The Bacia do Rio Macacu Environmental Protection Area (APA) covers parts of the municipalities of Cachoeiras de Macacu, Itaboraí and Guapimirim in Rio de Janeiro.
It has an area of 19,508 hectares (48,210 acres).
It includes areas of plains and lowlands and mountainous areas with springs and important remnants of forest.
Its largest area is occupied by pastures, vegetable fields and quarries for sand to be used in construction.[1]
The Guapimirim-Macacu sub-basin is part of the Guanabara Bay basin.
It is bounded to the north and northwest by the Serra dos Órgãos, to the northeast by the Serra de Macaé de Cima, to the east by the Serra da Botija and the Serra de Monte Azul, and to the south by the Serra do Sambê and the Serra dos Garcias.
The Macacu River, the main river of the APA, is born in the Serra dos Órgãos at about 1,700 metres (5,600 ft) in the municipality of Cachoeiras de Macacu, and runs for about 74 kilometres (46 mi) to its junction with the Guapimirim River.[2]
The Bacia do Rio Macacu Environmental Protection Area was created by state law 4.018 of 5 December 2002.
Its objective is to protect marginal areas in the basin of the Macacu River, the largest contributor to Guanabara Bay.[1]
It is included in the Central Rio de Janeiro Atlantic Forest Mosaic, created in December 2006.[5]
The management plan was prepared in 2009 by the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (Embrapa) in cooperation with other institutions, within a regional planning strategy for the mosaic which considered opportunities for forming corridors between the protected areas and for ecologically sound agriculture.[4]
Notes
^In 2013 the Paraíso Ecological Station was integrated into the Três Picos State Park.[3]