|
Piranha Eco Lodge
Rainforest Adventure Station
A brand new concept of ecotourism in the
Brazilian Amazon rainforest
Rainforests now cover less than 7% of Earth’s land surface
but they are home to over 50% of all known species of living organisms. And
some researchers think our current number of known species may vastly
underestimate Earth’s true total, and that millions more may
exist—especially in tropical rainforests—waiting to be discovered.
On
the 10 square kilometres Private Biological Reserve were found to be home of
300 species of birds, twice the number living in the broad-leafed forests of
all of North America. One tree in our Private Reserve may contain more
species of ants than found in the entire United Kingdom.
But
for all this wealth of organisms, there’s a constant struggle for scarce
resources. Plants fight for raw materials, and life finds ingenious ways to
take advantage of every niche and every scrap of energy. Beneath the vast
spreading canopy there are, in fact, many very different worlds.
This
overview provides portraits of the trees, plants, animals and insects of the
Amazon Rainforest. It sketches the relationships which link these organisms
together in an intricate web of life. The more distant you are from Manaus,
the more wildlife and untouched rainforest you will find!!!! Jungle is
remaining and destroyed rainforest!!
About the Piranha Reserve With 103 thousand hectares (255 thousand
acres),it is located on the left bank of the Solimões River, actually the
Upper Amazon River , near the mouth of the Manacapuru River, inserted in the
Middle Amazonian corridor, and as such, it is a priority conservation area
in the National Project of Ecological Corridors. The Piranha reserve was
created in 1997 with the objective to protect the richness of the area and
the different ecosystems, as well as to promote sustainable development and
improvement of the quality of life of the several local communities, also
providing an enormous potential for research, eco tourism and environmental
education for the local dwellers.
The Flotel Piranha Eco Lodge, your Rainforest Adventure Station, consists of a
flat bottom barge in the middle of one of the lakes where it is situated,
adding to its uniqueness under the open sky, surrounded by the lush green
rainforest and its so many different sounds that come out of the rainforest.
There’s all the necessary infrastructure, consisting of 16 apartments only,
all with screens for mosquito’s , mosquito nets over the beds and the
apartments mostly consisting of two single beds. All rooms have a private
bathroom, with a naturally heated shower and wash basin, besides the
Restaurant with mosquito/light bug screen. Maximum capacity of 32 travelers
in twin rooms.
The
restaurant has a capacity for 40 persons and is naturally specialized in the
regional cuisine with emphasis on the multiple varieties of local fresh
water fish. Due to the gigantic proportions of The Piranha Wildlife Reserve,
around 103.000 ha (225.00 acres), we developed a brand new concept:
Reception and bar - with comfortable sofas, hammocks and chairs, ideal to
relax before and after the tours, to have a conversation with newly met
friends, accompanied by regional, national and international refreshing
drinks. There´s also a observation tower on the barge itself to get falcon
eye views from the area. The roof being of regional amazonian architecture -
rustic and completely protected by screens against mosquitos and any other
light attracted bugs, adding to a great atmosphere in order for you to enjoy
the delicious regional kitchen.
The
generator of 110V is available just for some hours during the evening hours.
Alternative Sources of energy are also being used, like torches or 12 V
lights in the bathroom. There is no hot water (only naturally heated) in
which the water temperature is usually between 26-32° Celsius throughout the
whole year. No guarantee of air conditioning in any means of transportation,
not even in the vans and on the barge itself.
"We Move and We Lodge"
Meaning that, a large and specifically for river and
lake navigation built flat bottom barge, will from month to month move
around the 180 lakes to take you to the best spots for wildlife observation
,depending on the water level, which may rise up to 8 meters in the flooded
season. Our unique concession to operate within this Sustainable
Development Reserve, from which visiting the all so many different lakes,
you will most likely never run into another guest exploring the region. We
are a Rainforest Adventure Station that moves...
And Much More
But
the Piranha Reserve is not only that mentioned here above. It is an intense
cultural experience that seeks to conserve the culture of human being that
have shared the rainforest with the animals and plants throughout the
centuries. The local people of the area have a profound knowledge of
medicinal plants and forest life in general.
Main attractions
Bird
Watching
Wildlife Observation
Environmental trekking
Tours to flooded areas and nesting grounds
Catch & Release Fishing
Visit to the Natives Communities
Special Night Adventure Tours
180
Lakes to Explore !…if you can afford the time needed…
Transfers
The
transfer from Manaus to the Fotel Piranha Eco Lodge or vice-versa is divided
in the following parts:
Daily departures: 02:00pm (total transfer time is around 3 1/2 hours)
1)
Manaus (AIRPORT OR HOTEL) - São Raimundo port: 1/2-hour trip by van or
minibus
2)
São Raimundo port to Cacau Pereira town by boat, around 30 min
3)
Cacau Pereira town to Manacaupuru town by van over paved road , around 60
min
4)
Manacapuru town to the Fotel Piranha Lodge by boat,
through channels and lakes , around 1 1/4 hr
Return transfers to Manaus (AIRPORT OR HOTEL) with arrival at noon
Bird Watching
Bird
watching is a unique experience here. It is not by chance that it occupies
the first place in our "main attractions list". Those large wetlands,
naturally preserved areas due to the difficulty of access in the low season,
roughly November and December , are the ideal places for nesting to several
dozen different migrating and local bird species.
