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Amazon Research Internacional

Where science meets the rainforest.

We regenerate fragile Amazonian biodiversity, ecosystems, and cultural heritage by uniting traditional knowledge with modern science — through conservation, research, policy, and empowerment of native communities and leaders.

Photo · Luis Garcia
Why we exist

The Amazon is at a tipping point.

Rapid destruction outpaces the work being done to repair it. ARI was founded in Peru to close that gap — pairing modern science with the traditional knowledge of Indigenous communities, and turning research into conservation, policy, and livelihoods that hold across generations.

2025 Law 32235 enacted
4 Programs in the field
25 + Indigenous communities
4 Countries in the bee corridor
How we work

Four practices in every program.

Conservation, science, outreach, and storytelling sit at the same table. Each program uses all four — never one without the others.

Conservation

We focus our efforts where Indigenous stewardship, biodiversity, and policy converge — protecting what works and regenerating what has been damaged.

Areas with the greatest impact for species and ecosystems.

Science

We design our studies with the people who live in the forest. Field biology, biochemistry, and traditional ecological knowledge sit at the same table.

High-impact research with Indigenous, national, and international experts.

Outreach

We invest in the next generation of scientists, beekeepers, and community leaders — most of them women — and build the local economies that make conservation viable.

Capacity programs for education, empowerment, and sustainable livelihoods.

Storytelling

We collaborate with photographers, filmmakers, and writers to tell the story of the Amazon truthfully and at scale.

Multi-media stories that travel beyond the canopy.

Without modern science together with indigenous traditional knowledge, there is no biodiversity.

— Richar Demetrio · Asháninka scientist and park ranger
Field notes

Notes from the basin.

Snapshots from the most recent weeks of fieldwork in Loreto and the Asháninka territories.

Setting up monitoring equipment in a community apiary
Tapiche · 04°41′S 73°22′W · 2024-03-14 Calibrating remote-monitoring cameras at a Kukama-Kukamiria apiary.
Community assembly in San Francisco
San Francisco · Loreto · 2023-11-09 Assembly with the community of San Francisco for the 2024–2027 management plan.
Selective harvest in agroforestry plot
Quillabamba · Cusco · 2024-01-22 Selective harvest in agroforestry plots under pacae shade.

Without native bees, there is no Amazon.

— Apu César Ramos · President of EcoAsháninka
Support the work

No contribution is too small.

Help safeguard the Amazon's under-appreciated organisms, the ecosystems they hold up, and the communities that live alongside them. Your gift goes directly to fieldwork, capacity programs, and Indigenous-led research.

Donations are processed in Peru. For US tax-deductible giving via our 501(c)(3) fiscal partner, write to amazonresearchint@gmail.com.

Field letters · monthly

Letters from the field.

Notes from the field, scientific findings, voices from the communities. No urgency, no hard sell — once a month.