EPISODE · May 5, 2026 · 32 MIN
The Severed Lifeline: Rebuilding a Fragmented Amazon
from Rewildology · host Brooke Mitchell
In this episode of Rewilding Amazonia, I follow the broken edges of the forest—the roads cutting through Indigenous territories, the degraded corridors between ecosystems, the unprotected landscapes sitting just outside national park boundaries—and the people stitching it back together. Juliana Martins, a road ecologist and PhD candidate at Imperial College London, has spent years working alongside the Waimiri-Atroari Indigenous community in the Brazilian Amazon, whose nightly closure of the BR-174 highway has produced the longest-running citizen science roadkill monitoring project in road ecology history and measurably higher wildlife diversity inside their territory than outside it. Ben Valks of the Black Jaguar Foundation is six years into one of the largest rewilding projects on earth: a 2,600-kilometer biodiversity corridor reconnecting the Amazon rainforest and the Cerrado savanna through a 17-step restoration approach, farmer by farmer, across a landscape the size of the distance from Boston to Miami. And Bruno Paladines of Nature and Culture International helped unite six Ecuadorian provinces and Indigenous nationalities under a single conservation agreement, the Amazonian Platform, to protect 60,000 square kilometers of intact, connected forest that had no formal protection at all. This episode is about landscape scale: what it takes to stop a forest from falling apart, and what becomes possible when the people who have always belonged to the land are finally given the tools to protect it. TIMESTAMPS00:00 Spider Monkey Wakeup01:38 Roads And Fragmentation02:21 Road Ecology Explained04:12 Highway Through Indigenous Land06:47 Night Closures Save Wildlife08:48 Canopy Bridges Solution10:05 Rethinking Road Building12:46 Mega Corridor Restoration17:00 How Black Jaguar Restores18:06 Winning Farmers Trust20:03 Wildlife Returns Fast21:08 Protecting the Ecuador Amazon24:25 Amazonian Platform Strategy26:26 Future Fund Governance28:23 Unified Voice At COP29:47 Jaguar Refuge Buffer Zone31:46 Connectivity And Next Steps Would you like to give to Rewildology? Donate here: https://givebutter.com/supportrewildology CREDITSExecutive Producer & Host: Brooke MitchellAssociate Producer & Music Composer: Brad Parsons LISTEN TO THE FULL SERIEShttps://rewildology.com/episode-group/rewilding-amazonia/ SHOW NOTES & NEWSLETTERShow notes & subscribe to newsletter, https://rewildology.com/ SUPPORT REWILDOLOGYhttps://rewildology.com/support-the-show/ LISTEN TO THE REWILDOLOGY PODCASTApple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3YXWSsFSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3oW6artLcvxX0QoW1TCcrq?si=ff3b5e2ec90542a2 FOLLOW REWILDOLOGYYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@RewildologyInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/rewildology/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/rewildology/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rewildologyX: https://x.com/rewildology DISCLAIMERThe views expressed by guests are their own and don't necessarily represent those of Rewildology or its host. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, science evolves and details may change—always do your own rese...
What this episode covers
In this episode of Rewilding Amazonia, I follow the broken edges of the forest—the roads cutting through Indigenous territories, the degraded corridors between ecosystems, the unprotected landscapes sitting just outside national park boundaries—and the people stitching it back together. Juliana Martins, a road ecologist and PhD candidate at Imperial College London, has spent years working alongside the Waimiri-Atroari Indigenous community in the Brazilian Amazon, whose nightly closure of the BR-174 highway has produced the longest-running citizen science roadkill monitoring project in road ecology history and measurably higher wildlife diversity inside their territory than outside it. Ben Valks of the Black Jaguar Foundation is six years into one of the largest rewilding projects on earth: a 2,600-kilometer biodiversity corridor reconnecting the Amazon rainforest and the Cerrado savanna through a 17-step restoration approach, farmer by farmer, across a landscape the size of the distance from Boston to Miami. And Bruno Paladines of Nature and Culture International helped unite six Ecuadorian provinces and Indigenous nationalities under a single conservation agreement, the Amazonian Platform, to protect 60,000 square kilometers of intact, connected forest that had no formal protection at all. This episode is about landscape scale: what it takes to stop a forest from falling apart, and what becomes possible when the people who have always belonged to the land are finally given the tools to protect it. TIMESTAMPS00:00 Spider Monkey Wakeup01:38 Roads And Fragmentation02:21 Road Ecology Explained04:12 Highway Through Indigenous Land06:47 Night Closures Save Wildlife08:48 Canopy Bridges Solution10:05 Rethinking Road Building12:46 Mega Corridor Restoration17:00 How Black Jaguar Restores18:06 Winning Farmers Trust20:03 Wildlife Returns Fast21:08 Protecting the Ecuador Amazon24:25 Amazonian Platform Strategy26:26 Future Fund Governance28:23 Unified Voice At COP29:47 Jaguar Refuge Buffer Zone31:46 Connectivity And Next Steps Would you like to give to Rewildology? Donate here: https://givebutter.com/supportrewildology CREDITSExecutive Producer & Host: Brooke MitchellAssociate Producer & Music Composer: Brad Parsons LISTEN TO THE FULL SERIEShttps://rewildology.com/episode-group/rewilding-amazonia/ SHOW NOTES & NEWSLETTERShow notes & subscribe to newsletter, https://rewildology.com/ SUPPORT REWILDOLOGYhttps://rewildology.com/support-the-show/ LISTEN TO THE REWILDOLOGY PODCASTApple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3YXWSsFSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3oW6artLcvxX0QoW1TCcrq?si=ff3b5e2ec90542a2 FOLLOW REWILDOLOGYYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@RewildologyInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/rewildology/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/rewildology/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rewildologyX: https://x.com/rewildology DISCLAIMERThe views expressed by guests are their own and don't necessarily represent those of Rewildology or its host. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, science evolves and details may change—always do your own rese...
NOW PLAYING
The Severed Lifeline: Rebuilding a Fragmented Amazon
No transcript for this episode yet
Similar Episodes
No similar episodes found.
Similar Podcasts
No similar podcasts found.