As a
consequence, we dedicate a great deal of time to bird observation with
specialized naturalist English speaking guides, using our canoes in one/two
hours excursions very early in the morning, 5:30 AM ( sunrise is around 6:00
AM all year around ) , and also very late in the afternoon 5:00 / 6:00 PM ,
when our winged friends are leaving or returning to their resting places.
A
spectacular visual show, it is also a sort of modern cacophonous comic
opera, since the number of branches on a designated tree and the space
available, is not, most of the time, coincident with the volume of different
species landing candidates , resulting in violently aggressive arguments ,
covering basically all tones in the sound scale ( and this can go for a long
time indeed … ) .
It
goes without saying that binoculars are mandatory for this type of excursion
and ear plugs are optional for those musically sensitive.
Environmental trekking
Recently, and this was not easy since we are basically in a 100.000 ha
flooded area , we discovered a pristine rain forest highland area , near the
Sacambu Lake ( please see map ) and not far from two small villages "
Campinas" and "Castanho".
Therefore we can offer from now on, guided excursions that will leave our
Flotel when it is at the mouth of the Piranha Channel with the Great
Manacapuru Lake, its nearest point.
Our
guides will take you , after a one and a half hours canoe ride , by foot
trough the dense high land rain forest ( see photos ) which is totally
different from the "varzea" flooded areas.
Here
we find the giant brazil nut trees, the red woods, the dry land rubber
trees, the medicinal plants , the water vines , the dark mysterious spots
and the furtive animals that dwell on it , guessing its presence mostly by
the noises, the tracks we find here and there , or the snack remains, proof
of its recent presence , since in the jungle , nothing edible stays for long
anywhere unless it's alive and in good physical condition.
Incidentally , we customize our walking tours according to the demand , the
condition and the interest of our guests ; and since our Flotel is limited
to 16 apartments , groups are never very large, which is always a plus
regarding any nature observation tour , and of course , your total
satisfaction is our main goal.
Tours to Flooded Areas
Since all around us everywhere is a flooded area, we do not have to go very
far away from our Flotel to do these tours. However, none of these tours
resemble in the least the first or the last you will participate during your
stay.
Why is that so?!
Just
because once you enter the Piranha Reserve , you enter a self sustainable
biome and Water Planet , composed of a myriad of labyrinthrs , channels ,
lakes , short cuts , hidden ponds, islands , peninsulas , lagoons , a real
paradigm of life in all its Amazonian forms and all its possible levels ,
underwater, slightly submerged , plainly floating, in and out , barely
touching, suspended, hanging , hiding , in plain view , jumping around or
slowly disappearing in the horizon…
Anyway, each of our tours is a learning experience even for us, since we
just discovered a large cormorant crowd which is not sleeping on the same
place anymore, or there is a new family of howler monkeys growling around,
and yes, last week we finally could navigate the "caipira" lake or the "gaivota"
channel which results in a 30 minute economy to get to the pink dolphins
lagoon.
So,
life is the same and every day is different at Piranha Lake Amazon Brazil!
Please let us be your host in this magnificent and unique experience.
Fly Fishing - Catch & Release Fishing
Yes,
we do fish for Piranas at Piranha Lake, that is obvious and much too easy .
Actually the variety and quantity of fish available associated with the
expertise of the local inhabitants, our guides, has led us not to put over
emphasis in our fishing tours, unless it is the main interest of a
particular private group .
So
many secrets now disclosed, so simple after discovered, like for instance
why there is such a huge quantity of fish available for the taking , always
in the vicinity of the large groups of sleeping birds …( and the reason, I
let you guess…).
Night Tours
A
lot of times wrongly called alligator spotting tour hardly reflects the
experience of a night tour in the Amazon , and specifically in our Piranha
Reserve area.
First, it is the night in itself, the raw beauty of the natural moon and
star reflections without the artificial lights of civilization.
Secondly the sounds, a midnight serenade ( no, we actually start sooner than
that ) of crickets, frogs, nocturnal monkeys , Caymans , birds …what was
that ?
And
finally the observation in itself , since besides the omnipresent Cayman ,
available in all shapes ( the piranas sometimes slightly modify their tail
end shapes ) sizes ( from baby dino to Godzilla ) species ( 3 - melanosuchus
niger - paleosuchus trigonatus and cayman crocodilus ) and moods ( from
apparently catatonic to… Jaws - the movie - The Amazon Connection ) ,
besides our reptilian friends , we will encounter night jars, giant potoos ,
dart frogs , sleeping birds, insomniac birds , birds that had no problem at
all sleeping until we accidentally woke them up, etc, etc.
Visit to the Native Communities
Yes,
our resident natives are called "caboclos" and they are the direct result of
the genetic melting pot originated by the European colonization , the
African slavery and the original Indians , accelerated on the last 150 years
by the discover of the Hevea Braziliensis - rubber tree and the resulting
boom , attracting thousands of immigrants from the dry lands of Northeast
Brazil.
