THANK YOU

Thank you for your incredible support this Giving Tuesday!

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Thanks to our incredible supporters, we have met our Giving Tuesday goal! All gifts will support the protection of wetlands in Brazil’s Pantanal. Thank you!

When the world’s largest wetland burns, the animals that live there burn as well.

Jaguars with burned paws. Hyacinth Macaw nests cooked by the heat before the chicks can fledge. Tapir and Marsh Deer and countless other wildlife suffering the effects of smoke inhalation.

The Pantanal is unlike anywhere else on Earth. This immense wetland covers more than 43.5 million acres across Brazil, Bolivia, and Paraguay—20 times larger than the Florida Everglades. It is also one of the most biodiverse places on the planet. More than 4,700 species of plants and animals live here, including one of the world’s largest and healthiest populations of Jaguars.

Right now, less than 5 percent of the Pantanal is protected. The vast majority of this irreplaceable landscape is vulnerable to deforestation and degradation for agriculture, the impacts of unregulated tourism and water use, and the devastation of wildfires like those that tore through the wetlands this year.

With your support, Rainforest Trust and our partner—Onçafari—will protect 326,179 acres to create the Taquari Wetlands State Park in Brazil. These acres will safeguard essential habitat for Caiman, Jaguars, Hyacinth Macaws, and hundreds of other species that rely upon the Pantanal for their survival. (Video header:  Drone footage of wild fires in the Pantanal, courtesy of partner Onçafari.)

In honor of Giving Tuesday, your generous gift will have four times the impact—giving your $50 donation the same impact as $200.

 

The Pantanal—the world’s largest tropical wetland—is burning. We need your help to protect this magnificent ecosystem, home to extraordinary biodiversity. Drone footage of fires in the Pantanal, courtesy of our partner, Onçafari.

With your support, Rainforest Trust and our partner will protect

326K

acres to create the Taquari Wetlands State Park in Brazil

A rehabilitation center treats the burned paws of a Jaguar injured in the Pantanal wild fires, photo by André Bittar/Onçafari
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A rehabilitation center treats the burned paws of a Jaguar injured in the Pantanal wild fires, photo by André Bittar/Onçafari

A rehabilitation center treats the burned paws of a Jaguar injured in the Pantanal wild fires, photo by André Bittar/Onçafari
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A rehabilitation center treats the burned paws of a Jaguar injured in the Pantanal wild fires, photo by André Bittar/Onçafari

Injured Tapir at rehabilitation center, by Fernando Faciole/Onçafari
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Injured Tapir at rehabilitation center, by Fernando Faciole/Onçafari

Marsh Deer in the burned Pantanal landscape, by Pedro Helder Pinheiro
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Marsh Deer in the burned Pantanal landscape, by Pedro Helder Pinheiro

Capuchin in the burned Pantanal landscape, by Bruno Sartori/Onçafari
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Capuchin in the burned Pantanal landscape, by Bruno Sartori/Onçafari

The Pantanal landscape, by Elleon
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The Pantanal landscape, by Elleon

The Taquari Wetlands, courtesy of Onçafari
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The Taquari Wetlands in the Pantanal, courtesy of Onçafari

The burned Pantanal landscape, by Mario Nelson/Onçafari
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The burned Pantanal landscape, by Mario Nelson/Onçafari

Healthy Rainforests. Healthy Planet.

Healthy rainforests are critical to a healthy planet. Creating protected areas is the most effective way to protect endangered animals, safeguard biodiversity, stop deforestation, and maintain the health of all species on our planet.

At Rainforest Trust, We Have
Animals injured in the Pantanal wild fires, photos courtesy Onçafari

Animals injured in the Pantanal wild fires, photos courtesy Onçafari

A Jabiru in the burning Pantanal, by Araquem Alcantara

A Jabiru in the burning Pantanal, by Araquem Alcantara

Despite its size and inherently wet nature, the Pantanal is not invulnerable to fire risk. Since January, more than 3 million acres have burned, and the fires continue. Photos courtesy Onçafari

Despite its size and inherently wet nature, the Pantanal is not invulnerable to fire risk. Since January, more than 3 million acres have burned, and the fires continue. Photos courtesy Onçafari

Fires are burning the wetlands of the Pantanal, by Araquem Alcantara

Fires are burning the wetlands of the Pantanal, by Araquem Alcantara

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