Deep in the state of Amazonas, Brazil, a single government decree in September 1980 C.E. drew a boundary around more than 2.3 million hectares of Amazon rainforest — protecting an entire river basin, thousands of species, and one of the most intact black water ecosystems on Earth. The creation of Jaú National Park was one of the most ambitious conservation acts in South American history.
Key facts
- Jaú National Park: Established by decree 85.200 on September 24, 1980 C.E., the park covers 2,367,333 hectares — roughly the size of Slovenia — in the state of Amazonas, Brazil.
- Amazon black water ecosystem: The park contains the entire Jaú River basin, a rare blackwater system whose dark, acidic waters support 263 recorded fish species, some previously unknown to science.
- UNESCO World Heritage Site: In 2000 C.E., UNESCO inscribed the park as a World Heritage Site; by 2003 C.E., it became part of the Central Amazon Conservation Complex, one of the largest protected tropical areas on the planet.
A river and a forest worth naming
The park takes its name from the jaú, one of Brazil’s largest freshwater fish — the gilded catfish (Zungaro zungaro) — which gave its name to the river, which gave its name to the park. That chain of naming reflects something real: this is a place where the ecological and the human are deeply intertwined.
The Jaú River runs through the heart of the park between two tributaries, the Unini to the north and the Carabinani to the south, all feeding into the right bank of the Rio Negro. The park sits about 220 kilometers northwest of Manaus in the Japurá-Solimões-Negro moist forests ecoregion — one of the most biodiverse zones on Earth.
The terrain ranges from flat-topped hills cut by deep valleys to seasonally flooded lowlands with poor drainage and permanent lakes. Average annual rainfall exceeds 2,500 millimeters. Temperatures stay between 22 and 32 degrees Celsius year-round. Dense rainforest covers 77% of the park’s area. Botanists have catalogued around 400 plant species, several of which exist only in specific microhabitats — the upland forest or the flooded igapó zones.
What the park protects
Jaú National Park is classified as an IUCN Category II protected area. Its mandate is not simply to fence off wilderness — it is explicitly designed to integrate environmental education, sustainable tourism, and ongoing research, alongside protection for present and future generations.
The species list reads like a field guide to Amazonian megafauna. The park shelters jaguars (Panthera onca), giant otters (Pteronura brasiliensis), Amazonian manatees (Trichechus inunguis), and margays (Leopardus wiedii). These are animals that require vast, connected habitat — exactly what Jaú provides.
The park is administered by the Chico Mendes Institute for Biodiversity Conservation, named for the rubber tapper and union leader whose advocacy for the Amazon — and whose assassination in 1988 C.E. — helped catalyze global attention to deforestation. The institution’s name is a reminder that park protection in Brazil has never been purely a technical or bureaucratic project. It has often been a matter of life and death.
Lasting impact
The establishment of Jaú in 1980 C.E. helped lay the groundwork for a larger conservation architecture across the Amazon basin. When UNESCO designated it a World Heritage Site in 2000 C.E., the international recognition brought new resources and visibility. The 2002 C.E. Central Amazon Ecological Corridor linked the park to surrounding reserves, creating one of the largest continuous protected tropical areas on Earth.
By 2003 C.E., the park had been folded into the Central Amazon Conservation Complex — a World Heritage Site encompassing Anavilhanas National Park, the Amanã Sustainable Development Reserve, and the Mamirauá Sustainable Development Reserve. In 2010 C.E., it became part of the Lower Rio Negro Mosaic. Each expansion built on the foundation the 1980 C.E. decree created.
The Amazon Region Protected Areas Program has continued to support the park. The IUCN’s global protected areas framework points to large, connected reserves like Jaú as critical infrastructure for both biodiversity and climate stability. Tropical forests like this one absorb and store billions of tons of carbon. Protecting the Jaú basin protects a carbon sink of global significance.
For Indigenous and traditional communities whose lives are intertwined with these rivers and forests, the park’s existence has been a mixed and sometimes contested reality. Reserve boundaries have not always aligned with community needs, and the history of large-scale protected areas in the Amazon includes cases where local peoples bore the costs of conservation they did not design. Ongoing advocacy by Indigenous rights organizations continues to push for governance models that center community voice alongside ecological protection.
Blindspots and limits
Jaú National Park exists within a broader Amazon under sustained pressure from deforestation, illegal mining, and climate change. A decree can create a boundary, but enforcing that boundary across 2.3 million hectares of remote terrain is a different challenge entirely. The park also sits within a region where Indigenous territorial rights and conservation designations have sometimes operated in tension rather than alignment — a gap that the Central Amazon Conservation Complex has tried to address, with uneven results.
The boundaries drawn in 1980 C.E. reflected the scientific and political knowledge of that era. Subsequent decades have revealed just how much those boundaries interact with, and depend on, the communities and ecosystems that surround them.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Jaú National Park — Wikipedia
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana establishes a new marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Indigenous land rights recognized across 160 million hectares ahead of COP30
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Brazil
About this article
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