Living in floating houses they are fiercely proud of their knowledge of the
rainforest ( an Indian legacy ) , of their knowledge in boat construction ,
( a Portuguese legacy ) meanwhile the elders remember nostalgic stories of
half a century ago , when the abundance of turtles and other animals was
amazing ( a legacy no one wants to take credit for ) , but we sure want to
contribute to reinstate this abundance , with our educational and
preservation philosophies .
So,
by visiting these communities, educating and hiring its members we are
contributing decisively to the sustainable development of this area trough
eco-tourism in which you, dear guest, is the main factor.
FLOTEL
PIRANHA ECO LODGE
REGULAR PROGRAM 4
DAYS / 3 NIGHTS
DAILY PROGRAMS AVAILABLE
1. Day Sunday
·
14.00 hrs depart from airport or you hotel in Manaus
Transfer time is around 4 hours in 4 stages:
A)
Manaus—São Raimundo port ( van )
B)
São Raimundo Cacau Pirera port ( speedboat )
C)
Cacau Pirera—Manacapuru ( 86 km paved road, van )
D)
Manacapuru—Lago do Piranha (speedboat )
·
18.00 hrs arrival at the Foltel Piranha Eco Lodge
Welcome drinks and reception
·
19.00 hrs Buffet style dinner
·
Overnight
2. Day Monday
·
05:30 hrs Depart for early morning birdwatching by wooden canoe
·
06.30 hrs Brazilian Breakfast
·
07.30 hrs Morning excursion by wooden canoe
·
12.00 hrs Buffet style lunch
·
Siesta
·
15.00 hrs Afternoon excursion by wooden canoe
·
18.30 hrs Byffet style dinner
·
Overnight
3. Day Tuesday
·
06.30 hrs Brazilian Breakfast
·
07.30 hrs Morning excursion by wooden canoe
·
12.00 hrs Buffet style lunch
·
Siesta
·
15.00 hrs Afternoon excursion by wooden canoe
·
18.30 hrs Buffet style dinner
·
19.30 hrs Caiman watching
·
Overnight
4. Day Wednesday
·
06.30 hrs Brazilian Breakfast
·
07.30 hrs Departure to Manaus Hotels or Airport
· 4
hours transfer with 4 stages.
·
Time to visit the Opera House for 15 minutes
·
Estimated time of arrival: 12.00 hrs
Observation: The half day excursion in wooden canoes are: Wildlife
Observation, Birdwatching, Rainforest Trek, Fishing, community visit,
depending on weather conditions and clients disposition. Exception is made
to the night excursion.
FLOTEL PIRANHA ECO LODGE
REGULAR PROGRAM 5 DAYS / 4
NIGHTS
DAILY PROGRAMS AVAILABLE
1.Day Wednesday
·
14.00 hrs depart from airport or you hotel in Manaus
Transfer time is around 4 hours in 4 stages:
A)
Manaus—São Raimundo port ( van )
B)
São Raimundo Cacau Pirera port ( speedboat )
C)
Cacau Pirera—Manacapuru ( 86 km paved road, van )
D)
Manacapuru—Lago do Piranha (speedboat )
·
18.00 hrs arrival at the Foltel Piranha Eco Lodge Welcome drinks and
reception
·
19.00 hrs Buffet style dinner
Overnight
2. Day Thursday
·
05.30 hrs Depart for early morning birdwatching by wooden canoe
·
06.30 hrs Brazilian Breakfast
·
07.30 hrs Morning excursion by wooden canoe
·
12.00 hrs Buffet style lunch
·
Siesta
·
15.00 hrs Afternoon excursion by wooden canoe
·
18.30 hrs Buffet style dinner
·
Overnight
3. Day Friday
·
06.30 hrs Brazilian Breakfast
·
07.30 hrs Morning excursion by wooden canoe
·
12.00 hrs Buffet style lunch
·
Siesta
·
15.00 hrs Afternoon excursion by wooden canoe
·
18.30 hrs Byffet style dinner
·
19.30 hrs Caiman watching
·
Overnight
4. Day Saturday
·
06.30 hrs Brazilian Breakfast
·
07.30 hrs Full day excursion to terra firme forest (Boat and walking)
·
12.00 hrs lunch box
·
18.30 hrs Byffet style dinner
·
Overnight
5. Day Sunday
·
06.30 hrs Brazilian Breakfast
·
07.30 hrs Departure to Manaus Hotels or Airport
· 4
hours transfer with 4 stages.
·
Time to visit the Opera House for 15 minutes
·
Estimated time of arrival : 12.00hrs
The
half day excursion in wooden canoes are: Wildlife Observation, Birdwatching,
Rainforest Trek, Fishing, community visit, depending on weather conditions
and clients disposition. Exception is made to the night excursion and the
full day Terra Firma visit.
Land Cost includes:
Adventure travel generally
requires operating with small group of people, and our packages are quoted
according to this small number of participants. All prices quoted above are
based on a minimum of 2 person sharing twin accommodation at the lodges,
including all meals, land and boat transportation, equipments, local
excursions and local guide.
