Taquari Extractive Reserve

The Taquari Extractive Reserve (Portuguese: Reserva Extrativista Taquari) is an extractive reserve in the state of São Paulo, Brazil. It protects a coastal area of mangroves.

Taquari Extractive Reserve
Reserva Extrativista Taquari
IUCN category VI (protected area with sustainable use of natural resources)
LocationCananéia, São Paulo
Coordinates25.042892°S 48.033434°W / -25.042892; -48.033434
Area1,662 hectares (4,110 acres)
DesignationExtractive reserve
Created21 February 2008

Location

The Taquari Extractive Reserve is in the municipality of Cananéia, São Paulo. It has an area of 1,662 hectares (4,110 acres).[1] The reserve covers an area of mangroves and salt water at the mouth of the Taquari River.[2]

History

The Taquari Extractive Reserve was created by state law 12.810 of 21 February 2008.[3] This law broke up the old Jacupiranga State Park and created the Jacupiranga Mosaic with 14 conservation units.[4]

Notes

    Sources

    • RESEX Taquari (in Portuguese), ISA: Instituto Socioambiental, retrieved 2016-11-21
    • RESEX Taquari (in Portuguese), SAP: Sistema Ambiental Paulista, retrieved 2016-11-21
    • Zanchetta, Inês; Bedeschi, Luciana (28 February 2008), Mosaico do Jacupiranga, no Vale do Ribeira, agora é lei (in Portuguese), ISA: Instituto Socioambiental, retrieved 2016-11-20
    gollark: Have you seen GPT-3? It can add four digit numbers!
    gollark: Or, well, future GPT-x.
    gollark: How long before GPT-3 can make esolangs and obsolete humanity?
    gollark: We rationalize things to death instead of thinking rationally, our reasoning is built on tangles of cognitive biases, and humans cannot effectively multitask.
    gollark: Why would you design MentalHealthBot™ with a human-like brain? Humans are uncool.
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.