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Yigüirro, Costa Rica's national bird. 941 bird species have been recorded in Costa Rica (including Cocos Island), more than all of the United States and Canada combined. More than 600 of the Costa Rican species are permanent residents, and upwards of 200 are migrants, spending portions of the year outside of the country, usually in North America.
This is a list of the mammal species recorded in Costa Rica. Of the mammal species in Costa Rica, [1] one is critically endangered, four are endangered, six are vulnerable, and three are near threatened. One species is considered extinct. [2] The following tags are used to highlight each species' conservation status as assessed by the ...
The rugged mountains and watersheds of the Esquinas and Piedras Blancas rivers are covered in dense evergreen forest that is home to a number of rare tropical trees and the habitat of many species of birds, mammals and reptiles. Hunting has been a problem, but the number of park rangers was increased from 6 to 16 between 2005 and 2007, and ...
An all-taxa biodiversity inventory, or ATBI, is an attempt to document and identify all biological species living in some defined area, usually a park, reserve, or research area. The term was coined in 1993, in connection with an effort initiated by ecologist Daniel Janzen to document the diversity of the Guanacaste National Park in Costa Rica. [1]
Genus Norops (21 species, including blue-eyed anole, ... List of non-marine molluscs of Costa Rica; Footnotes This page was last edited on 25 September 2024 ...
View of INBioparque's lake. The Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad (INBio) is the national institute for biodiversity and conservation in Costa Rica.Created at the end of the 1980s, and despite having national status, it is a privately run institution that works closely with various government agencies, universities, business sector and other public and private entities inside and outside of ...
Thus, although the species are generalists, individual sloths may feed on a relatively narrow range of leaf types. [6] Although they get most of their fluids from the leaves that they eat, brown-throated sloths have been observed drinking directly from rivers. [14] Brown-throated sloth at midday in Manuel Antonio National Park, Costa Rica
The Costa Rican portion holds 450 species, the Panamanian 225. Notable locally threatened birds in the forest are the resplendent quetzal , black guan ( Chamaepetes unicolor ), sulphur-winged parakeet , three-wattled bellbird , and bare-necked umbrellabird , which is found in both the Costa Rican and Panamanian region, and the harpy eagle ...