Not included:
International and national
airfares, insurance of any kind, optional tips to staff, item of personal
nature (water, sodas, drinks, laundry, calls etc).
Amazon Rainforest
“...trees of a thousand kinds and tall, so that they seem to touch the sky.
I am told they never lose their foliage, and this I can believe for I saw
them as green and lovely as they are in Spain in May...” - Christopher
Columbus
The
Amazon Rainforest contains the largest area of tropical forest in the world.
It covers 6 million square kilometers in 9 different countries (circa 60% in
Brazil). At first look, the Amazon forest seems to be rather uniform in
physiognomy but in fact there are many typological variations and ample
species diversity. The forest canopy is frequently discontinuous, giving
space for special ecological niches. At the heart of this region lies the
huge Amazon River, the longest water course of the world. The Amazon holds
more than 20% of the planet's fresh water, has at least 1,000 tributaries.
The Rio Negro is its largest tributary. The Amazon Rainforest with Gateway
Manaus actually includes four major vegetation type:
TERRA FIRME Forest (Upland forest) Located on higher grounds with no direct
influence from rivers.
VÁRZEA Forest (Marshland forest) Seasonally flooded lowland forest.
IGAPÓ Forest (Flooded forest) Permanently flooded lowland forest.
CATINGA Forest (Along Rio Negro) River, called as well Campinarana.
Do
you really think you know everything about the Amazon Forest? Let us be your
introduction to one of the last undiscovered places on Earth. The Nature's
Greatest Show. THE AMAZON FOREST!
Home
of the world's largest rainforest, and a ceaseless source of myth, mystery
and adventure.
A
canopy of green spreads over a 2,030,000 square mile ecosystem that includes
the Amazon River, Amazon Forest (the largest and densest rainforest in the
world) and upwards of five million animal species.
Over
25,000 species of plants and more butterflies can be found here than
anywhere else on the planet.
There are also 170 Indian cultural groups living in the Amazon, remnants of
the 7 million who flourished there once, but who have been reduced to no
more than 200,000 today.
The
Amazon is an area of superlatives. Home to our planet's greatest diversity
of plant and animal species:
The
Amazon Basin is the planet's largest body of fresh water!
Besides the Amazon River, there are 1100 tributaries, 17 of which are more
than 1000 miles long !
Now
recognized as the world’s greatest reserve of life form !
Holds the greatest biological accumulation of carbon on Earth !
Marajó Island, located near the river mouth, is the size of Switzerland !
Giant Victoria lilies, pink dolphins, poison arrow frogs, and much more is
all to be found here !
Once
an oceanic gulf, some 250 million years ago opening westward to the Pacific
Ocean, the Amazon River today flows 1/5 of the world’s fresh water into the
Atlantic Ocean.
The
Amazon is one of the largest remaining contiguous tracts of nature on earth.
Here nature’s finest show unfolds before our eyes!
Rainforest
Rainforests
are living emeralds which adorn our world with rare beauty and natural
wonders. They are a product of planetary processes and are - in turn -
contributors to the water and carbon cycles on which all life depends.
Tropical rainforests are the result of the unique climatic conditions found
between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, in the regions north and south
of Earth’s equator. Here, constant heat and humidity allow trees and plants
to grow year round, without seasonal time-outs. Vast columns of hot air rise
and condense out as rain, resulting in annual rainfall of 80 to 400 inches:
annual temperatures average over 80 degrees Fahrenheit. And so the tropics
are garlanded with trees,plants, animals and insects, uniquely adapted to
these conditions.
The earliest written description of rainforests in Western literature seems
to be that of Christopher Columbus, but the term “Regenwald” (rain forest)
was first used by a German naturalist, A. F. W. Schimper, many centuries
later, in 1898. Exploring rainforests had a profound impact on the thinking
of some of the greatest of 19th century biologists and naturalists—Alexander
von Humboldt, Alfred Russell Wallace and Charles Darwin. Darwin’s and
Wallace’s experiences in rainforests shaped their theories of evolution
through natural selection, which in turn inspired 20th century biology,
leading to recent advances in molecular biology and genetic engineering.
The last few decades of this century have also given us a new understanding
of, and appreciation for, rainforests: new techniques have allowed
researchers to explore the canopy for the first time and to census its
otherwise unseen inhabitants.
Rainforests are living emeralds which adorn our world with rare beauty and
natural wonders. They are a product of planetary processes and are - in turn
- contributors to the water and carbon cycles on which all life depends.
Tropical rainforests are the result of the unique climatic conditions found
between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, in the regions north and south
of Earth’s equator. Here, constant heat and humidity allow trees and plants
to grow year round, without seasonal time-outs. Vast columns of hot air rise
and condense out as rain, resulting in annual rainfall of 80 to 400 inches:
annual temperatures average over 80 degrees Fahrenheit. And so the tropics
are garlanded with trees,plants, animals and insects, uniquely adapted to
these conditions.
