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The Reserves

Amazon
The Amazon Biological Reserve in located in the province of Napo in Ecuador. Of the six stations, Amazon is the oldest, and was created in 1986 out of the need to have a conservation, investigation and education centre to host scientists and students interested in the tropical rainforests. The present size of this reserve is 2 000 hectares, created by donations from various individuals and organizations concerned with the rapid loss of the tropical rainforests in the Amazon and the world. This reserve is located in an Alpha Biodiversity Hot Spot, one of the most biologically diverse areas in the world.
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Bilsa
The Bilsa reserve conserves a critical remnant of Ecuador's coastal pre-montane wet forest, of which less than 1% remains. Located in the Mache Mountains in the north western coastal province of Esmeraldas, this remnant of forest has a unique composition of flora and fauna, internationally renowned for both its diversity and rarity. The region's rugged topography (300 to 800 meters) and the coastal climate create a dense fog, which shrouds all of Bilsa's steeper ridges. Rare animals found at the reserve include the Jaguar, several small cat species, the Long Wattled Umbrella Bird, the Giant Anteater and abundant populations of the threatened Mantled Howler Monkey.
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Congal
The Congal Biological Research Station was founded in 2001 in order to protect Ecuador's endangered coastal ecosystems. The area features primary tropical rainforest, beach, natural regeneration, mangrove, estuarine habitat, wetland and wet tropical forest, diverse habitats which account for the regions high biodiversity and local endemism. The Congal reserve covers 250 hectares of mangrove forest on an island in the Muisne estuary, home to a variety of animals including three-toed sloths, armadillos, bottle-nosed dolphins, swimming crabs, and frigatebird colonies.
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Guandera
In response to research that recognized the unique composition and extremely high diversity of cloud forests, motivated the Foundation to take urgent action. The Guandera Biological Station was created in 1994 to save the last remnants of inter-Andean forests in Ecuador. Guandera is in the midst of the last remaining extensive stretch of high altitude cloud forest, an area in which less than 4% of the original forests are still intact. This forest is found only on the inter-Andean slopes, in the valley between eastern and western cordilleras, and the reserve draws its name from the large Guandera (Clusia flaviflora) which dominate this unusual and threatened forest.
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La Hesperia
The 814 hectare Hesperia Biological Station is situated in the western lower reaches of the Andes, 1100 to 2040 metres above sea level. This diverse reserve spans over evergreen, low montane and tropical cloud forest. More than three hundred bird species have been identified at La Hesperia; 19 are endemic to the region, and 7 are vulnerable or in danger of extinction. Although the area is extremely important for the conservation of biodiversity, deforestation remains a threat.
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San Cristobal
The San Cristobal Biological Station is located on the Gal�pagos Islands, off the west coast of Ecuador. The recently established reserve was established on a 200 hectare site in the highlands of San Cristobal Island. The objectives of the project are to reconstruct the original forests on the island, and to provide viable agricultural products for the local population to grow. Volunteers will work on habitat restoration and agricultural sustainability while at the reserve. In addition foundation staff will lead volunteers on explorations of lagoons, native forests, beaches, and the local villages, to explain the ecological and human dynamic of Galapagos.
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Tito Santos
The Tito Santos reserve was founded in September 2001 in Ecuador�s Manabi Province, one of the most important areas for conservation in the world due to the destruction of 99% of the natural forest. A number of mammal, bird and tree species which have disappeared elsewhere are relatively abundant at The Tito Santos Dry Forest Reserve. Dry forests are strongly seasonal. During the dry season many plants shed their leaves to conserve water, and animals gather around the remaining water holes. Once the rainy season arrives, the area returns to life in a few days.
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