The New York Times reports
The remote rain forests in Peru’s northeast corner are vast — so vast that the clouds that form above them can influence rainfall in the western United States. The region contains species, especially unusual fish, that are unlike any found elsewhere on Earth. Scientists studying the area’s fauna and flora may gain insights into evolutionary processes and into the ecological health and geological history of the Amazon.
Now the area has become home to one of the Western Hemisphere’s newest national parks. Yaguas National Park will protect millions of acres of roadless wilderness — and the indigenous people who rely on it — from development and deforestation.
Read full story at Peru Moves to Protect ‘One of the Last Great Intact Forests’ – The New York Times


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By: New National Park in Peru Protects Unique Rain Forests… | huggers.ca on February 16, 2018
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