THINGS TO DO IN COCA

Here is a list of the different options of Things to do in Coca.

Puerto Francisco de Orellana is surrounded by an impressive access to a variety of iconic Amazonian Wildlife. Many of the most fascinating jungle tours starts in Coca, a cultural melting pot along the Río Napo.

Sumaco Ñahui wants everyone gets involved! We want to start planting trees by May 2018. In order to get the project running, we have a fundraising program: a Conservation Timesharing program. Join Us!
Sumaco Ñahui is a Cloud Forest Restoration Dream to restore a deforested area next to Sumaco National Park & Antisana Ecological Reserve.
Puerto Francisco de Orellana. Napo River. Orellana -Ecuador.
Puerto Francisco de Orellana. Napo River. Orellana -Ecuador.

Coca is the last reach of real civilization before the Río Napo transports you deep into the rainforest to the Parque Nacional Yasuní and beyond into the Amazon basin, next big town is iquitos in Peru.
In the 1990s the town was transformed by the oil industry from a tiny river settlement with dirt roads into a hot, teeming mass of concrete.
The capital of the Orellana province since 1999 (and officially known as Puerto Francisco de Orellana),
Coca is trying to start itself up. With a pretty malecón is extending block by block along the riverfront and bars where it’s actually pleasant to enjoy a drink with a stunning new suspension bridge now spans the Napo, taking traffic bound down Via Auca towards the Yasuní Biosphere Reserve.

Check below some of the activities you can do while you are staying in Coca.

Birdwatching

Yellow-tufted Woodpecker can be found at any direction from Coca.
Yellow-tufted Woodpecker can be found at any direction from Coca.
Birdwatching in the Taracoa Lake.
Birdwatching in the Taracoa Lake.

Birding in Coca can be effective in terms of seen variety of species from the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador. From colorful Tanagers, funny Toucans, elegant Herons, skulking Antbirds, tiny Antwrens, Macaws and many others can be found during a day trip from Coca. Ask for Birding Trips.

Boats Trips

Boat trips along the Napo, ,Coca and Payamino Rivers to visit different destinations.
Boat trips along the Napo, Coca and Payamino Rivers to visit different destinations.

Coca is surrounded by 3 major rivers such as the Napo River, Coca River and Payamino Rivers, all three carry water from the Andes. The duration of the trips depends on the destination and interest you have.
All these rivers have indigenous communities living along their banks, pristine rainforests can be seen from the boats rides and human activities such as oil activities, agriculture, and tourism.

Museum

MACCO ha permanent exhibition worth visiting.
MACCO ha permanent exhibition worth visiting.

This is the first archeological museum in the region. MACCO Museo Arqueologico Centro Cultural de Orellana. The building was completed in 2015 and was inaugurated on April 30, 2015

MACCO is responsible for disseminating, promoting and rescuing the Amazonian cultural heritage and making it serve the citizens.
MACCO has a permanent archaeological exhibition about the Omaguas, integrated by a collection of more than 300 archaeological objects of the called Napo Stage (1,100-1,500 dc).

OPENING
Monday with reservation 48 hours in advance
Tuesday to Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Saturdays and Sundays from 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.

ENTRANCE FEE
National visitors: $ 2.50
Foreign visitors: $ 5.00

Yasuniland

Yasuniland is just 10 minutes away from Coca.
Yasuniland is close place to have a different perspective in town

Within 10 minutes boat ride from Coca along the Napo River, you are connected with the Rainforest.
Yasuníland is a theme park of adventure and nature, located in flooded forest in good shape at the moment it offers nice trails with giant Kapok trees and a Canopy Tower great for seeing wildlife and panoramic view of Coca and it surroundings.

Indigenous Communities

Pilchi community is located along the Napo River.
Pilchi community is located along the Napo River.

Within 10 minutes boat ride from Coca along the Napo, Coca,  and Payamino Rivers, you can visit indigenous communities and visit their start up tourism projects, you can learn about traditional ways of living in the Amazon Rainforest, from farming, cooking, danza, medicine and rituals.

