Long before becoming a national forest, the mountains of the Sierra de Luquillo were a sacred place for the Taíno, the native people of Puerto Rico (Borikén). According to the Taíno worldview, these summits, often wrapped in mist and crowned by clouds, were the home of Yuquiyú (also spelled Yúcahu or Yukiyú), a protective and benevolent deity, associated with good and, according to the stories, opposed to Juracán, the destructive force of the storms and hurricanes.
For the Taíno, these mountains had a special spiritual power: from them, Yuquiyú watched over the island and protected it. It's not hard to understand why such an imposing landscape — lush jungle, misty peaks, constant rains, rivers and waterfalls — inspired reverence. The connection between the natural and the sacred was total.
From that Indigenous background comes, according to one of the most widespread explanations, the name 'El Yunque' itself: it would be a derivation or adaptation of Yuquiyú (Yu-ki-yú). Other versions relate it to the anvil shape (yunque means 'anvil', the blacksmith's tool) of some of its summits seen from a distance. Whatever the exact origin of the name, what's certain is that the forest keeps, in its place names and in its aura, the mark of that sacred mountain of the Taíno.
The value of the forest was recognized by the authorities very early. In 1876, during the Spanish colonial era, the Crown declared the El Yunque area a forest reserve, in order to protect its forests and, above all, the water sources that rose in its mountains, vital for the region. This decision makes El Yunque one of the oldest protected forest areas in the Western Hemisphere.
The protection responded to a concern increasingly widespread in the 19th century: deforestation and its consequences for water, climate and soils. In a Puerto Rico where much of the territory had been transformed into plantations (sugarcane, coffee, tobacco), conserving a large mountain forest had an evident strategic and environmental value. The 1876 reserve sought precisely that: to preserve this green lung and its water-regulating function.
That Spanish declaration laid the foundations for El Yunque's continuity as a protected space across the changes of sovereignty and the centuries. When Puerto Rico passed into US hands, the area already had a protection status that eased its integration into the new national forest system.
After the change of sovereignty in 1898, El Yunque was incorporated into the federal protected-areas system of the United States. In 1903, President Theodore Roosevelt officially established the forest reserve under US administration, and over time the area came to be part of the National Forest System, managed by the US Forest Service.
For much of the 20th century, the forest was officially known as the Caribbean National Forest, though people continued to popularly call it 'El Yunque', after its most emblematic peak and mountain. In those decades, part of the infrastructure that visitors enjoy today was built: the road that climbs through the forest (PR-191), the stone observation towers (like the Yokahú Tower and the Mount Britton Tower, built in the first half of the century, partly by the Civilian Conservation Corps during the New Deal era) and the trails.
Finally, in 2007, the forest was officially renamed with the name by which it was always popularly known: El Yunque National Forest. The change recognized the cultural identity of the place and its Taíno root. It's the only tropical rainforest within the entire United States National Forest System, which makes it exceptional.
What makes El Yunque unique is its condition as a tropical rainforest, fed by one of the highest rainfalls in Puerto Rico: in its high areas, several meters of rain can fall per year. That constant humidity, added to the variation in altitude (from the base to peaks of a little over 1,000 meters), generates different levels or types of forest, each with its own characteristic vegetation.
In the lower areas the tabonuco forest dominates, with tall trees and a dense canopy. At mid-altitude the sierra palm forest and the palo colorado forest appear. And at the summits, where the mist is almost permanent and the winds lash, grows the so-called dwarf forest or cloud forest, with low, twisted trees covered in mosses and bromeliads: an almost storybook landscape. This succession of ecosystems in a relatively small space is an ecological marvel.
That diversity of habitats sustains an extraordinary biodiversity, part of it endemic to Puerto Rico: the coquí (the island's symbolic little frog, with several species), the Puerto Rican parrot (an endangered parrot that is the object of conservation programs), the Puerto Rican boa, a multitude of birds, giant ferns, orchids and bromeliads. El Yunque is, in short, a living laboratory of tropical nature and a crucial refuge for species that exist nowhere else in the world.
In September 2017, Hurricane Maria — one of the most devastating in Puerto Rico's recent history — struck the island with extreme force, and El Yunque suffered enormous damage. The winds ravaged much of the forest canopy, felled trees, caused landslides and seriously damaged trails, lookouts and infrastructure. The ever-green forest was, for a time, brown and bare, a shocking image for those who knew it.
But El Yunque, as a tropical ecosystem adapted to hurricanes (recall Juracán from Taíno mythology), has a remarkable capacity for regeneration. In the following months and years, the jungle sprouted again with force: the green returned, the rivers recovered their course and the wildlife repopulated the forest. The recovery has been a fascinating example of the resilience of tropical nature, studied by scientists around the world.
The reconstruction of the tourist infrastructure (road, trails, El Portal visitor center) took time, and partly motivated the implementation of the access-reservation system for the main area, to better manage the influx and protect the recovering forest. Today El Yunque again welcomes visitors to much of its attractions, though some trails may remain closed or under restoration. The scar of Maria recalls the force of nature, but the reborn forest also celebrates its capacity to regenerate.
Today El Yunque is at once a protected natural treasure and one of the most visited tourist destinations in Puerto Rico. Managed by the US Forest Service, it combines its conservation mission — protecting a unique ecosystem and its endemic species — with that of offering the public an accessible and educational nature experience. The El Portal visitor center, the lookouts, the trails and the waterfalls allow thousands of people a year to get to know the only tropical rainforest in the US national forest system.
Current management seeks to balance that tourism with the protection of the forest. The access-time reservation system for the main area, the temporary closures of trails for maintenance or safety, and the rules for visitors (don't leave trash, don't disturb the wildlife, don't swim when the rivers are running high) are part of that effort to conserve El Yunque for future generations.
Beyond its ecological value, El Yunque is a cultural and emotional symbol for Puerto Ricans. Its name, of Taíno root; its coquí, which sings across the whole island; its resilience after Hurricane Maria; its inexhaustible green: everything makes it an image of Puerto Rico itself. To visit it is to immerse yourself in the purest tropical nature and, at the same time, to connect with the deepest roots of the island, from the sacred mountain of Yuquiyú to the protected forest of today.