The
earliest written description of rainforests in Western literature seems to
be that of Christopher Columbus, but the term “Regenwald” (rain forest) was
first used by a German naturalist, A. F. W. Schimper, many centuries later,
in 1898. Exploring rainforests had a profound impact on the thinking of some
of the greatest of 19th century biologists and naturalists—Alexander von
Humboldt, Alfred Russell Wallace and Charles Darwin. Darwin’s and Wallace’s
experiences in rainforests shaped their theories of evolution through
natural selection, which in turn inspired 20th century biology, leading to
recent advances in molecular biology and genetic engineering.
The
last few decades of this century have also given us a new understanding of,
and appreciation for, rainforests: new techniques have allowed researchers
to explore the canopy for the first time and to census its otherwise unseen
inhabitants.
Buttress
Soils of the typical lowland rainforest are often shallow. In much of
Amazonia, there’s only a few inches of soil above reddish clay. Many roots
stretch out over the surface, rather than burrowing underground. Here many
trees use wooden buttresses (like the buttresses which support the giant
Gothic cathedrals of Europe), organic flanges which grow out from the base
of the tree on all sides to balance it. Some biologists say this shape also
allows the tree to gather nutrients from a greater surface area of soil
since lots of small rootlets extend down from the bottom of the buttresses.
Still Roots
In
other places, so-called “prop” or “stilt” roots emerge like slanting rods
from the main trunk 1 to 2 meters above the ground to help support the
trunk. (The LFRF Guide provides a way to explore these engineering feats of
Nature in Activity 1.2.). This particular kind of root is often found in
flooded or mangrove forests, where it also protects the tree against waves
and currents.
Drip tips
Rainforest leaves also have distinctive features. Many have “drip tips”—a
pointed shape which helps drain excess water from the leaf and reduces
vulnerability to mold and predation. Researchers often speak of how
different plants try to prevent ”herbivory”—the eating away of vegetation by
insects or other parasites—and minimizing moisture with drip tips is one
such strategy. When it fails, leaves become a lacy net of holes and fibres.
Mutualistic relationships
With
the constant fight for light and water, nutrients and energy, many
rainforest species come to rely on each other, and develop intimate and
exclusive relationships. Some plants, for example, provide “ant houses,”
home to a particular species of ant whose soldiers defend the leaves against
other would-be insect predators. Other plants provide leaves with tiny
feeding troughrs, pools of sugar-solution, enticing ant patrols with sweet
rewards. (You can find more information on these “ant-defended plants” in
the LFRF Teacher Resource video which is part of the Multimedia Kit.)In
addition, however, to listing and marvelling at such distinctive aspects of
rainforests, we should also try to comprehend the myriad relationships and
interactions to be found in them. As Alexander von Humboldt wrote, “...more
beautiful still than all the wonders individually is the impression conveyed
by the whole... in its entirety.”(For more on rainforest relationships,
please explore “ECO system” online, and if you’re a teacher or youth leader,
consider implementing the Tropical Rainforest Food Web Game [Activity 2.3]
which helps bring these intricate interactions to life.)".
Rainforests are defined—as you would expect—by rainfall, and in fact they
are literally created by it. (“Rain forest”—two words—is the older usage:
both are accepted, but most modern authors and researchers combine the two,
as does PTK, as in “Rainforest.”) They can be found where rain exceeds 80
inches per year, and can appear in temperate as well as tropical zones, so
long as the rainfall is sufficiently plentiful.
Tropical rainforests often have from 160 to 400 inches of rain a year. But
they aren’t the wettest or even the hottest places on Earth. (The wettest is
Mount Waialeale, in Hawaii, USA, and the hottest is Libya in North Africa.)
But just as important as the amount of rain in shaping the unique character
of rainforests is the constant humidity and high average temperature. In the
Amazon basin you can expect at least 130 days of rain a year and, in many
places, up to 250 days. The relative humidity never falls below 80%, and
temperatures vary little between daytime averages of 31 degrees Centigrade
(88 Fahrenheit) and night-time lows of 22 degrees C (72 F).
Sometimes this constancy of temperature and humidity leads people to argue
that rainforests have no seasons, but in the tropics this is only partially
correct. There may not be a cold winter and a hot summer, but there are DRY
seasons and WET seasons. Plants and trees flower at these different times of
year, profoundly influencing the lives of the creatures who inhabit them.
And our contemporary understanding of rainforests (see ECO system) quickly
dispels the misconception that this is a changeless Eden, where Nature’s
endless bounty means things are always the same. In fact there’s a constant
fight for light, water and nutrients, one of the reasons natural selection
has had such a powerful effect in creating the great numbers of species
which make tropical rainforests the richest places for biodiversity on
Earth.
Emergent trees
Rainforests have a distinctive structure. Above a sea of green, which is
called the "upper canopy", tower just a few “emergent trees” per acre,
sometimes as tall as 40 meters (over 130 feet.) In all the forest they alone
enjoy unfettered access to the sun and sky. The ways in which they disperse
their seeds—by wind—and the creatures who inhabit them—birds like the harpy
eagle, and the toucan—are very different from those found below.