We will add more activities as it arise around. Enjoy it!!

Amazon Rainforest Snakes

The Amazon Rainforest snakes has covered every niche the forest has created from the canopy to the ground, inside soil, inside water.

Sumaco Ñahui wants everyone gets involved! We want to start planting trees by May 2018. In order to get the project running, we have a fundraising program: a Conservation Timesharing program. Join Us!
Sumaco Ñahui is a Cloud Forest Restoration Dream to restore a deforested area next to Sumaco National Park & Antisana Ecological Reserve.

If you are walking through and spot a whip snakes resting on dead branches across the your path, is a signal of the forest is always in motion, sometimes canoeing along rivers or oxbow lakes and catch sight of a giant anaconda coiled, you cannot help but feel excited.

Calico is ground-dwelling snake, found in the flooded forest of the Yasuni Biosphere Reserve.
Calico is ground-dwelling snake, found in the flooded forest of the Yasuni Biosphere Reserve.

Anaconda

Anacondas are the world’s heaviest snake at around 250 kg. They can grow about 10 metres and have a semi-aquatic lifestyle made possible by the position of their eyes and nostrils on the tops of their head. They seem to choose areas with thick vegetation (grassy areas ), pile of dead logs where they hide. They hunt mainly at night eating most manageable animals like capybara, peccaries and deer. It likes forest streams.

Amazon Whip Snake

Chironius Whip Snake exploring for prey
Chironius Whip Snake exploring for prey

Snakes in this genus (Chironius) are among the most abundant in all South American forests. They include both ground-living and canopy-living diurnal species that mainly prey on frogs but also take lizards and birds.

Chironius Whip Snake lives in the canopy of the Amazon Rainforest. Yasuni Biosphere Reserve.
Chironius Whip Snake lives in the canopy of the Amazon Rainforest. Yasuni Biosphere Reserve.

Chironius  seeks prey in shrubs and trees. Smart for a snake, there are records of this species investigating bromeliads for their frog prey. Bromeliads collects water making a perfect home for frogs.

Bushmasters

Bushmaster molting: notice the whitish eye. Yasuni Biosphere Reserve. Photo by our guide Daniel Hicks
Bushmaster molting: notice the whitish eye. Yasuni Biosphere Reserve. Photo by our guide Daniel Hicks

Bushmasters are a formidable South American viper and are the largest venomous snake in the western hemisphere. Bushmaster is a very large snake, often exceeding 6,5 ft (2 m) in length. But they can grow to be over 12 ft (3.5 m) making them the longest venomous snake found in the Americas. Strangely for a neotropical pitviper, bushmasters lays eggs as opposed to giving birth to live young.

Fer-de lance

Fer-de-lance resting along the trunk we used for crossing. Yasuni Biosphere Reserve.
Fer-de-lance resting along the trunk we used for crossing. Yasuni Biosphere Reserve.

Fer-de lance are nocturnal and solitary. It can be found near rivers and streams, basking under the sun during the day and lying still while well camouflaged in leaf litter or under forest cover waiting to ambush prey (including rats and mice) that comes within range during the night. When cornered or threatened, this species can be very defensive and may exhibit an S-coiled defense display. Juveniles are often semi arboreal and even adults are sometimes encountered in bushes and low trees.

Emerald Tree Boa

Emerald Tree Boa lives in the canopy, although it can come to lower vegetation. Active at night. Yasuni Biosphere Reserve.
Emerald Tree Boa lives in the canopy, although it can come to lower vegetation. Active at night. Yasuni Biosphere Reserve.

Emerald tree boas live in the trees and blend into the leafy background. They often use their strength to hang from branches and snatch prey like mammals and birds. They have white markings over their body and are locally common in the Amazon Rainforest. Juveniles of this species are reddish orange then mature to a magnificent green.

Rainbow Boa

Rainbow Boa, it lives inside leafcutters ants colonies. Yasuni Biosphere Reserve.
Rainbow Boa, it lives inside leafcutters ants colonies. Yasuni Biosphere Reserve.

