• Peru
  • Bolivia
  • Visit
  • Donate
Skip to content
  • Home
  • Who
    We Are
    • Mission and Vision
    • Approach
    • Board of Directors
    • Staff
    • Supporters
    • Partners
    • Financials & Reports
    • Careers & Internships
    • Contact Us
  • The
    Challenge
    • Why Protect The Amazon
    • Threats to the Amazon
  • Our
    Approach
    • Protect Wild Places
    • Empower People
    • Put Science and Technology to Work
    • Monitoring of the Andean Amazon Project (MAAP)
    • 2020-2030 Strategy
    • Our Results
  • Where
    We Work
    • On the Ground
    • Across the Amazon
    • Research & Biological Stations
      • Los Amigos Biological Station
      • Wayqecha Cloud Forest Biological Station
      • Manu (Villa Carmen) Biological Station
      • Tahuamanu Biological Station
  • Visit
    the Amazon
    • Our Ecolodges
    • For Researchers
      • Los Amigos Biological Station
      • Manu (Villa Carmen) Biological Station
      • Wayqecha Cloud Forest Biological Station
      • Tahuamanu Biological Station
    • For Students and Universities
  • News
    & Events
    • Recent News
    • Pressroom
    • Events
  • Take
    Action
    • Donate
    • Your Impact
    • Ways to Give
    • Join Wild Keepers
    • Become a Business Supporter
  • Peru
  • Bolivia
  • Visit
  • Donate

Education

Providing educational opportunities for more people to learn, engage and become passionate about the Amazon rainforest.

We’re setting the foundation to educate thought leaders of tomorrow – the very leaders to whom we’ll pass the torch of protecting this irreplaceable habitat.

“When I bring students to Amazon Conservation’s research stations, it is always a joyous experience for both them and myself; hiking, running, exploring and discovering nature and evolution firsthand, not just from a textbook.
– Dr. Caroline Chaboo, Adjunct Faculty at University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Training the Next Generation of Conservationists

Training locals in deploying cutting-edge technology for conservation

Through our MAAP Project and our Western Amazon Drone Center, we teach local communities, leaders, students, farmers, landowners, and government officials to use the latest technology like drones, camera traps, radar, and satellites to monitor wildlife and track deforestation.

By empowering locals with knowledge and tools, we enable them to take charge of building their own conservation solutions.

 

Putting a new spin on environmental education

We get students excited and inspired about conservation.

We provide classrooms with hands-on experiences using camera traps to identify, understand, and monitor wildlife. Students install the cameras and analyze the imagery themselves, with our local staff experts.

After identifying species on the camera trap images and videos, the kids create presentations on their findings and present them to their parents, other students and even local government officials, becoming true stewards of their forests.

Managing the tropics’ premier research stations

Every year, we host hundreds of researchers, scientists, and students from all over the globe at our five research stations in Peru and Bolivia.

These stations are a gateway for individuals and universities to conduct scientific research on the Amazon. In addition, they are centers of knowledge for local communities – a place to gather and learn about their forests and how to keep them standing.

See how to visit them here.

Providing scholarships to the biologists of tomorrow

Every year, we award financial scholarships and science-related support to Peruvian students to conduct research at our premier research stations.

As most Peruvian students lack access to funding for the fieldwork required to obtain a biology degree, scholarships fill a critical gap and help build a local community of active conservation scientists.

Giving opportunities for up-and-coming bird researchers to do field studies

In addition to providing scholarships to biologists, our Los Amigos Bird Observatory is responsible for managing the Jonathan Franzen Fellowship, which awards young ornithologists with the funds and technical support from a board of experts to pursue their research at the Los Amigos research station.

Impact Highlights

Over 3,000 individuals

Trained on a wide variety of conservation best practices

240+ scholarships

Awarded to students to conduct field research in the Amazon

An average of 20 universities

Hosting field courses at our premier research stations every year

The Latest from the Amazon

Celebrating International Women’s Day by Empowering Women Bird Guides in Peru

Among birders, a Big Day is a day in which birders or teams of birders strive to identify and record as many bird species in a defined area as they can in a single day.  This year, Amazon Conservation is proud to sponsor the first-ever Women’s Big Day in Peru at our Manu Conservation Hub […]

Peru Recognizes Los Amigos Conservation Area at 2022 COP15

At 2022’s COP15 (the United Nations Biodiversity Conference of the Parties to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity) in Montreal, Peru announced the recognition of Los Amigos Conservation Concession as its first of two Other Effective Area-Based Conservation Measures (OECM), as part of Peru’s efforts to meet the goal set by the Biological Diversity Agreement […]

Creating Protected Natural Areas for Sustainable Management

On December 20, 2022, with technical support from our sister organization in Bolivia, Conservación Amazónica – ACEAA, the Mayor’s office of Porvenir in the Amazonian department of Pando, established the Natural Area of Integrated Management of the Porvenir Forest.  This new protected area will ensure the health and sustainable management of these productive forests with […]

  • More >

Want to help educate tomorrow's leaders?

Donate Now >

Help keep the Amazon wild.

Become a Wildkeeper
Donate
Visit the Amazon

Follow us @AmazonConservation on Instagram

Loading...
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • YouTube

    1012 14th Street NW · Suite 625 · Washington DC 20005 · USA
    202-234-2356 / info@amazonconservation.org

The Amazon is essential for our survival, help us protect it:

  • Donate
  • Subscribe

© 2025 Amazon Conservation Association. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy  |  Terms of Use
  • Great Nonprofits
  • Guidestar
  • Charity Navigator