The Rubber Tree: source of natural rubber

From the Amazon rainforest to industrial cities, the story of the latex that transformed the world.

Rubber tree (September 24, 2011) by asanoOriginal Source: Wikimedia commons

The rubber tree

Native to the Amazon, the rubber tree (Hevea brasiliensis) grows in seasonally flooded areas of the forest, reaching up to 40 meters in height. From its trunk flows latex, a milky substance that changed the course of world history.

Hevea brasiliensis (1897) by Franz Eugen Köhler and Karl GüntherOriginal Source: Wikicommons

Indigenous knowledge

Amazonian peoples used rubber tree latex to waterproof fabrics, mold objects, and even make footwear. Rubber ball games were a tradition among the Maya and Aztec, who used a different tree: Castilla elastica.

A large rubber tree in Peru (December 31, 1888) by Charles KroehleOriginal Source: Wikicommons

The encounter with Europeans

In the 16th century, Spanish chroniclers reported Indigenous peoples molding latex around clay pots, creating elastic containers that astonished the colonizers. Centuries later, naturalists such as La Condamine described its properties, sparking European interest.

Charles Goodyer (1901) by Milton HadleyOriginal Source: Library of Congress

Rubber and the Industrial Revolution

In the 19th century, rubber spread across the world. Vulcanized by Charles Goodyear in 1839, it became a vital input for tires, cables, insulators, condoms, and countless other products. The Amazon then experienced the ‘rubber boom,’ marked by both wealth and contradictions.

Amazon Theatre (September 27, 2017) by photobomOriginal Source: Wikicommons

The Amazonian Belle Époque

Latex extraction turned the cities of Manaus and Belém into symbols of tropical luxury. Theaters, palaces, and boulevards reflected the opulence of rubber wealth, while rubber tappers endured harsh conditions in the forest.

Sir Henry Wickham (1900) by Bain News ServiceOriginal Source: Library of Congress

The smuggling of seeds

In 1876, Henry Wickham clandestinely transported about 70,000 Hevea seeds from the Amazon to London’s Kew Gardens. Around 3,000 seedlings germinated there, soon to be sent far beyond Europe.

Wardian case (1890) by Photographer unknownOriginal Source: Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew

Wardian cases

The seedlings cultivated at Kew were shipped to Asia in Wardian cases (miniature glass-and-wood greenhouses that revolutionized plant transport). These shipments enabled the creation of vast rubber plantations in Southeast Asia, breaking the Amazon monopoly.

Rubber tree plantation in Samoa (1918) by Alfred James TattersallOriginal Source: Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa

Decline and reinvention

With the expansion of Asian plantations, the Amazon entered an economic decline. Still, the rubber tree remained central to regional life, sustaining livelihoods and keeping the forest’s extractive culture alive.

Power House at Fordlandia, Brazil (September 05, 2010) by Amit EvronOriginal Source: Wikicommons

Fordlândia

In the 1920s, Henry Ford tried to build an American-style model city in Pará to secure rubber for his industry. Fordlândia failed in the face of pests, cultural clashes, and Amazonian resistance, but became a symbol of early globalization.

From rubber soldiers to unsung heroes by Fundo Paulo de Assis Ribeiro, Arquivo NacionalOriginal Source: Arquivo Nacional

Rubber Soldiers

During World War II, the Amazon once again supplied latex to the Allies. Thousands of migrants, the ‘rubber soldiers,’ braved the forest to keep production going, in an epic marked by sacrifice and hope.

Chico and Ilsamar Mendes (November 01, 1988) by Miranda SmithOriginal Source: Wikicommons

Chico Mendes

In the 1980s, rubber tapper Chico Mendes led the struggle for extractive reserves, defending both the standing forest and social justice. Assassinated in 1988, he became a global symbol of socio-environmental resistance and an inspiration for new generations.

Rikbaktsa ancestral practice of rubber tapping by Mariana BassaniOriginal Source: CicloVivo

A symbol of the bioeconomy

Today, the rubber tree stands as a symbol of a possible bioeconomy: conserving the forest, valuing its guardian peoples, and innovating sustainably. From the sap that flows from its trunk emerge memories, challenges, and pathways to the future.

Credits: Story

Research and writing: Fernando B. Matos (CRIA)
Editing: Fernando B. Matos (CRIA)
Review: Vanderlei Canhos (CRIA)
References: Flora Brasiliensis (http://florabrasiliensis.cria.org.br); Viagem pelo Brasil (https://www2.senado.leg.br/); Laws (2010). Fifty Plants that Changed the Course of History. Quid Publishing; Olsen (2025). Biodiverso: a potência da floresta em pé e da união de seus povos. CicloVivo (https://ciclovivo.com.br/).
Additional information: http://florabrasiliensis.cria.org.br/stories
Acknowledgments: To the authors of the images that illustrate this exhibition, especially photographer Mariana Bassani and the news portal CicloVivo, for authorizing the use of the photograph that concludes this story.

*Every effort has been made to credit the images, audio, and videos and to accurately recount the episodes narrated in these exhibitions. If you find any errors and/or omissions, please contact us at contato@cria.org.br

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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