Jacundá National Forest


The Jacundá National Forest is a sustainable-use national forest in the state of Rondônia, Brazil.

Location

The Jacundá National Forest is in the Amazonia biome and covers.
The forest covers parts of the municipalities of Candeias do Jamari and Porto Velho in the state of Rondônia.
The Samuel Ecological Station, a state-managed unit, lies to the south of the forest.
Altitude ranges from.
The terrain is mainly the floodplains of the large and small rivers, surrounded by fluvial terraces.
The forest is bordered by the Madeira River and its right-bank tributaries the Jamari and the Ji-Paraná or Machado River.
The Jacundá, Miriti, Preto and Verde rivers are fed by springs in the forest.
Temperatures range from with an average of.
Average annual rainfall is.
There are three dominant vegetation types including at least 285 tree species in 55 botanical families.
Most of the area is covered by open rainforest, with smaller areas of dense rainforest and savannah, the last of which have little commercial value.
Migratory birds include black-tailed tityra, nacunda nighthawk, band-rumped swift, fork-tailed flycatcher, solitary sandpiper, vermilion flycatcher and purple martin.

Conservation

The Jacundá National Forest was created on 1 December 2004 and is managed by the federal Chico Mendes Institute for Biodiversity Conservation.
It is classed as IUCN protected area category VI.
The purpose is to allow sustainable use of forest resources and scientific research, with emphasis on sustainable exploitation of native forests.
The 2009 annual plan authorized using for forestry.
The Cuniã-Jacundá Integrated Management is a proposed management organization that would take responsibility for three federal conservation units in Rondônia, the Cuniã Ecological Station, Jacunda National Forest and Lago do Cuniã extractive reserve.
All three are managed by ICMBio and have complementary objectives in maintaining a total of of Amazon biome and its transition to savannah.