Instituto do Meio Ambiente e Recursos Hídricos – INEMA / BA
The Serra do Conduru State Park (Portuguese: Parque Estadual da Serra do Conduru) is a state park in the state of Bahia, Brazil.
It protects an area of Atlantic Forest that is regenerating after damage from human intervention.
Location
The Serra do Conduru State Park is divided between the municipalities of Uruçuca (44%), Itacaré (41%) and Ilhéus (15%) in Bahia.
It has an area of 9,275 hectares (22,920 acres).
The buffer zone covers 25,057 hectares (61,920 acres).[1]
The park is in the eastern hydrographic basin of Bahia.[2]
It includes the Lagoa Encantada, the village of Serra Grande, the Itacaré Forest and the mountainous coastline.
Human activities include extreme sports, adventure tourism, mountaineering, trekking, mountain biking and ecotourism.
Threats include illegal logging and poaching, and delays in regularization of land ownership.[2]
Environment
The average annual temperature is 23 °C (73 °F), with a super-humid tropical climate.
The park contains the headwaters of 30 rivers and streams.[2]
The park is in the Atlantic Forest biome and consists of dense submontane rainforest in various stages of succession.[1]
Vegetation includes many clearings for agriculture or pasture and fragments of forest in different stages of regeneration.
The vegetation is always green, and includes trees up to 40 metres (130 ft) in height as well as dense shrub growth of ferns, arborescents, bromeliads, palms, vines, orchids and cactuses.
The wetlands that have not been disturbed by people hold fig trees, palm trees and palmettos.
There are as many as 458 tree species per hectare, a very high rate of biodiversity.
About 72% of species are typical of the Amazon Forest.[3]
The campaign to create the Serra do Conduru State Park began in 1993, and was promoted in 1996 by Conservation International Brazil, the SOS Atlantic Forest Foundation and the Institute of Social and Environmental Studies of Southern Bahia (IESB).[5]
The park was formally created by 6.227 of 21 February 1997.[2]
In 1998 highway BA-001 from Ilhéus to Itacaré was inaugurated, prompting studies on land regularization and closing the sawmills in southern Bahia that threatened the ancient trees of the region.[5]
It became part of the Central Atlantic Forest Ecological Corridor, created in 2002.[6]
Decree 8.702 of 4 November 2003 expanded the size of the park.[2]
The composition of the park's management board was agreed in November 2010.
By 2011 the park had formal tenure over 51% of the land, but was still vulnerable due to lack of infrastructure for protecting the land and allowing public use.[5]
Lamas, Ivana Reis; Crepaldi, Maria Otávia; Mesquita, Carlos Alberto Bernardo (2015), Uma Rede no Corredor(PDF) (in Portuguese), Conservação Internacional (CI-Brasil), ISBN978-85-98830-28-5, retrieved 2016-10-22