Project media

Restoring wildlife pathways through Rio's 180-km Transcarioca Trail

Brazil
Restoration, Conservation, Water
AS
Associação Movimento Trilha Transcarioca
Brazil
Nonprofit

The Trilha Transcarioca is a movement that brings together individuals and civil society organizations committed to implementing, marking, managing, promoting, and enabling the qualified public use of a long-distance trail that connects protected areas in Rio de Janeiro and functions as an ecological corridor between them. The trail extends for approximately 180 km, from Barra de Guaratiba to Morro da Urca, crossing important Atlantic Forest landscapes and urban natural areas. The movement operates through a voluntary and collaborative model, in which volunteers adopt specific trail sections and contribute to trail signage, periodic maintenance, ecological restoration, administrative activities, and communication efforts. Beyond promoting outdoor recreation and environmental awareness, the initiative plays an important role in strengthening ecological connectivity and conserving Atlantic Forest biodiversity.

Project story

Trails that Connect Lives: The Story of the Transcarioca Trail

The Atlantic Forest (Mata Atlântica) is one of the richest ecosystems in terms of biodiversity on the planet—and one of the most threatened. In Rio de Janeiro, urban expansion has deeply fragmented the landscape, isolating our forests into green islands. It is at the heart of this challenge that the Transcarioca Trail was born: much more than just a long-distance hiking trail, it is a vital spine of conservation, volunteerism, and ecological connectivity cutting through the soul of our city.

Stretching approximately 180 kilometers (112 miles), the trail connects Barra de Guaratiba to the iconic Morro da Urca (Sugarloaf Mountain). By weaving together protected areas, it functions as a critical ecological corridor that allows wildlife to migrate, forests to regenerate, and people to rediscover their role as active stewards of nature.


The Heart of the Movement: Collective Strength and Volunteerism

The Transcarioca does not belong to a single institution; it is a living, breathing, collaborative movement driven by civil society. We are citizens, mountaineers, scientists, and environmental advocates who have stepped up to "adopt" specific sections of the trail.

Our hands-on work is split into key fronts that care for the ecosystem as a whole:

  • Trail Management & Signage: We keep the trail safe, clear, and uniformly marked (using the standard yellow and black footprint logo) to ensure a high-quality public experience.

  • Ecological Restoration: We actively combat invasive species, mitigate soil erosion on steep slopes, and restore the dominance of native flora.

  • Education & Awareness: We transform hiking into an educational journey, turning trail users into passionate defenders of the Atlantic Forest.


Pillars of Impact: Projects Driving Real Change

To go deeper than the dirt path itself, the movement develops specialized conservation and citizen science initiatives:

Transcarioca Green Corridors Restoration

The greatest threat to our forest today is fragmentation. This project directly addresses this by reforesting key gaps and recovering ecological connectivity. We plant hyper-local, native keystone species—such as the ancient canopy giant Jequitibá-Rosa, the vital Juçara Palm (whose fruits sustain countless forest birds and mammals), and the rare Cambucá tree—building green bridges to fuse the forest back into one continuous ecosystem.

Fauna Transcarioca (Citizen Science)

The wildlife resisting within our metropolis deserves a voice. Through participatory monitoring using field logs and motion-activated camera traps, our volunteers help map and understand the mammals and reptiles inhabiting these connected forest patches. Every capture generates real scientific data used to design better species protection strategies.

Sweet Nature – Along the Native Bee Trail

A forest cannot spread without its pollinators. This project focuses on the conservation of native, stingless bees (such as the docile and highly efficient Mandaguari Amarelo - Scaptotrigona xanthotricha). Through ethical management, planting pollinator-friendly flora, and deploying upcycled artificial hives (like our PET vira Lar campaign), we ensure these invisible forest workers keep the reproductive cycle of the Atlantic Forest thriving.

Passarinhar Transcarioca (Birdwatching)

Avifauna acts as a natural thermometer for a forest's health. We promote community birdwatching and participatory avian monitoring along the entire corridor. In addition to gathering vital conservation data, this activity fosters a deep, therapeutic bond between citizens and the rich soundscape of the Atlantic Forest.


Our Goals and Daily Challenges

Our goal is to solidify the Transcarioca Trail as a global benchmark for urban trail management, but our daily obstacles require constant resilience:

  • The Threat of Wildfires: During Rio's dry winter months, the risk of forest fires is critical. Monitoring newly reforested areas and educating the public to prevent accidental blazes is a constant battle.

  • Urban Pressure & Invasive Species: Operating on the fringes of a major metropolis means battling an relentless invasion of aggressive grasses (like capim-colonião) to protect fragile, young saplings until they can reach the canopy.


Transparency: How Your Support Builds the Future

Inspired by the success that led the Brazilian Long-Distance Trail Network to win the National Tourism Award from the Ministry of Tourism in 2018, the Transcarioca movement guarantees that every donation, volunteer hour, and corporate partnership translates into immediate, tangible impact on the ground:

Funding AllocationPractical Impact on the GroundReforestation & Bio-inputsSourcing healthy native Atlantic Forest saplings, organic soil conditioners, and planting tools for community workdays.Pollinator SanctuariesMaterials for crafting bait-nests, managing native stingless bee hives, and supporting meliponiculture education.Signage & Trail InfrastructureManufacturing standardized trail markers, educational botanical plaques, and maintaining critical trail steps/bridges.Citizen Science & TechMaintenance of camera traps, high-durability batteries, memory cards, and field logistics for wildlife monitoring.


Leave Your Footprint on History

The Atlantic Forest has shaped Rio de Janeiro’s climate, landscapes, and global identity. Now, it is up to us to ensure that future generations inherit a forest that is alive, connected, and vibrant.

Whether you adopt a trail section, join us for a weekend planting mutirão, support our wildlife and bee projects, or contribute financially to keep our infrastructure standing: the Transcarioca is built by you.

Support our roots. Protect our wildlife and pollinators. Help us keep the Transcarioca Trail alive!

Project updates

Team

DM
Diego MonsoresAssociação Movimento Trilha Transcarioca, Brazil

Location

Brazil