Sustainability Applied in the Amazonia
Is this project an undergraduate, graduate, or faculty project?
Undergraduate
Project Type
group
Campus
Daytona Beach
Authors' Class Standing
Beatrice Ribeiro, Junior Lucas Acosta, Sophomore
Lead Presenter's Name
Beatrice M Ribeiro
Lead Presenter's College
DB College of Engineering
Faculty Mentor Name
Marwa El-Sayed
Abstract
The Amazon Rainforest is the most biologically diverse place on Earth, with thousands of unique plants and animals inhabiting it. As the Amazon plays a critical role in global ecological balance with the lumber, rubber, and many more industries relying on it, these same industries are what are killing it. This research outlines strategies to rehabilitate its ecosystems without compromising the needs and welfare of local communities. The goal of this project is to create a plan to help restore the Amazon, through the usage of the 3-legged sustainability model: environmental, social, and economic sustainability. Through the unity of these entities, it will help foster the preservation and growth, the equity of its surrounding communities, and economic prosperity. This approach is to integrate innovative reforestation techniques, community-based conservation projects, and sustainable economic practices to allow the forest's natural dynamics to occur. The methodology includes a detailed stakeholder analysis to identify and engage all relevant parties, ensuring a collaborative effort towards restoration and application of sustainable development goals such as responsible consumption, economic growth, climate action, and infrastructure. By focusing on a multifaceted strategy, the study aims to demonstrate how restoration efforts can be effectively balanced with human and economic considerations, paving the way for a resilient and thriving Amazon Rainforest.
Did this research project receive funding support (Spark, SURF, Research Abroad, Student Internal Grants, Collaborative, Climbing, or Ignite Grants) from the Office of Undergraduate Research?
No
Sustainability Applied in the Amazonia
The Amazon Rainforest is the most biologically diverse place on Earth, with thousands of unique plants and animals inhabiting it. As the Amazon plays a critical role in global ecological balance with the lumber, rubber, and many more industries relying on it, these same industries are what are killing it. This research outlines strategies to rehabilitate its ecosystems without compromising the needs and welfare of local communities. The goal of this project is to create a plan to help restore the Amazon, through the usage of the 3-legged sustainability model: environmental, social, and economic sustainability. Through the unity of these entities, it will help foster the preservation and growth, the equity of its surrounding communities, and economic prosperity. This approach is to integrate innovative reforestation techniques, community-based conservation projects, and sustainable economic practices to allow the forest's natural dynamics to occur. The methodology includes a detailed stakeholder analysis to identify and engage all relevant parties, ensuring a collaborative effort towards restoration and application of sustainable development goals such as responsible consumption, economic growth, climate action, and infrastructure. By focusing on a multifaceted strategy, the study aims to demonstrate how restoration efforts can be effectively balanced with human and economic considerations, paving the way for a resilient and thriving Amazon Rainforest.