Yasuní National Park () is a protected area comprising roughly between the Napo and Curaray Rivers in Pastaza and Orellana Provinces within Amazonian Ecuador. <!--partially in Napo province -->The national park lies within the Napo moist forests ecoregion and is primarily rain forest. The park is about from Quito and was designated a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve along with the adjacent Waorani Ethnic Reserve in 1989. It is within the ancestral territory of the Huaorani indigenous people. Yasuní is also home to two uncontacted indigenous tribes, the Tagaeri and the Taromenane. and aquatic plant Montrichardia linifera typically line the edges of these slow moving rivers, often referred to as Igapós.
The park contains an estimated 1.7 billion barrels of crude oil – 40 percent of Ecuador's reserves. Plans to extract this oil were met with resistance from Indigenous people, and criticised by scientists. In 2007, president Rafael Correa launched the Yasuní-ITT Initiative in an effort to protect the park's natural resources. The initiative promised to protect the park's biodiversity in exchange for compensation from the international community, but the effort did not raise enough money. Oil extraction began in 2016 and was expanded in 2019.
In August 2023, a referendum on oil exploration in the national park passed, requiring a halt to oil drilling in the national park.
Biodiversity
thumb|left|[[Amazon rainforest in the Park]]
thumb|Indigenous Tourism project within the park
thumb|The grounds at Yasuní Research Station in Ecuador, located in Yasuní National Park along the bank of the [[Tiputini River]]
Yasuní National Park (YNP) is arguably the most biologically diverse spot on Earth and a convergence point for three unique regions, the Equator, Andes Mountains, and the Amazon rainforest. The park is at the center of a small zone where amphibian, bird, mammal, and vascular plant diversity all reach their maximum levels within the western hemisphere. Moreover, the park breaks world records for local-scale (less than 100 km<sup>2</sup>) tree, amphibian, and bat species richness, and is one of the richest spots in the world for birds and mammals at local scales as well. The park also harbors a lot of amphibian diversity compared to other sites sampled in the western Amazon.
Mammals
thumb|Napo saki, [[Pithecia napensis]]
Many types of mammals live within the national park both in water, on land, and in the air. Pteronura brasiliensis, commonly known as the giant otter, an endangered species endemic to rivers in and surrounding the national park, are forced to adjust to constant seasonal changes in water levels that concurrently alter food availability. A species of bat, Lophostoma yasuní, is endemic to the park, and the Amazon Basin has an estimated 117 bat species, but on a local scale, Yasuní is estimated to have comparable richness. Many species of monkey spend their lives coexisting among the tops of the canopy, including the Eastern Ecuadorian squirrel monkey (Saimiri cassiquiarensis macrodon) and Humboldt's squirrel monkey (Saimiri cassiquiarensis), pygmy marmoset (Cebuella pygmaea), Ecuadorian white-fronted capuchin (Cebus aequatorialis), Red-crowned Titi (Plecturocebus discolor), Napo saki (Pithecia napensis), Colombian red howler (Alouatta seniculus), white-bellied spider monkey (Ateles belzebuth), and brown woolly monkey (Lagothrix lagothricha). These creatures are key components to many trophic levels of the ecosystem as they serve as seed dispersers and remove insects from plants for nourishment.
Herpetofauna
thumb|The Yasuní River is home to many different species of caiman.
In spite of covering less than 0.15% of the Amazon Basin, Yasuní is home to approximately one-third of the amphibian and reptile species. The park holds a world record 150 amphibian species for places with comparable landscapes, and high amphibian diversity compared to other sites sampled in the western Amazon. Treefrog Osteocephalus Yasuní is named after the park. Reptile species in the park are also very high with 121 documented species found.
Fish
The park harbors high levels of fish diversity, boasting an estimated 500 species. However, this may be an underestimate of the amount of species actually present due to cryptic diversity, differences not easily seen morphologically but revealed using DNA studies, amongst species. The diversity of fish species in this region is influenced by seasonality and habitat, which is important for consideration when trying to capture
the breadth of species encompassed in the waterways.
Birds
thumb|Water puddles with mineral rich clay are where many animals and insects congregate to obtain minerals they cannot obtain otherwise.
thumb|Parrots at a clay lick, Anangu, Yasuní National Park
thumb|[[White-banded swallows perching of a tree stump on the bank of Rio Tiputini, Yasuní National Park]]
Yasuní is also home to at least 596 bird species which comprises one-third of the total native bird species for the Amazon. According to a field guide composed by PUCE, the area surrounding the Yasuní Scientific Research Station contain a large diversity of bird species including various predatory birds like falcons, hawks, and eagles and other birds such as macaws, antwrens, manakins, thrushes, and many other species. The diverse levels of canopy available have supported many different lifestyles for birds, including pollinators like hummingbirds who can often share close relation with certain plant groups.