Rainbow Boas have iridescent scales -it shines at any direction or angle- giving this boa its common name. They feed on birds, lizards, and small mammals found in their range of northern and central South America. Can be found inside leafcutter ants colonies. Rainbow boas are very popular in the pet trade due to their beautiful colouration.

Boa Constrictor

Boa Constrictor resting in front of amazon explorers, Yasuni Biosphere Reserve.
Boa Constrictor resting in front of amazon explorers, Yasuni Biosphere Reserve.

Boa constrictors are a very distinct snake. Their colouration depends on habitat and there are many different subspecies. Although proficient swimmers, they prefer a more land-based lifestyle and seek safety in mammal constructed burrows. Constrictors are dwarfed by their anaconda cousins and grow to around 4 metres in length. Threatening their existence in the wild, boas are hunted for their skins to make various products.

Coral Snake

The South American coral snake is a beautifully patterned elapid (member of the Cobra (Elapidae) family. Coral snakes vary widely in their behavior, but most are very elusive, fossorial snakes which spend the vast majority of their time buried beneath the ground or in the leaf litter of a rainforest floor, coming to the surface only when it rains or during breeding season. Some species, like Micrurus surinamensis, are almost entirely aquatic and spend most of their lives in slow-moving bodies of water that have dense vegetation. Coral snakes feed on lizards and other snakes and are highly venomous.

Amazon Tree Boa

As their name suggests, Amazon Tree Boas live mainly in the trees and are classed as arboreal, but they can come down to the ground at night. Like the emerald tree boas, these snakes are also known to hang from trees to catch passing prey. They have varied colouration from an olive body to orange or yellow.

We will continue adding for species to this post, enjoy it!!

Fieldbook of the Birds of Ecuador

The Second edition of Fieldbook of the Birds of Ecuador by Miles Macmullan & Lelis Navarrete is recently printed!!

Fieldbook of the Birds of Ecuador

Check some of the Second Edition novelties are:
An appendix with the most striking mammals and sought after by visitors.
It includes 20 new bird species that have been registered in Ecuadorian territory to date (March / 2017).
The maps of the species present the different subspecies that exist in Ecuador.
400 new illustrations, many of which have not been published previously.
The taxonomy – although not the linear sequence – reflects the classification used by the IUO (IOC) in the list of birds of the world published in January 2017, version 7.1

  • 1680 species illustrated
    +3000 illustrations

Cost : $ 35

Free Shipping in Quito!!

Ecuador Global Big Day

Ecuador Global Big Day

The Ecuador Global Big Day is Huge Birding tradition among birders, birdwatchers and nature lovers.

Ecuador Global Big Day
Ecuador Global Big Day

The Global Big Day organized by the Cornell University and Ebird which seeks to find and watch the largest number of birds in a single day worldwide, and raise awareness about the conservation of natural habitats for birds, no matter where they are! Every bird counts!

Come and join us in one of the most important days for birding community!!

How does Ecuador Global Big Day work?

  • Upload your findings on Ebird
  • Organize field trips for the local school, community
  • Meet your friends and go
  • Go to your favorite birding spot

Here are some of the destinations available for this birding event, many locations of Ecuador’s Christmas Bird Count below:

Baby Rufous Potoo
Baby Rufous Potoo
  • Northwestern Choco – Mindo
  • Eastern Cloudforest – Cosanga
  • Amazon Lowlands – Coca Yasuní
  • Northern Ecuador – Chical
  • Southern Ecuador – Macas

Check below in the map other locations to go birding in May.

Join us on our Ecuador Big Day!

Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest

Introduction to the Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest.

When we visit the Rainforest for the first time, the familiar Plants will blow our minds away in many ways, the amount of different Plants living in here is overwhelming.

As we go deep in our journey, we start picking up the regular plants around us by looking at their natural characteristics such as leaf shapes, leaves arrangments, flowers, and fruits.

Many of the stereotype plants have adapted to live in different habitats such as terra firme, várzea, oxbow lakes, and landslides, and in all the forest strata are present.

