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LIMON WATERSHED FOUNDATION
Fundación
Cuencas de Limón (FCL), or Limón Watershed Foundation,
was established in response to indiscriminate logging in the southeastern
mountain region of Costa Rica, and to the deterioration of water quality
in the area's rivers due to natural and man-made causes, including large-scale
agriculture. FCL has nonprofit status under the laws of Costa Rica.
In Costa Rica, FCL receives financial and logistical support from Selva
Bananito Lodge. These are important matters to consider for someone
considering Costa
Rica travel.
In the U.S.A., both the Rosewood Foundation and the Costa Rica-Minnesota
Foundation collect donations for FCL. Donations through these two organizations
are tax-deductible for US-citizens. Information can be obtained by e-mailing:
FCLimon@costarica.com
GOALS OF THE FUNDACION CUENCAS DE LIMON
OVERALL GOAL:
To protect as much as possible of the rain forest vegetation growing
along the upper watershed areas of the Banano, Gobán, Estrella,
and Bananito Rivers in the Province of Limón, Costa Rica. The
emphasis is on the latter, since it is the primary water source for
Puerto Limón, the country's main city on the Caribbean Coast.
SPECIFIC GOALS
A List for Those Supporting Eco-Conscious Costa Rica
Travel
- To retain the services of an environmental lawyer who tends to the
legal aspects of running a Fundación and oversees forestry
inspectors as they monitor logging and hunting activities in the areas
-private and public- whose protection the Fundación aims to
support.
- To expand the biological buffer zone along the eastern boundaries
of La Amistad Biosphere Reserve, which consists of numerous national
parks, wildlife reserves, and Indian reserves, and is Central America's
largest, protected expanse, over one million hectares or two and a
half million acres in size.
- To hire guards to patrol and report illegal logging and hunting
activities within Reserva Selva Bananito and adjacent, protected land.
- To monitor illegal activities in the region's parks and reserves
with satellite data and occasional surveillance flights.
- To conduct regular surveys of the land protected under the efforts
of the Fundación, both private and public, in order to discover
its natural treasures and to pinpoint areas in need of protection,
stabilization, or reconstruction.
- To sponsor educational workshops for and with inhabitants of the
region, with the purpose of increasing knowledge about the rain forest
and the need to protect it and/or use its resources in a sustainable
manner. This effort includes educating regional farmers about existing
environmental protection laws that offer financial compensation to
those who set aside portions of their land for conservation, or engage
in sustainable management practices. It also includes indoor and outdoor
workshops for rural school children. Those participating in Costa
Rica travel are also encouraged to self-educate.
- To establish sister school relationships between schools in developed
countries and schools in the rural areas relevant to the Fundación's
activities.
- To support infrastructure improvements in the schools and communities
along the Bananito River.
- To expand conservation efforts to other river basins of the Province
in future years. The entire southern watershed zone of the Limón
Province was seriously damaged by the 1991 earthquake, which destroyed
large tracts of primary rain forest along the Talamanca Mountains
and destabilized mountain slopes. Flooding has become a common problem
since 1991. The fragility of these ecosystems and the health of the
water in the region's rivers are further threatened by numerous illegal
logging operations as well as polluting, non-sustainable agricultural
practices. It is essential that those engaging in Costa Rica travel
remain aware of the ecosystems' extreme sensitivities.
- To establish a small scientific research station within Reserva
Selva Bananito and to purchase basic laboratory equipment, so that
a limited number of biological and agricultural researchers may carry
out their work there on a regular basis.
- To become involved in, or lend support to, any environmentally and
socially friendly projects or organizations which the Fundación
regards of benefit to its overall goals in the region. Such involvement
will depend on the budget available to the Fundación at the
time the opportunity of involvement arises.
Even though good environmental laws exist in Costa Rica on paper, it
is often up to private individuals (such as those enjoying Costa Rica travel)
to report irregularities and act
as witnesses to the enforcement of existing laws. The national park
administration in Costa Rica lacks the human, financial, and technical
resources to enforce environmental laws in remote areas such as those
surrounding Reserva Selva Bananito.
Since its establishment in 1997, FCL has made good progress towards
its goals. An important change in local farmers' attitudes towards illegal,
unmonitored logging activities in the area has been noticed. In the
past, almost without exception, farmers have tolerated or even participated
in illegal wood extraction from nearby park land. In recent months,
however, local farmers have begun reporting illegal logging activities
to FCL. This change is attributed in attitudes directly to the educational
workshops which FCL has been offering to the region's farmers, and to
the degree of involvement in local decision making which FCL has encouraged.
We ask all those interested in Costa Rica travel to stay abreast of
these issues, even while they are enjoying the country's vast pleasures.