PRN offers its members the opportunity to use this website as an advertisement tool for their private reserve. The information provided here is taken from the membership forms filled out by the reserves representative.
The PRN web design team can add more information to each profile upon request by the protected area's assigned contact. For further information, email:
info@parksnetwork.org
...that using Google Earth Technology, you can visit an online map of any of our private reserve members?
Pumalin is located in northern Patagonia, operated by a non-profit NGO, Fundacion Pumalin, located in Chile. Pumalin Park protects a large swath of southern Chile, along with several native chilean species. The Alerce and Chilean Huemul are native species of the region, threatened due habitat destruction and illegal practices.
Campanario Biological Station is an off-the-grid remote reserve with no roads, with sole access by foot or boat. The reserve is a combination of spectacular primary and secondary lowland rainforest with several kilometers of well-marked tails and freshwater streams. The private reserves protects the following endangered species: scarlet macaw; black-cheeked ant tanager; tapir; tamandua; white-faced monkey; tayra; jaguarondi; collared peccary; and jaguar, to name a few. The coastal areas includes rocky points, tide pools, secluded beach, and good snorkeling opportunities. Easy access available to nearby Corcovado National Park and Isla del Caño. The reserve is perfect for research opportunities and ecotourism travelers.
For further information on the Campanario Biological Station, please visit: http://www.campanario.org
The Santa Lucia Preserve mission is to conserve and sustain the Santa Lucia Preserve, a unique California Central Coast landscape, by implementing a model of comparable development and sustainable conservation where natural landscapes are protected and restored for Santa Lucia Preserve residents and all future generation. Santa Lucia lies on the Central California Coast halfway between Los Angeles and San Francisco. The preserve ranges in elevation from a low of 300 feet to nearly 3,000 feet at the summit of Halls Ridge. Variations in temperature and rainfall from lower to higher elevations contribute to an array of habitats and species within the Santa Lucia Range and Preserve. The private reserve protects threatened species, such as the California Red-Legged Frog, California Tiger Salamander, Smith's Blue Butterfly, Golden Eagle, and the Steelhead Trout. The Santa Lucia Preserve is managed by the Santa Lucia Conservancy, whose vision is to “...create a model of compatible development and sustainable conservation that works.”