What is ARCAS? and Who is Involved?
ARCAS is a non-profit Guatemalan NGO formed in 1989 by a group of Guatemalan citizens who became concerned as they saw their precious natural heritage - especially their wildlife - rapidly disappearing before their eyes.
ARCAS was originally created for a very specific and urgent purpose: to build a rescue center to care for and rehabilitate wild animals that were being confiscated on the black market by the Guatemalan government.
Since its establishment, the ARCAS Rescue Center has grown into one of the largest and most complex rescue centers in the world, receiving between 300 and 600 animals of more than 40 species per year.
ARCAS 's objectives are:
- To strive for the conservation, preservation, protection and research of wildlife.
- To rescue, rehabilitate and reintroduce into their natural habitat wild animals seized from illegal traffickers.
- To promote and assist in the creation and management of protected habitat areas for wild animals
- To support tropical wildlife veterinary medicine and research.
- To reproduce endangered wildlife.
- To raise awareness among Guatemalans and visiting tourists about the need to conserve natural resources through a program of education and information dissemination.
- To develop and promote economic alternatives in rural communities to the unsustainable consumption of natural resources.
Since the establishment of the Rescue Center in Peten, ARCAS has branched out into other very necessary activities including environmental education, protected areas management, marine turtle conservation, sustainable community development, ecotourism and reforestation. ARCAS’s three main project sites are: the Guatemala City area, the remote northern department of Petén, and the Hawaii area of the southern Pacific Coast.
At its Pacific coast site of Hawaii, ARCAS manages the most productive of the 21 sea turtle hatcheries in Guatemala, rescuing nearly 50,000 olive ridley and leatherback eggs per year. Also in Hawaii, it is working with the Guatemalan government to establish a 4,000 hectare protected area focused on the local mangrove wetlands and carries out reforestations of 2 to 10 hectares per year. Its Environmental Education Department, based in the Guatemala City office, reaches out to over 8000 children per year throughout the country.
ARCAS's THREE MAIN PROJECT SITES:
(a) Environmental education
(b) Cerro Alux
(c) Networking and fundraising
(a) Rescue Center
(b) Education
1. Kinkajou Kingdom
2. Educational activities
Also:
1. Macaws Without Borders
2. Spider Monkey rehab program
3. Jaguars without borders
(a) Sea turtle conservation and research, Squeaky IX
(b) Environmental education
(c) Hawaii protected area, Finca El Salado
(d) Alianzas
iv) Wildlife trafficking enforcement activities
v) Community development activites
To learn more about what ARCAS does, check our Annual Reports on the publications page. If you want to volunteer please see the Volunteer Information or email us at
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Last Updated on Thursday, 14 April 2011 20:39 |