Book

Conservation and responsible tourism

Zacambú Eco Lodge seen from a boat | Amazon Jungle Trips

Amazon Jungle Trips works with a responsible tourism vision, aiming for each rainforest experience to have the lowest possible impact.

Responsible tourism experience in the Amazon rainforest | Amazon Jungle Trips

A living, sensitive rainforest

Amazon rainforest exploration engraving | Amazon Jungle Trips

The rainforest is a living and sensitive ecosystem. For this reason, walks are planned to avoid trail deterioration, and wildlife observation is encouraged in its natural habitat.

The experience seeks to bring visitors closer to nature without turning it into an artificial stage. Conservation is expressed through concrete decisions that protect natural wildlife behavior and the cycles of the forest.

Do not feed animals, do not capture them for permanent display, do not use the same paths repeatedly, and allow visited areas to recover naturally.

Zacambú Eco Lodge drone view | Amazon Jungle Trips

In previous years, until approximately 2022, regenerative tourism activities were also carried out, including clean-up days, meetings with nearby communities, and visitor contributions to community spaces.

Although these actions are not currently active on a permanent basis, they remain part of a line of work that can be reactivated when proper coordination is in place.

River boat navigation | Amazon Jungle Trips

The lodge has attempted reforestation processes in high and low rainforest areas. Experience has shown that natural rainforest regeneration is complex and does not always respond immediately to manual planting.

For this reason, any reforestation initiative requires specialized technical knowledge and respect for the Amazon ecosystems own cycles.

Guide interpreting the Amazon rainforest | Amazon Jungle Trips

Our priority is to operate consciously, reduce impacts, respect natural wildlife behavior, and share with travelers an authentic rainforest that has not been artificially altered for tourism.