Insects
thumb|Yasuní National Park hosts a large diversity of insects.
This national park hosts very high levels of insect diversity and insect–plant mutualisms. In a single hectare, Yasuní has over 100,000 different species of insects which is roughly the amount of insect species that can be found in all of North America.
Plant Diversity
The park also boasts one of the world's richest levels of vascular plants. It is one of nine places in the world that has over 4,000 vascular plant species per 10,000 km<sup>2</sup>. The park contains many species of trees and shrubs and holds at least four world records for documented tree and liana richness as well as three world records for diversity in woody plant species. Several recent book publications in coordination with PUCE have provided comprehensive information about plant species within the Yasuní region, one of which details 337 plants, predominantly trees, endemic to the Yasuní Region. The park also hosts a list endemic species such as 43 different species of vertebrates and 220–720 different plant species.
Threats to the park
Oil reserves
Yasuní National Park contains an estimated 1.7 billion barrels of crude oil – 40 percent of Ecuador's reserves – in the Ishpingo-Tiputini-Tambococha (ITT) oil fields. Oil exploration in the park began in 1995. In 2005, plans for additional oil roads into the park prompted environmentalists and scientists such as Jane Goodall, E.O. Wilson, and Stuart Pimm to urge the government to leave the resources untapped. Indigenous people and environmentalists called for a national referendum on the issue.
In response, President Rafael Correa launched the Yasuní-ITT Initiative to protect the park's natural resources in June 2007. The initiative promised to leave the park undisturbed in exchange for compensation from the international community. The government hoped to raise 50 percent of the value of the oil reserves, amounting to US$3.6 billion over 12 years. By 2009 pledges of support from around the world came to around $1.7 billion. Not drilling in the park would prevent 400 million metric tons of carbon dioxide from entering the air, officials said.
Actors Leonardo DiCaprio and Edward Norton, filmmaker and global ecological activist/scientist Michael Charles Tobias, and former Vice President of the United States Al Gore were among those who pledged support to the Ecuadorian government. Countries contributing funds included Turkey, Chile, Colombia, Georgia, Australia, Spain and Belgium. However, fundraising efforts were inhibited by Correa's insistence that Ecuador alone would decide how the funds would be spent.
Oil drilling began in the park in 2016, and in 2019 President Lenín Moreno expanded the drilling area into the buffer zone intended to protect Indigenous communities.
2023 Ecuadorian Yasuní National Park oil exploitation referendum
A referendum on banning oil exploitation in Yasuní National Park was held in Ecuador on 20 August 2023 alongside general elections. If the proposal was accepted, a progressive withdrawal of all activities related to oil extraction would occur within one year from the announcement of the official results, and the state would not be able to take action intending to initiate new contracts to continue oil exploration in the block. The referendum was a popular initiative demanded by indigenous communities for more than ten years before being finally validated by the Constitutional Court in May 2023.
The proposal was approved. The choice was seen as a blow to President Guillermo Lasso, who had advocated for drilling. State oil company Petroecuador will have to dismantle its drilling operations in the area in the coming months.
Other threats to the park
Colonization, deforestation, illegal logging, and unsustainable hunting are affecting the park at present.
See also
- 2023 Ecuadorian Yasuní National Park oil exploitation referendum
- Finding Species
- Tiputini Biodiversity Station
- Yasuní-ITT Initiative
References
Further reading
- Hennessy, L. A. (2000). Whither the Huaorani? competing interventions in indigenous Ecuador. Master's thesis, Berkeley, University of California, Berkeley.
- Lu, F. E. (1999). Changes in subsistence patterns and resource use of the Huaorani Indians in the Ecuadorian Amazon. PhD dissertation. Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
- Pitman, N. C. A. (2000). A large-scale inventory of two Amazonian tree communities. PhD dissertation. Durham, Duke University.
- Vogel, J.H. (2009). The economics of the Yasuní Initiative: climate change as if thermodynamics mattered. London, Anthem Press .
External links
- "Opinion: Yasuní and the New Economics of Climate Change" CNN. Edition: International. August 23, 2010.
- Yasuní Green Gold Campaign to save the park and its indigenous people
- Yasuní Campaign by New Internationalist
- Background article at Deutsche Welle climate-project 'Global Ideas' on Ecuador's controversial plan to refrain from drilling for oil in its rainforests in return for money.
- Deutsche Welle report on Yasuní National Park
- Where do we draw the line? Documentary directed by Joseph Wordsworth, and produced by Cora Fern and Mike Smith, vimeo.com/193289299
