Skip to main content
Access to this video is a benefit for members through PBS Passport.

Up Next

Back to Show
In the America's with David Yetman

The Rainforest Nesei: Japanese Immigrants in the Amazon

Season 2 Episode 203

In the early 1920s, a small group of Japanese peasants received a land grant deep in the vast forests of the Amazon. Today their descendants have become prosperous farmers, raising tropical crops and pepper, all the while protecting large tracts of primary tropical forest.

Support Provided By
Season
Dry Times in the Southwest: the new realities
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:46
Explore how cities and countryside adapt to drought in the American Southwest.
The road from Oaxaca to Chiapas
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:46
Explore the states of Oaxaca and Chiapas in southern Mexico.
Baracoa: Cuba's outpost on the Atlantic
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:46
Explore the old town of Baracoa and Cuba's vast sugar cane fields.
Pororoca: Brazil’s Famous Wave
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:46
Discover why surfers now flock from around the world to ride the Pororoca.
Brazil’s Pantanal: Wetlands and Wildlife
Unlock with PBS Passport
26:46
Explore the world's largest freshwater swamp, the Pantanal.
Father Kino and the Southwest
26:46
Learn everything about Francisco Eusebio Kino and the Mission San Xavier del Bac.
Chiapas Highlands: Mexico's Indian Empire
26:46
In Mexico's southernmost state, David finds nations apart from mainstream Mexico.
Cuba's Far East
26:46
With distinct Afro-Cuban roots, Santiago de Cuba was once Cuba's most important city.
Oregon: Violent Past and Verdant Present
26:46
More than any other of the contiguous United States, Oregon has been shaped by volcanoes.
Dominican Republic: Of Baseball, Whales, and Limping Devils
26:46
A hotbed of baseball, whalewatching, and a lively carnival, after years of turmoil.
Costa Rica: Laboratory of the Biosphere
26:46
From a biosphere to a Costa Rican rainforest reserve, scientists observe climate change.
Mexico’s Sierra Pinacate
26:46
The Pinacate Volcanic Range on the U.S.-Mexico border has a history of fire and brimstone.
Active loading indicator