RIO DE JANEIRO — Dozens of young people kneeled under the scorching sun recently in Rio de Janeiro’s rural interior, planting a green corridor that will be a future safe passageway for the region’s most emblematic and endangered species: the golden lion tamarin.
The 300 tree seedlings they planted — only inches tall at present — will eventually connect two patches of forest together. It is the latest in a series of incremental forest growth initiatives driven by environmentalists, providing an ever-larger habitat for the monkey.
Until recently, the bare and dry land they were replanting belonged to a ranch owner who tore down its trees for cattle pasture.
Rampant deforestation over centuries decimated this part of Brazil’s Atlantic Forest, the only place in the world where the small, copper-colored monkey whose face is framed by a silken mane can be found. With fewer than 5,000 individuals, it is considered an endangered species.
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“One of the biggest problems is the fragmentation of the forest,” said Luís Paulo Ferraz, executive director of the Golden Lion Tamarin Association, known by its Portuguese acronym AMLD. “Otherwise the monkeys start mating within their own families.”
Ferraz says monkeys are too scared to cross the few hundred meters of bare land that sometimes separate two isles of green vegetation, fearing they might become the prey of larger predators, such as big cats. Hence the need for green corridors.
Sarah Darwin, great-great-granddaughter of Charles Darwin, second from right, takes photos with others Friday in the rural interior of Rio de Janeiro, Silva Jardim, Brazil.
Applauding their recent effort was Sarah Darwin, the great great granddaughter of Charles Darwin. The British botanist was joined by a handful of young naturalists who are retracing the sailboat expedition taken by Charles Darwin nearly 200 years ago that led to his theory of evolution, part of a project called Darwin200.
“He arrived in the Brazilian Mata Atlantica forest and had a moment of clarity … a peak experience, where he felt at one with nature,” Darwin said as she entered the forest, known for its astonishing diversity of mosses, ferns and other vegetation. In the canopy above, the small golden monkeys with long tails jumped from one branch to another. “One of the most enduring experiences of his life,” she added.
Before colonization by the Portuguese in the 16th century, the Atlantic forest biome covered 330 million acres — more than 500,000 square miles — near and along Brazil’s coast. Less than 15% of that remains today, according to The Nature Conservancy.

Students on Thursday participate in the planting of tree seedlings that will form an ecological corridor for the golden lion tamarin in the rural interior of Rio de Janeiro, Silva Jardim, Brazil.
In the specific region of the Atlantic forest where golden lion tamarins can be found, the forest is down to just 2% of its original size, Ferraz said.
Sugar cane and coffee plantations were the main driver of early deforestation. Then came urban development and cattle pastures. In the 1970s, when scientists began efforts to save the species, there were just 200 golden lion tamarins left, according to AMLD.
In Brazil, the animal became a symbol for wildlife preservation; it was even featured on the country’s 20-real bill.
In recent times, the science and conservation nonprofit has been purchasing land from farmers and cattle ranch owners, which it then reforests one patch at a time. It bought a first parcel of 339 acres in 2018, and another of 445 acres this month.

Students on Thursday participate in the planting of tree seedlings that will form an ecological corridor for the golden lion tamarin in the rural interior of Rio de Janeiro, Silva Jardim, Brazil.
The process is slow and expensive, as it requires heavy and regular maintenance, especially in the first few years. But it is rewarding.
On the ground, the bare hills bought by AMLD in 2018, which the organization began reforesting the following year, have reclaimed their vibrant green, covered with a healthy forest and inhabited by many animal species the nonprofit can trace thanks to night vision cameras.
In spite of a bad bout of yellow fever in 2018 — when the population dropped more than 30% in a matter of months — there are now more golden lion tamarins than at any time since conservation efforts began.
According to the association’s latest survey, published earlier this year, there are about 4,800 individuals.
Photos: Race is on to vaccinate rare wild monkeys in quest for survival

Marcos da Silva Freire, who led the work of experimental vaccination of golden lion tamarins for yellow fever, walks on a dirt road on his family’s property in the Atlantic Forest region of the Silva Jardim region, in Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Saturday, July 9, 2022. The first monkeys were released near here, behind that hill,” he said, recalling the afternoon nearly 40 years ago of one of the first successful reintroductions of golden lion tamarins. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)

A golden lion tamarin sits in a tree in the Atlantic Forest region of Silva Jardim, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Friday, July 8, 2022. A campaign to vaccinate these endangered monkeys in Brazil against yellow fever may help save them from extinction. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)

A golden lion tamarin sits in a cage after it was captured in order to be vaccinated against yellow fever, in the Atlantic Forest region of Silva Jardim, Rio de Janeiro state, Tuesday, July 12, 2022. The pioneering inoculation campaign started last year. The first such effort in Brazil, and one of the first worldwide. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)

