The 5 Great Forests of Mesoamerica

A regional initiative for climate, biodiversity and peoples

Mesoamerica is a biodiversity hotspot. With only 0.5 percent of the world's land area, the region is home to 7% percent of the world's biological diversity, including rare and endangered species. Forests such as the 5 Great Forests of Mesoamerica contain more than six times the carbon of the most degraded forests and hold approximately half of the region's forest carbon stocks. They also provide essential ecosystem services to five million people.

The 5 Great Forests of Mesoamerica are: Selva Maya in Mexico, Guatemala and Belize; La Moskitia in Nicaragua and Honduras; Indio Maíz-Tortuguero in Nicaragua and Costa Rica; La Amistad in Costa Rica and Panama; and El Darién in Panama and Colombia.

Climate change has varied impacts across geographical regions, but it also impacts people differently based on their socio-cultural context. Women and men, Indigenous Peoples and non-indigenous people are likely to experience climate change differently, with common gender and ethnic-based inequalities pervading and persisting around the world.

Mesoamerica's most vulnerable populations to climate change, Indigenous Peoples and local forest communities, manage and protect half of the remaining forested area in the five forests, relying on their resources for food security, income, cultural identity, and more. Where the conditions are right, this relationship is mutually beneficial. Forests managed by indigenous peoples with secure land tenure have much lower deforestation rates than forests outside indigenous lands. 

The 5 Great Forests Alliance, which includes government, NGO, academia, Indigenous Peoples, and local communities partners, has announced its commitment to protect the 5 Great Forests of Mesoamerica — the last remaining forests from Mexico to Colombia critical for wildlife, carbon sequestration, clean water, and food security to five million people.

Location reference map of The 5 Great Forests of Mesoamerica by Marco Martínez (WCS)

Location reference map of The 5 Great Forests of Mesoamerica © Google Earth

News

June 8, 2024

Placing women front and center is key to achieving global marine conservation and sustainable development agendas

Ahead of the United Nations Ocean Conference pre-meeting in Costa Rica, women leaders from 11  from Latin America and Caribbean countries released a call to action with major recommendations for better mainstreaming women’s priorities for coastal marine conservation and sustainable development into national policy dialogue.  Among other requests, the Women Ocean Guardians called for concrete actions by governments to eliminate gender-based violence, recognize the benefits and burdens of caregiving, enhance fairness of labor practices, guarantee health care, and foster leadership opportunities for women.

April 26, 2024

World Tapir Day: The forest gardener

There are four species of tapir in the world and Central America is home to the Tapirus bairdii species, also known as danta o danto, considered a symbol of the jungle and fertility, present in myths and legends of various indigenous communities. This April 27th, we celebrate their presence in the Great Forests of Mesoamerica, as they play a crucial role in seed dispersal, thus contributing to the regeneration of tropical forests where they inhabit. Their distribution spans southern Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Panama, northwestern Colombia (Chocó and Darién) and historically in El Salvador.

April 9, 2024

Biodiverse Landscapes Fund starts activities in Trifinio

The UK Biodiverse Landscapes Fund is a global initiative covering six valuable biodiversity hotspots around the world. In Mesoamerica it will invest up to approximately US$19 million over the next six years. In Guatemala and Honduras, the fund will cover the areas of the Mayan Jungle, Trifinio and Mosquitia.

March 22, 2024

Global overview and forecast for Mesoamerica and its Great Forests as they brace for the impacts of El Niño

If we consider historical patterns during El Niño years, particularly the effects observed in Mesoamerica during dry and fire seasons, we could anticipate consequences for this year similar to those experienced in previous critical moments. For example, in 1998, El Niño contributed to one of the most severe fire seasons, devastating large areas of the Maya Forest, affecting biodiversity and exposing communities to critical levels of smoke pollution.


Events & multimedia