Cuieiras River | |
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Baré people bathing in the river
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Native name | Rio Cuieiras |
Country | Brazil |
Basin features | |
River mouth |
Rio Negro 2°49′28″S 60°30′33″W / 2.824315°S 60.509059°WCoordinates: 2°49′28″S 60°30′33″W / 2.824315°S 60.509059°W |
River system | Rio Negro |
The Cuieiras River (Portuguese: Rio Cuieiras) is a river in the municipality of Maués, Amazonas state, Brazil.
The Cuieiras River is a tributary of the Rio Negro, which it enters from the left (east) upstream from Manaus in the Anavilhanas archipelago region. It defines the north boundary of the Rio Negro State Park South Section. The north bank of the river is in the Rio Negro Left Bank Environmental Protection Area, a 611,008 hectares (1,509,830 acres) sustainable use conservation area created in 1995. The forest around the river is home to the endangered Pied tamarin.
During the second half of the 20th century indigenous families from the middle Solimões River and the upper Rio Negro settled in areas on the banks of the Cuieiras and founded seven communities. The communities are ethnically diverse, including Cocama, Baniwa, Tucano, Ticuna, Mura, Baré, Sateré-Mawé and Carapana people. There is conflict with non-indigenous families. The river has been used for sand extraction, which the residents consider to be a source of pollution.
In 1996 the indigenous families began to fight for regularisation of property ownership without gaining much support from the Fundação Nacional do Índio (National Indian Foundation, FUNAI). In January 2014 FUNAI was directed to create a technical group to identify and demarcate the land and submit a final report within six months. One issue is that the residents are in the state park, as their presence was not considered when the park was established in the 1980s.