Guyana’s Essequibo River and the nearby Iwokrama Forest and Rupununi Wetlands provide a home for a wide variety of plants and animals, including the crocodilian black caiman and endangered giant otter. Additionally, four hundred species of fish, like the carnivorous piranha, live in Guyana’s rivers, and eight hundred species of birds, such as the endangered harpy eagle, build their nests in the canopy of the rainforest.
Without their habitat in the rainforest, these diverse species might not exist. Preserving their home helps these different creatures to survive and maintain the careful balance and food chain of the forest. If one species begins to die out, it can affect all the animals in that area. For example, the excrement of the black caiman used to feed plankton, the base of the food chain. The plankton clean the river by eating waste created by other animals, but the decrease in caiman population led to a decrease in plankton and small fish that feed upon it, therefore altering the food chain.
Failing to preserve rainforests and their plants and animals can lead to extinction. These plants and animals may have unknown medicinal qualities that would be lost forever if they died out. The destruction of rainforests over the next 25 years is predicted to wipe out or endanger almost half of the world’s animals, plants, and microorganisms. Although a quarter of Western pharmaceuticals contain ingredients from plant sources, only 1% of rainforest plants have even been tested for medicinal value. Protecting the rainforest keeps these valuable resources intact and prevents further loss of species.



*Harpy eagle: The most powerful eagle in the world, the harpy eagle weighs ten to eighteen pounds with a wingspan of about seven feet. Feeding on birds, iguanas, monkeys, opossums, big rodents, etc., the harpy eagle is a carnivore that hunts during the day. A pair of harpy eagles raises only one chick every two to three years, and this low rate of reproduction leads in part to a shrinking population. Destruction of their home, the rainforest, also contributes to their decline, and most forests only have one nest every ten or fifteen miles.
The fragile ecosystem of the Essequibo River area, a 200,000-acre rainforest, could have been destroyed. However, Save Your World™, in conjunction with Conservation International, buys rainforest acres for the same prices as loggers and instead conserves this pristine area. By keeping these forests intact, we help enable the various species to continue to remain for future generations. After all, with your help, the purchase of One Product Equals One Acre of Rainforest Saved for One Year™.
Unique Animals of the Amazon River

*Boto: Also known as the Pink River Dolphin because of its unique color, the boto lives in the Amazon and Orinoco Rivers. Adult boto are usually around eight feet long and weigh 330 pounds. They feed on crabs, fish, and sometimes turtles and often travel in small groups.
*Tucuxi: Although these dolphins are found in similar locations to the boto, the species are not closely related. The tucuxi are found in the Amazon Basin and coastal waters north and east of South America, like near Guyana. Although comparable in appearance, they are smaller than the bottlenose dolphin and often feed with other river dolphins. Energetic and social, they may leap out of the water, called breaching, somersault, tail-splash, and more.
*Uakari: Bald red heads and long-haired bodies distinguish these agile creatures from other monkeys. When moving in the forest, they travel along the trees’ lower branches but search for food in the canopy, feasting on nuts, fruits, leaves, and buds.
For more about our conservation mission visit http://store.saveyourworld.com/category-s/19.htm
References:
http://news.mongabay.com/2006/0502-wc13.html
http://www.projetoboto.com/
http://www.fishbase.org/Summary/SpeciesSummary.php?id=263
http://www.livingrainforest.org/about/plants/giantwaterlily
http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/wildfacts/factfiles/308.shtml
http://www.bioone.org/perlserv/?request=get-document&issn=0097-3157&volume=154&issue=01&page=0039
http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/natsci/herpetology/brittoncrocs/csp_mnig.htm
http://www.nature.org/animals/mammals/animals/giantotter.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harpy_eagle