4 Ecotourism Stars of Brazil

31058886879?profile=RESIZE_710xVice Paes


Latin America‘
s largest country is home to a bewildering variety of biodiversity and natural landscapes, from jungles to deserts and tropical seashores to crisp Alpine mountains. Here are some Brazil highlights that nature lovers will want to put on their eco-bucket lists!

Chapada Diamantina National Park

A rugged 521-sq.-km (201-sq.-mi.) expanse atop a pleateau in the hinterland of Bahía state, six hours by road and an hour by small plane from the city of Salvador, it’s fantastic for hiking, biking, and wildlife spotting amid the forests, ravines, rivers, caves, and waterfalls (including Brazil’s highest), and includes a couple of little onetime mining settlements (in one of which, Lençóis, you can overnight).


31058887290?profile=RESIZE_710xSilvio serrano

Mantiqueira Mountains

In the southeast, split between the states of Minas Gerais (60 percent), Rio de Janeiro (ten percent) and São Paulo (30 percent), the thickly forested “Mountains That Cry” are home to some of Brazil’s highest peaks and towns, and are a popular destination for climbers and hikers. Wildlife here includes the lobo-guará (maned wolf, South America’s largest canid), the perro-vinagre (bush dog), the gato-leopardo (leopard cat), the paca (a large spotted/striped rodent), the howler and long-tailed monkey, and the toucan. It also includes the country’s oldest national park, Itatiaia, with an area of 300 sq. km (116 sq. mi.).


31058888053?profile=RESIZE_710xFilipefrazao

Mato Grosso Wetlands

Also down south, the world’s largest marshland is ten times the size of Florida‘s Everglades and one of its most diverse ecosystems – with for example the Americas’ largest concentration of fauna, including 100 species of mammals, 260 types of fish, and 80 reptile species). Known as the Pantanal, most of its 187,818-sq.-km (72,517-sq.-mi.) expanse lies mostly in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul, and its gateway is the city of Cuiabá; the best way to explore here is on horseback!


31058888287?profile=RESIZE_710xHVL

Serra do Cipó National Park

Down in Minas Gerais state about 2½ hours from the city of Belo Horizonte, these 316 sq. km (122 sq. mi.) are similarly rugged, with many of the same types of attractions as Chapada Diamantina, and are also home to some of the world’s most diverse sets of flora (much of it endemic to this region), with more than 1,700 species. There are also a few Neolithic and precolumbian archaeological sites to explore, and the reserve boasts a well-signposted network of trails for hiking and biking.

 

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