| See Today | UpComing this month |
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| Yucatán Biospheres |
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From Friday, December 11 2009 To Thursday, December 17 2009 |
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This
tour visits two enormous reserves selected by UNESCO as World Heritage
Sites to preserve the biological diversity of the Mexican Petén region
and its Caribbean coast. Calakmul, at 1.8 million acres, protects the
Mexican portion of the so-called “Mayan Forest.” Larger than the state
of Delaware, Calakmul shares its rain forest with vast regions of
Guatemala (only 30 miles south) and Belize (60 miles east), and
altogether these five million acres are the largest contiguous block of
tropical forest north of the Amazon River Basin. Wildlife thrives.
There are an estimated 600 Jaguars roaming the biosphere, as well as 30
different birds of prey. Among these are the magnificent Crested Eagle,
Ornate Hawk-Eagle, and White Hawk. With large populations of Ocellated
Turkey, Great Currasow, and Crested Guan, this is also the best area in
Mexico for big gallinaceous birds, as well as one of the few places
where both Howler and Spider Monkeys co-exist in the same locale. The
name Calakmul comes from the language of the indigenous Maya, and it
describes an archaeological site that was first discovered in 1931.
Meaning “two adjacent temples,” the ancient buildings and spacious
courts still appear much as they did when they were abandoned 1000
years ago. Dominating the site at 180 feet, Structure I is the second
tallest Maya pyramid, and Structure II has the greatest volume of
material of any temple known from the Maya realm. With a population
estimated at 50,000 at its peak from 500-800 A.D., Calakmul was
probably always in competition with its neighbor Tikal, only 50 miles
southeast. Today the birds and mammals move freely across the border
that divides these two formerly rival religio-political city states.
Variously translated “Gift of the Sky” or “Where the Sky is Born,” Sian
Ka’an protects an 80-mile-long stretch of the Caribbean coast and
adjacent mainland that encompasses 1.3 million acres. Most of the bird
and wildlife at Calakmul also occurs at Sian Ka’an, as well as in the
deciduous woodlands that border the preserve. Among the many species
that we’ll watch for in this Biosphere are Singing Quail and Yucatán
Bobwhite, Keel-billed Toucan and Collared Araçari, Lineated and
Pale-billed Woodpeckers, Gray-collared and Rose-throated Becards, and
Yellow-winged and Rose-throated Tanagers. Yucatán and Peten endemics
include Yucatán Parrot, Yucatán Woodpecker, Yucatán Flycatcher, Yucatán
Jay, Gray-throated Chat, and Orange Oriole.Leaders: David MacKay & David Salas Cost of Yucatán Biospheres includes all accommodations, all meals, all transportation, and all entrance fees beginning in Mérida and ending in Cancún, Mexico—$2795. $100 will be discounted if Yucatán Biospheres is combined with Yucatán, Birds & Ruins—$6190. Photo: Bicolored Hawk
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Events v1.2 Copyright © 2003-2004 by Eric Lamette, Dave McDonell