Una Biological Reserve


Una Biological Reserve is a Biological reserve in Brazil.

Location

The Una Biological Reserve, which is in the Atlantic Forest biome and covers, was created on 10 December 1980.
It became part of the Central Atlantic Forest Ecological Corridor, created in 2002.
It is in the Una municipality of Bahia.
The climate is hot and humid, with annual rainfall over.
The temperature varies from, with an average of.
Elevation ranges from above sea level.
The terrain has isolated plateaus, mostly around in height, within a flat coastal plain.
Removal of the original forest cover has caused accelerated erosion of the plateaus.
The reserve is in the basin of the Una River, which is fed by the Aliança and São Pedro rivers.
The Serra River runs through the reserve from the west to the south east.
The Maruim River forms the natural border of the north west of the reserve.
The flora is a diverse example of Atlantic Forest biome.
Fauna include three species of seriously threatened endemic primates: the golden lion tamarin, black-tufted marmoset and golden-bellied capuchin.
The environment has been damaged by deforestation, removal of riparian vegetation and cattle damage to the river banks causing more extreme flooding and greater levels of sediment in the water.
This has had negative effects to the fauna.

Conservation

The Biological Reserve is a "strict nature reserve" under IUCN protected area category Ia.
The purpose is to fully preserve the biota and their natural attributes without direct human interference.
Protected birds in the reserve include the Atlantic black-breasted woodpecker, black-headed berryeater, red-billed curassow, banded cotinga, Stresemann's bristlefront, band-tailed antwren, ochre-marked parakeet and striated softtail.
Other protected species in the reserve include golden-headed lion tamarin, maned sloth, giant anteater, cougar, Recife broad-nosed bat, Platyrrhinus recifinus, Hercules beetle, the butterfly Napeogenes rhezia and the Characiformes fish Nematocharax venustus.