Tucano State Forest

The Tucano Sustainable Yield State Forest (Floresta Estadual De Rendimento Sustentado Tucano) is a state forest in the state of Rondônia, Brazil.

Location
The Tucano Sustainable Yield State Forest is in the municipality of Cujubim, Rondônia. It has an area of 660 ha. It adjoins the larger Mutum State Forest to the east. The forest is in the north east of the state in the Machado River basin, at an altitude of about 100 m. The soils are mostly red-yellow latosols. The forest has a resident population.

History
The forest was originally one of the "blocks" of the 1984 Cujubim settlement project. A management plan for the project's reserves was defined in 1996 in cooperation with the Plan Agropecuario y Forestal de Rondônia (Planafloro: Rondônia Agriculture and Forestry Plan).

The Tucano Sustainable Yield State Forest was created by state decree 7.603 of 8 October 1996 with an area of about 659.56 ha. The Secretaria de Estado do Desenvolvimento Ambiental (SEDAM) was given administrative responsibility. The purpose was to provide a space for sustained production of renewable forest resources with natural regeneration, to ensure productive capacity of the forest with minimal alteration of ecosystems. The forest is part of the Southern Amazon Mosaic, recognized in 2011.