Project Story
Across the Río de la Plata coast and Pampas ecosystems in Argentina, productive landscapes, wetlands, and native biodiversity are under growing pressure from urban expansion, ecological degradation, and the loss of traditional ecological knowledge.
Our project develops community-led productive neoecosystems that reconnect agroecology, ecological restoration, and local livelihoods. Working with a cooperative network of producers, researchers, and communities, we support winegrowers and agroecological producers in transitioning toward regenerative practices adapted to estuarine, grassland, and riparian environments.
A core part of our work is the creation of analog forest systems inspired by the Paraná riparian rainforest and native Pampas ecologies, integrating biodiversity recovery with sustainable production and landscape stewardship.
Funds raised through this campaign will support pilot restoration and analog forestry actions, producer training, community workshops, participatory restoration, and activities within the Gran La Plata Biocultural Ring initiative, strengthening environmental governance, community engagement, and territorial resilience.
Our goal is to demonstrate that restoration is not separate from productive life: communities, biodiversity, and regenerative economies can grow together, creating viable alternatives to environmental degradation, urban pressure, and biodiversity loss.
Evidence and reviews live on the open ATProto network and can be inspected by anyone.