Costa Rica has one of the highest biodiversity densities on Earth and has a relatively high rate of endemism.
Its list of species includes approximately 948 birds, 250 mammals, 220 reptiles, 200 amphibians and an estimated 300,000 invertebrates.
HECTARES FUNDED 0 (4,991 acres)
Costa Rica has one of the highest biodiversity densities on Earth and has a relatively high rate of endemism.
Its list of species includes approximately 948 birds, 250 mammals, 220 reptiles, 200 amphibians and an estimated 300,000 invertebrates.
Explore this project in more detail with our interactive map.
In 1994, Rainforest Action Costa Rica (RACR) became the second project of World Land Trust (WLT) and focused on the Costa Rican rainforests of the Osa Peninsula – one of the top twenty areas of greatest biodiversity on earth.
The goal of RACR was to purchase areas of forest for conservation. WLT’s partner for this project, Fundación Tierras Unidas Vecinales por el Ambiente (TUVA) also aimed to work with local farmers to establish sustainable incomes which would not be detrimental to the surrounding forest.
WLT helped purchase 2,020 hectares (4,991 acres) in the Esquinas Sector, which is now incorporated into Corcovado National Park. But while land purchase for immediate protection was a key part of the conservation strategy, other methods were also used. For example, supporting local landowners to purchase conservation rights on the land (easements) where land purchase was not an option. This dual approach ensured that the needs of the local people were met. Additionally, RACR ensured that conservation benefited the local community by: