There are human communities along the edge of the state park and along BR-174 in Presidente Figueiredo in the Aturiá–Apuauzinho section of the APA. More than 100 families live in this section, mainly engaged in hunting, farming and subsistence fishing. There is relatively little non-timber extraction from the forest other than fiber for crafts and straw for homes. There is intense logging. The
Instituto Nacional de Colonização e Reforma Agrária (National Institute for Colonization and Agrarian Reform – INCRA) created the Tarumã-Mirim Settlement Project on 10 August 1992, located parallel to the BR-174 Manaus-Boa Vista highway between the Tarumã-Açu and Tarumã-Mirim rivers. The settlement project is almost all in the Tarumã Açu – Tarumã Mirim section of the APA. It covers with 1,042 lots, averaging for family farming and of collective forest reserves. There is conflict between conservation goals and activities of the settlers such as burning wood for charcoal. The settlers engage in intensive deforestation in hillside and riparian areas, and often do not use the cleared land for farming. At least two tons of charcoal are sold weekly, usually informally, at a price up to 400% lower than the price in Manaus. The poor families in the settlement also depend on poached game from the forest for nutrition. Typically these families have low income, little education, poor sanitation, lack of access to medical services, insecure land titles and lack of assistance in controlled plant extraction. Most do not know about the APA requirements. There is a lack of dialog between the government and the communities, and lack of understanding of how the families survive. They understand the value of preserving the forest but need the income from charcoal. Economic activities with good potential include crafts using lianas and extraction of non-timber products and medicinal herbs for the pharmaceuticals industry. Valuable forest plant species include
Copaifera species,
Carapa guianensis,
Açaí palm (
Euterpe oleracea), buriti (
Mauritia flexuosa),
Oenocarpus bataua and
Oenocarpus bacaba. The main agricultural products are cassava flour, cassava, banana, pineapple, sugar cane and passion fruit. Coconut and rice farming are starting to be developed. The rivers provide fish. ==Notes==