Exotic
Costa Rica
Wildlife abounds there, from
toucans to astounding lizards
By Donna de la Cruz
Associated Press
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Red-eyed
tree frogs are fun to spot in Costa Rica's
Lapaz Waterfall Gardens. |
SAN
JOSE, COSTA RICA -
During a recent trip to Costa Rica, I found
myself constantly looking up to see the host of exotic
animals that reside in this beautiful country.
I spotted toucans -- even
the famous ``Froot Loops'' species -- monkeys, gorgeous
butterflies, poisonous frogs as small as an inch long and
more lizards and colorful birds than I could count.
When my husband and I left
our New York City home, our exposure to wildlife had been
limited largely to pigeons and pampered dogs and cats. Our
animal repertoire was about to be broadened. Wildlife was
plentiful in the three different regions we visited. Two
locations were so remote they were accessible only by boat
or plane.
Visiting Costa Rica, which
is about the size of West Virginia, is like visiting
several countries at once because of its geological
contrasts. The rain forests, pristine beaches, lush green
valleys and volcanic areas here are home to five percent
of all the known species on Earth, and about 25 percent of
those species are protected in wildlife reserves or
national parks.
You will find about 200
species of mammals, about 850 species of birds, 160
species of amphibians and more than 200 species of
reptiles in Costa Rica. Wildlife is taken seriously by
guides, most of whom are biologists or biology students.
We first visited Tortuguero
on the Caribbean coast near the Nicaraguan border.
Tortuguero is a maze of gorgeous canals surrounded by rain
forest. Our journey from the country's capital of San Jose
began after we left our van in the small village of Matina
and boarded a boat for the two-hour cruise some tour books
liken to being on the movie-famous African Queen,
minus Humphrey Bogart and Katharine Hepburn.
We stayed at Mawamba Lodge,
within the Tortuguero National Park. Part of our visit
included very early morning boat tours of the canals where
our eagle-eyed guide and driver were able to spot wildlife
that tourists were able to see only with binoculars.
All the animals, except for
some brightly colored birds, blended so well into the
landscape that it took a few minutes for us to notice
them. For example, we studied a tree for what seemed like
eternity, hoping to spot the more than footlong lizard our
guide saw. Then we gasped when it leaped from the branch
and began tiptoeing across the water. The animal is
commonly called the ``Jesus Christ lizard'' because it can
walk on water.
Monkeys
abound
Above us in the trees in
various parts of the park, we were able to spot three of
the four species of monkeys that live in Costa Rica --
howler, spider and squirrel. Howler monkeys are so called
for the noise they make to ward off predators. They sound
like ferocious dogs baying at the moon.
Howlers, the easiest to
spot, have certain rules they follow, according to our
guide. All the monkeys must travel through the trees along
the same route as their leader. If a monkey falls to the
ground, he cannot return to his ``troop'' and is
essentially exiled for the rest of his life from other
howlers.
In contrast to howlers,
white-faced Capuchin monkeys are the charmers. But we
learned Capuchins have a sinister side, sometimes
distracting tourists by ``posing'' for pictures while
other monkeys grab backpacks and other items and quickly
dash up trees to hang their souvenirs.
We never did see a Capuchin
monkey, but when we visited Corcovado, our next stop, we
spoke to a woman who was attacked by one as she walked
along the same trail we had taken the day before, and, a
teen-age boy told us a Capuchin monkey taunted him
relentlessly whenever he returned to his hotel room.
In Tortuguero, birds of all
colors -- bright blue, yellow, snow white -- flew past our
boat. Others perched precariously close to caimans --
small crocodile-type reptiles -- that slept mere feet from
my side of the boat, hiding in plain sight next to
similarly colored logs and leaves submerged in the water.
We were introduced to the
poisonous tree frog and were surprised to see that the
amphibian was barely an inch long. The red-eyed tree frog
was not much bigger, and became one of our favorite
animals. Its bulging cartoonish eyes make the creature so
approachable that my husband did not mind when he
accidentally touched one sitting on a small bridge railing
leading to our lodge's restaurant.
On a hike through the rain
forest, we spotted toucans perched in a tree, and colorful
butterflies, including the deep-violet blue morphos,
floating silently past us.
We visited Tortuguero
during its off season, and missed seeing marine turtles
during their nesting season. Marine turtles of five
species come to both the Caribbean and Pacific coasts of
Costa Rica to lay their eggs at various times of the year.
Guided tours are available to witness the event.
Oceanside
cats, rodents
Our next stop was Corcovado
on the southern Pacific coast, near the border of Panama.
A short flight via a small plane left us in a dusty
landing strip where a Jeep took us on a bumpy journey
along a road that would be considered impassable in the
United States. We were dropped off along the beach where
we waded into the Pacific Ocean to board a small boat --
the only means of transportation -- that took us to
Marenco Lodge just north of Corcovado National Park, a
protected rain forest.
At our lodge, we heard the
howler monkeys constantly but saw only a few during a hike
because of the hot and humid weather. Birds were the
animals of the day -- toucans and trogons were the most
plentiful.
I was not pleased to make
the acquaintance of an agouti, a cat-sized rodent that
resembles a squirrel with no tail. The agouti quickly
bounded past us, but another one turned up outside our
bungalow the next day. I was glad our bungalow was on
stilts, but another couple asked to switch bungalows when
an agouti decided to set up house in their bathroom.
During one hike, I asked
our guide if he ever saw any of the six species of wild
cats that live in Costa Rica -- including jaguars,
ocelots, pumas and cheetahs. He said in the 15 years he
had been giving tours, he had never seen any of the cats.
I was mostly relieved at his answer.
During a snorkeling
expedition off of Cano Island, about an hour's boat ride
from the mainland, sea turtles, sting rays, jellyfish and
small sharks were visible. On the ride back, a group of
dolphins charmed us by jumping in and out of the ocean
alongside our boat.
Costa
Rica volcano
A short flight back to San
Jose, and then a two-hour van ride through lush green
valleys shrouded in fog brought us to our final
destination: Arenal Volcano, in the north-central part of
the country. Arenal was thought to be an extinct volcano
until it erupted on July 29, 1968, wiping out the nearby
town of Tabacon.
The volcano has been
smoldering ever since and I expected to see no exotic
animals as a result. I was wrong. I got my closest look at
howler monkeys -- including a mother cuddling her baby --
as I stood hundreds of feet in the air on a platform that
seemed the size of a postage stamp, about to swing through
the trees on a harness as part of the popular canopy tour.
Outside the restaurant at
the Volcano Lodge, hummingbirds were a pleasant sight
every morning. Costa Rica boasts 51 species of
hummingbirds. The country is also home to numerous species
of bats, and I believe we encountered all of them during a
mud-filled, water-splashed hike through the nearby Venado
Caverns, another popular tourist attraction. Every time I
looked up, the flashlight attached to my helmet
illuminated thousands of the creatures, some sleeping,
some flying.
As we left Arenal on our
way back to the airport to begin our journey home, there
was one more animal left to spot. Hanging on a telephone
wire alongside a busy road was a three-toed sloth, sound
asleep. Our van driver pulled over so we could get a good
look but not even the flash of cameras would budge the
sleeping sloth.
He may still be hanging
there now.
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