Canopy
Most
photosynthesis occurs in the canopy—that vast carpet of green which
Alexander von Humboldt called a “forest above a forest”—which absorbs as
much as 98% of the sunlight falling on the forest, darkening the lower
regions. Here, 20-30 meters up (65-100 feet), live butterflies, and mammals
like the three-toed sloth, moving slowly but efficiently in search of
vegetation, descending only once a week to the ground to defecate. (See
Ecosystem.) Temperatures here reach 32 degrees C (96 F) but the humidity is
only 60% (compared to 98% down below.) Since this is where photosynthesis
occurs, this is also where productivity is greatest: each year a tropical
rainforest produces about 25-30 tonnes of new growth per acre (10-12 tons),
twice as much as a temperate oak forest.
Under story
In
virgin rainforest, the under story is not the “jungle” of tangled vines seen
in old movies, or observed from boats on one of the thousands of rivers and
tributaries also nourished by the heavy rains. Undisturbed rainforest is
surprisingly clear of vegetation close to the ground in part because so
little light filters down through the canopy, sometimes only 1 to 2 per cent
of the sun’s original intensity. But even here life’s struggles are intense,
and insects, fungi and roots all fight for access to energy the raw
materials of existence. Here temperatures are cooler, averaging about 28
degrees C (82 F) but humidity is higher, about 98%.
In
addition to Brazil, Peru, Columbia and Venezuela have large regions of
rainforest. Almost one third of Columbia is forested, as is much of southern
Venezuela. The forested area of Guyana is largely untouched, since the
population lives mainly on the coast, and in Suriname much of the nation is
park or preserve.
The
agouti, a relatively large, rabbit-sized rodent with a short tail and long
legs, is mainly active during the day, but at times is also active at dusk
and at night. It lives on the forest floor and sleeps in burrows. Many
rodents destroy all the seeds that they gather and eat, but agoutis exhibit
the behaviour of “scatter-hoarding”; they carry some seeds long distances
and bury them without damage, just as squirrels in North America bury
acorns. Fruits too heavy or awkward to be carried by bats or monkeys are
often dispersed by animals like agoutis.
For
example, people have wondered how the seeds of the Brazil nut tree are freed
from the very hard woody fruit enclosing them. It is now known that Brazil
nut fruits, after falling to the ground, are chiselled open by agoutis,
which eat some of the seeds but scatter-hoard the rest. Agoutis generally
fail to find all of the Brazil nut seeds they bury, and these are then free
to germinate and grow into seedlings. Agoutis are eaten by predators of the
forest floor like the jaguar, large snakes, and bush dogs. They can also be
taken by birds of prey like the Harpy eagle.
Many
different kinds of small frogs live in and around the pools provided by the
central cup of tank bromeliads. These frogs mainly eat ants and other small
insects that come to the bromeliad. They reproduce in the bromeliad, and
their tadpoles develop in the water-filled pools, feeding off algae,
mosquito larvae, or other small organisms in the water. Two kinds of
bromeliad frogs are marsupial frogs and the colourful poison arrow frogs.
Some marsupial frogs carry their eggs and developing tadpoles under a skin
flap on their back. When the female enters the water in the bromeliad pool,
the tadpoles are released into the water and continue their development
there.
Poison arrow frogs. Brightly-coloured and very poisonous poison arrow frogs
(the source of the toxin Amazon Indians use to tip their poisoned blow
darts) lay their eggs under wet leaves on the forest floor. The parents
guard the eggs until they hatch, then carry the tadpoles on their backs, one
at a time, high up into the canopy to a bromeliad pool. Only one tadpole is
placed in each bromeliad pool, a behaviour that scatters the tadpoles and
reduces competition for limited food in the small pool. Predatory damselfly
larvae also developing in the bromeliad pools are major predators of
bromeliad frog tadpoles. The adult frogs, with their poison-laced skin, are
protected from most predators. About 200 different poisonous chemicals have
been found so far in the skin of these small frogs.
Known as the "organ-grinder's" monkey, these monkeys prefer to live in the
upper levels of the forest canopy. They are intelligent and agile, with a
"wise-old man" facial expression created by a wrinkled forehead and a head
of hair like a monk's hood. They are omnivores and eat a varied diet,
consuming fruits, seeds, flowers and their nectar. Capuchins travel in noisy
troops. A troop can range from 5 to over 30 monkeys who forage at various
levels of the forest. They hunt in the treetops and swoop down to the shrub,
eating nearly all animals they can catch: insects, snails, caterpillars,
spiders and other small animals. They also capture larger prey such as small
rodents, opossums, baby birds, lizards, and frogs. When capuchin monkeys lap
up the nectar from flowers, the fur surrounding their hairy faces gets
covered in yellow pollen. By carrying the pollen through the forest, they
may assist in the pollination of some trees to a greater extent than
scientists have previously realized.
