversity.
August 31, 2023
From Nautilus

Inside This Extraordinary Living Lab

At Gorongosa National Park, scientists are determined to understand how an ecosystem recovers from the decimation of war.
August 18, 2023

How to organize a Bioblitz

Bioblitzes are quick to set up, fun for kids and adults of all ages, and educational for anyone with an interest in understanding local wildlife. But the observations are important for scientists, too!
December 1, 2023

Restore nature now with native plants & animals

Often the first and most effective strategy to healing a landscape is to pay attention to how ancestral wildlife, like native plants and animals, once shaped and strengthened these natural spaces.
An artist's illustration of a rewilded area, with trees, flowers, grasses, a pond, and deer.
October 14, 2023

Rewilding

Rewilding initiatives are growing in popularity in places with degraded or disturbed landscapes whose ecosystems have lost many of their endemic species.
What is Wild Hope?

Become a Wild Hoper

Instagram
Join Our Newsletter
  • HHMI.org
  • Privacy Policy & Cookie Notice
  • Terms of Use
  • Press