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  • 5 weeks ago
Rio de Janeiro: Three blue-and-yellow macaws were released on January 7 into Tijuca National Park in Rio de Janeiro as part of a reintroduction programme aimed at supporting the ecological restoration of Brazil's Atlantic Forest, project organisers said.The birds — Fernanda, Fatima and Sueli — arrived at the park in June 2025 from the Parque Três Pescadores facility in the state of São Paulo and underwent a seven-month acclimatisation and adaptation process before being set free.The initiative is led by Brazilian civil society organisation Refauna, with support from the Chico Mendes Institute for Biodiversity Conservation (ICMBio) and other partners. During the preparation period, the macaws followed a gradual training programme to build muscle and improve flight skills, learned to avoid human presence, and shifted their diet to recognise native forest fruits, organisers added.

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00:00Oh
00:05after more than 200 years blue and yellow macaws
00:10are flying again over Rio de Janeiro
00:15three macaws were released into Tejuka national
00:20park on January 7 after months of
00:22rehabilitation and training
00:25the boat
00:30the boats were brought from Sao Paulo
00:32and slowly prepared for life in the wild
00:34learning to fly
00:35find food and avoid humans
00:40and this introduction is very important
00:41not just for the Hararls that are going to be
00:42be released
00:43but also for the National Park
00:45and for the city of Rio de Janeiro
00:47as a whole
00:48we hope that Hararls Canindé
00:50has the ability to bring the forest
00:52to people
00:53because they are animals
00:54very charismatic
00:55they are very colorful
00:56they are very colorful
00:57so it is also a way to reconnect
01:00people who live in an urban environment
01:02who usually don't look at the nature
01:05with this nature
01:07that exists in a way
01:08very beautiful
01:09in the middle
01:10in the middle
01:11in the middle
01:12in the middle
01:13in the middle
01:14the release
01:15is part of a conservation effort
01:17to restore Brazil's Atlantic forest
01:19one of the
01:20one of the country's
01:21most threatened ecosystems
01:22well
01:24and now
01:25as far as they are
01:26they start
01:27all this new phase
01:28of our work
01:29to monitor intensely
01:30our team
01:31is now in the field
01:32the whole time
01:33these Hararls
01:34are marked
01:35but we also
01:36are very excited
01:37to see Hararls
01:38through the eyes
01:40of the residents
01:41of Rio de Janeiro
01:42so
01:43...
01:45now
01:46free
01:47the Macaws
01:48will be closely monitored
01:49as they are
01:50down
01:50trapped
01:51to their new home
01:54conservationists
01:55hope
01:56their return
01:57will help restore the forest
01:58and reconnect city residents
01:59with nature
02:00to
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02:07to
02:08to
02:09to
02:10to
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02:19take
02:20you
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