Howlers can be found all over the U. C. neotropics. There are six species,
two of which are considered endangered. Howlers are large monkeys with
prehensile tails and bearded faces. Four colures ranges from bright reddish
to brown to black. The names come from their most distinctive feature—a
ferocious, loud, and according people who have been awakened from sleep by
howlers, almost unearthly voice that echoes throughout the rainforest at
sunrise and sunset. Male howlers have specialized throat structures that,
like a megaphone, amplify their calls so they resonate for nearly a mile
through the rainforest. Howlers mark their territory: through their calls,
they are communicating the location of their “turf” to other troops, thus
avoiding a face-to-face or troop-to-troop confrontation. Howlers have a
social structure: males are dominant over females; troops generally consist
of 3 adult males, 7-8 adult females and a varying number of juveniles. Their
prehensile tails and strong claws are designed for gripping and leaping from
branch to branch, so these leaf-eating, tree-dwelling “swingers” rarely have
to come down to earth.
Although it is the largest cat in the Americas and the largest predator in
the Amazon, the jaguar is increasingly uncommon and rarely seen. It can be
found in many habitats, but prefers riverbanks, where it usually sleeps by
day and hunts by dusk/night. The jaguar generally hunts forest floor
animals, but can both climb and swim with ease. Its favourite hunting
strategy is to lie in wait in branches and pounce on its victim. Jaguars are
“searchers,” preying on whatever creatures they come upon, unlike “pursuers”
such as the cheetah, who chase down only a few select animals. The jaguar’s
major prey includes tapirs, deer, monkeys, and capybara, but it will eat
almost any vertebrate. Occasionally, it is able to catch sloth’s when they
make one of their infrequent descents to the forest floor. The heavy jaws
and large facial muscles of the jaguar give it one of the most powerful
bites of any cat. The most water-loving of the cats, they can cross wide
rivers and capture prey in the water. It can eat "tough" prey like caiman
and turtles, crunching through the shell. Jaguars are "keystone" predators
that help keep populations of prolific rodents like agoutis in balance.
“Keystone” species are critically important to others in the community.
Their removal causes dramatic changes for other species, altering the
balance in the community. Jaguars have distinctive spots. In the rainforest,
this serves as an advantage. The spotted pattern moving through the
sun-flecked light and alternating shadow becomes less of an obvious physical
outline, thereby disguising the jaguar as it stealthily moves across the
forest floor. Jaguars are normally solitary. Still widely distributed in
South America, but persecuted as predators by cattle ranchers, they have
become extinct or endangered in many local areas.
Spider monkeys are the most acrobatic of the South American monkeys. They
have a powerful, well-developed prehensile tail that can be used as a “hook”
for hanging from branches, or as a “hand” for gathering and holding their
favourite foods. They prefer to eat fruits, along with nuts, shoots, buds,
new leaves and flowers. When eating fruits, a family of spider monkeys drops
many to the ground, where they are eaten by agoutis, which destroy many of
the seeds.
The
monkeys, however, swallow the seeds along with the fruit, then carry them
away and deposit them in their dung elsewhere in the forest. Thus, the
monkeys are another species that aids the re-growth of the forest. Spider
monkeys spend most of their time in the forest canopy. Although they are
remote from ground water supplies, they have been observed drinking from the
"water cups" of tank bromeliads.
Their high habitat protects them from most forest predators. They may be
eaten by cats and large snakes like boa constrictors; young monkeys are also
preyed upon by Harpy eagles. The major threat to their survival is
deforestation, which has led to the fragmentation and isolation of
populations.
This
is a cat-sized anteater with short, coarse fur and a prehensile tail. It
spends nearly all its time in trees. South American tamanduas usually have a
uniformly honey coloured coat; those from Central America have bold,
two-toned black and tan coats. Using its strong tail to grip the branch, the
tamandua breaks into the hard-walled outer protection of ant or termite
nests with its powerful fore-claws, and then catches ants and termites with
its long sticky tongue, licking up thousands during a meal. Although
termites and ants form the bulk of its diet, it will eat other insects (e.g.
bees, beetles etc.) as well.
It
does not eat all kinds of ants or termites! Army ants are too aggressive,
and can sting. Leaf-cutter ants are spiny, and difficult to swallow in its
long, toothless mouth. Such kinds of ants are usually avoided. Azteca ants
are a favourite prey, but when thousands of ants start pouring from the nest
and onto the anteater, biting with their tiny jaws, the anteater will
usually retreat. Thus, the ant nest is rarely completely destroyed .
Toucans have large brightly-coloured beaks that are adapted for
fruit-eating. Each species’ beak is distinctively coloured, which seems to
serve as a "flag" to allow toucans to find others of their species in the
dense vegetation.
Toucans nest in holes high in trees. They are weak fliers and usually
short-glide or hop among tree branches in the canopy layer, searching for
fruits and berries. The seeds of some forest plants can only be successfully
germinated after passing through the digestive tract of animals like the
toucan. Other seeds can only be successfully scattered throughout the forest
with the help of birds and mammals like toucans, macaws, monkeys, and the
capybara.
Though mainly specialized fruit-eaters, toucans sometimes search in
bromeliads and tree holes for frogs and lizards, snap at flying insects or
grab baby birds out of tree holes and nests.
This
beautiful snake lives almost entirely in the trees. It is well-camouflaged,
with green skin striped with white or yellow. This protective coloration
allows the snake to get near its prey without being seen, and also helps to
conceal it from predators like the Harpy eagle.