A golden lion tamarin that has been vaccinated against yellow fever is transported in a cage, to be released in the Atlantic Forest region of Silva Jardim, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Tuesday, July 12, 2022. Around the 1960’s, before conservation efforts were put into effect, habitat loss and poaching for the pet trade had reduced the number of golden lion tamarins to as low as 200 in the wild. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)

Research assistant Ademilson de Oliveira uses a telemetry device to locate golden lion tamarins in the Atlantic Forest region of Silva Jardim, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Friday, July 8, 2022. Many golden lion tamarins are descendants of animals carefully released in 1984, in cooperation with local landowners. That effort and subsequent campaigns to replant and connect parcels of rainforest, has seen the population of tamarins slowly recover. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)

A golden lion tamarin is handled by researchers after it was vaccinated against yellow fever in a lab run by the nonprofit Golden Lion Tamarin Association in the Atlantic Forest region of Silva Jardim, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Monday, July 11, 2022. Scientists in Brazil adapted a human yellow-fever vaccine to inoculate these endangered monkeys after yellow fever began to spread among the human population in Brazil in 2016, which quickly killed a third of the highly vulnerable tamarins, the majority of them in just a few months. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)

A vehicle drives under an ecological corridor that allows animals to cross over a highway in Silva Jardim, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Sunday, July 10, 2022. The bridge connects the Poco de Dantas biological reserve with a farm that the nonprofit Golden Lion Tamarin Association acquired to transform into an ecological park. (AP Photo/Lucas Dumphreys)

Golden lion tamarins, vaccinated against yellow fever, are carried in cages to be released, in the Atlantic Forest region of Silva Jardim, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Tuesday, July 12, 2022. The effort to save the charismatic monkeys has led to a pioneering captive breeding program, coordinated among around 150 zoos worldwide, including the Smithsonian National Zoo in Washington, DC. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)

Carlos Ramon Ruiz Miranda, right, president of the Golden Lion Tamarin Association, talks with field coordinator Andréia Martins, while logging in information, in their lab in the Silva Jardim region, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Monday, July 11, 2022. Martins has been tracking golden lion tamarins in the rainforest for nearly four decades. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)

A golden lion tamarin is examined before it is inoculated with a yellow fever vaccine in a lab run by the nonprofit Golden Lion Tamarin Association, in the Atlantic Forest region of Silva Jardim, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Monday, July 11, 2022. When the golden lion tamarin population was being decimated by yellow fever, conservationists who had toiled for decades to protect the monkeys were sharply divided over whether to inoculate the tamarins. Some were hopeful, at first, the virus wouldn’t impact the monkeys; others worried that any kind of novel intervention would be too risky. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)

A golden lion tamarin sits in a tree in the Atlantic Forest region of Silva Jardim, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Friday, July 8, 2022. The little primate, whose name derives from the shock of orange fur that frames its face like a mane, has watched its habitat shrink over decades — even centuries — of rampant deforestation. Animal traffickers have also targeted the brightly colored monkeys. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)

A golden lion tamarin is measured before it is inoculated with a yellow fever vaccine at a lab run by the Golden Lion Tamarin Association, in the Atlantic Forest region of Silva Jardim Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Monday, July 11, 2022. While authorities elsewhere have inoculated animals to safeguard human health – vaccinating feral dogs and wild animals such as raccoons for rabies and other diseases – it’s still very rare for scientists to administer vaccine injections to directly protect an endangered species. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)

Field coordinator Andréia Martins releases a golden lion tamarin after it was inoculated against yellow fever, in the Atlantic Forest region of Silva Jardim, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Tuesday, July 12, 2022. The longtime biologist for the nonprofit Golden Lion Tamarin Association can spot the tiny shimmer of golden fur among a green canopy and recognize more than 18 distinct vocalizations – from the specific calls of alpha males to their mates, to varying sounds to alert young monkeys to different types of food and predators. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)

Research assistant Ademilson de Oliveira wraps sheets of newspapers around a cage holding a golden lion tamarin as a way of reducing stress for the animal, before it is vaccinated against yellow fever in a lab run by the nonprofit Golden Lion Tamarin Association, in the Atlantic Forest region of Silva Jardim, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Monday, July 11, 2022. While authorities elsewhere have inoculated animals to safeguard human health, it’s still very rare for scientists to administer vaccine injections to directly protect an endangered species. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)

Veterinarian Suelen Sanches Ferreira, left, inoculates a pregnant golden lion tamarin with a yellow fever vaccine, in a lab run by the nonprofit Golden Lion Tamarin Association, in the Atlantic Forest region of Silva Jardim, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil, Monday, July 11, 2022. Conservationists who had toiled for decades to protect the monkeys were sharply divided over whether to inoculate the tamarins. Some were hopeful, at first, the virus wouldn’t impact the monkeys; others worried that any kind of novel intervention would be too risky. (AP Photo/Bruna Prado)
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