The
boa’s common hunting strategy is to remain quiet and inconspicuous in the
trees as it waits for potential victims to come close; it then strikes out
and grabs or drops on the prey animal. Boas are non-poisonous constrictors
that kill the prey by squeezing and suffocating. The boa’s diet usually
consists of small birds, but it also kills small rodents, such as mice or
young agoutis, lizards, other snakes, etc.
The
three-toed sloth is almost totally arboreal (“tree-dwelling”), with a body
"built to hang." It lives in the shrub or lower tree layer, but sometimes
moves to the canopy. Its long, coarse, grayish-brown fur often appears
greenish, not due to pigment but to algae growing on it. The sloth’s
greenish color and its sluggish habits provide an effective camouflage:
hanging quietly, the sloth resembles a bundle of leaves. Large curved claws
help the sloth to keep a strong grip on tree branches. Considered by some to
be a highly selective feeder, it was once thought to eat only leaves of the
cecropia tree. Although cecropia leaves do make up the bulk of the sloth’s
diet, more recent studies have shown that it also eats the leaves of many
other tree species. The three-toed sloth spends nearly its entire life
sleeping, feeding and moving around in trees, only descending to the base of
the trunk every week or two to deposit dung pellets. It expends a lot of
energy in this effort, descending from the tree, poking a hole with its
stubby tail and then carefully burying its dung pellets. This “toilet”
schedule helps this tree-dweller to conserve water, which, ironically, is
not easy to get up in the trees.
The
sloth sleeps soundly upside down for about 18 hours each day. It is
protected by its high habitat and hanging posture from most predators.
However, it is vulnerable to attacks by the Harpy eagle, especially when it
basks in the sun at the end of branches. Though rarely seen, the sloth is
probably one of the most common large animals in the New World tropics;
however, populations are declining due to destruction of forest habitat.
Many
different kinds of antbirds exist. They are usually full-coloured birds that
feed on insects such as ants and termites. The most famous antbirds are
those that are associated with army ants. When the ants set out on a "raid",
the birds follow them as they move. The birds stay near the front lines of
the advancing ant army, and capture insects, spiders, scorpions, etc. that
are trying to escape from the ants. Antbirds don’t usually eat the army ants
themselves, but they do seize and steal animals already caught by the ants,
in addition to those trying to escape or outrun them.
Antbirds also sometimes move through the forest in a large mixed-species
flock that may contain as many as ten different species of antbirds and many
other kinds of forest birds (e.g. tanagers, antshrikes, and antwrens) in a
kind of cooperative hunting party. These large groups of birds flying
through the forest at several different levels like a "bird wave" scare up
many different insects. Antbirds are a specialized species, and are one of
the first to disappear when the forest is damaged or disturbed.
Many
different kinds of fruit bats live in the Amazon. Some prefer to live only
in the upper canopy. As their name implies, fruit bats feed on flowers and
fruits. They have large eyes and sensitive noses and use both sight and
smell to locate fruit. Fruit bats have small, weak teeth and long, bristly
tongues. As the bat probes the flower for nectar, it collects pollen on its
furry head and neck. It then carries the pollen to other flowers.
Many
tropical trees rely on bats for successful pollination of their flowers.
Whereas trees pollinated by birds often produce red flowers to attract the
birds, those that rely on bat-pollinators produce large amounts of nectar
and pollen and often tend to have flowers that are drab, bloom at night, or
have a fetid smell. Fruit bats eat the fruit of cecropia and other trees and
are essential seed dispersers. The seeds pass through their digestive tracts
and are thus widely scattered throughout the forest.
Scientists have observed that most bats spend only a few seconds or so at
each nectar and pollen-rich clump of flowers. This may be because tree
snakes (like the emerald tree boa) or other nocturnal predators often wait
in hiding near blooming flower clusters.
The
largest and most ferocious of the world's eagles, the Harpy is a bird that
is rare and infrequently seen. It is the top predator in the jungle canopy,
and hunts by day. It is a heavy bird in flight, with a powerful bill and
talons. Its wings are rounded, strong and relatively short, and its tail is
long: a body shape that makes it agile and highly maneuverable in flight,
and enables it to chase monkeys through the canopy branches at high speeds.
Its mottled gray plumage provides good camouflage. Hunting mainly in the
canopy, it can swoop down through the tree crowns and with outstretched
giant talons capture fleeing monkeys, or snatch sleeping slothrs.
Harpy eagles nest in the tallest emergent trees, often silk cotton trees;
the nest is a large platform of twigs that is used from year to year.
Normally, two eggs are laid, but only one chick is successfully reared to
adulthood, in about 6 monthrs. One pair of harpy eagles that were carefully
studied by scientists was found to prey mainly on two animals: slothrs and
capuchin monkeys. Other animals caught and eaten included opossums, agouti,
small deer, tree porcupines, kinkajous, howler monkeys, snakes, ant-eaters
like the tamandua, and large parrots.
Important:
Before you travel please check your Tour Voucher and Arrival
Information for the latest joining instructions. This will be sent to
you upon receipt of final payment.
All
itineraries are subject to change without prior notice.
Prices
for - Brazil Adventures and
Wildlife
|