The well-established plants of the Amazon Rainforest are popular for many species of animals, just think about Cecropia Tree, it brings several species of Monkeys, Bats, Birds, Ants, Butterflies, Sloths, and Kinkajou just to list a few!

We have prepared a small collection of the most common genera of plants you will find useful while you explore the Diversity of Life in the Cuyabeno Wildlife Reserve and Yasuni Biosphere Reserve.

Check the list of the Common  and Conspicuous Plants of the Rainforest below:

ACANTHACEAE

Aphelandra

Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest, Aphelandra ACANTHACEAE
Aphelandra flowers attract butterflies and hummingbirds. ACANTHACEAE

Aphelandra is a genus of flowering plants in the family Acanthaceae, native to tropical regions of the Americas.

They are evergreen shrubs growing to 1–2 m tall, with opposite, simple leaves 5–30 cm long, often with white veins.

The flowers are produced in dense spikes, with brightly colored bracts. Several species are grown as houseplants for their patterned leaves and brightly colored inflorescences.

ARACEAE

Philodendron

Philodendron is one of the largest genera in the Araceae family. It has an extremely diverse array of growth methods.

The habits of growth can be epiphytic, hemiepiphytic, or rarely terrestrially. The leaves are usually large and imposing, often lobed or deeply cut, and may be more or less pinnate.

They can also be oval, spear-shaped, or in many other possible shape variations.

The leaves are borne alternately on the stem; juvenile leaves and adult leaves can be drastically different from one another.

When philodendrons are ready to reproduce, they will produce an inflorescence that consists of a leaf-like hood called a spathe within which is enclosed a tube-like structure called a spadix. Birds eat their fruits

The name derives from the Greek words Philo- or “love, affection” and dendron, or “tree”.

Anthurium

Anthurium is a genus in the Araceae family often growing as epiphytes on other plants. Some are terrestrial. The leaves are often clustered and are variable in shape.

The inflorescence bears small flowers which are perfect, containing male and female structures. The flowers are contained in dense spirals on the spadix.

The spadix is often elongated into a spike shape, but it can be globe-shaped or club-shaped. Beneath the spadix is the spathe, a type of bract.

This is variable in shape, as well, but it is lance-shaped in many species. It may extend out flat or in a curve. Sometimes it covers the spadix like a hood.

The fruits develop from the flowers on the spadix. They are juicy berries varying in color, usually containing two seeds.

Anthurium can be poisonous due to calcium oxalate crystals. The sap is irritating to the skin and eyes. Birds such as Euphonias, Tanagers, and Manakins eat their fruits

BEGONIACEAE

Begonia

Wildflower of Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest.
Begonia grows in tree trunks

Begonia are terrestrial (sometimes epiphytic) herbs or shrubs, and occur in subtropical and tropical moist climates, in South and Central America, Africa, and southern Asia.

They are commonly upright-stemmed, rhizomatous, or tuberous. begonia are monoecious, with unisexual male and female flowers occurring separately on the same plant; the male contains numerous stamens, and the female has a large inferior ovary and two to four branched or twisted stigmas.

In most species, the fruit is a winged capsule containing numerous minute seeds, although baccate fruits are also known.

The leaves, which are often large and variously marked or variegated, are usually asymmetric (unequal-sided).

CAMPANULACEAE

Centropogon

Centropogon CAMPANULACEAE
Centropogon
CAMPANULACEAE
Cuyabeno Wildlife Reserve, Centropogon CAMPANULACEAE
Centropogon CAMPANULACEAE

Centropogon is a neotropical endemic genus of plant in the family Campanulaceae. The hummingbirds compete for the nectar of Centropogon

COMMELINACEAE

Dichorisandra

Dichorisandra is a neotropical genus characterized by its slightly zygomorphic flowers with large anthers usually releasing pollen by means of pores at the apex, as well as by its seeds that are embedded in a red or sometimes white aril, and tubers that often form at the tips of the roots.

Geogenanthus

Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest, Geogenanthus
Geogenanthus
Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest
Geogenanthus

Geogenanthus is a genus of plants with 3 species in the family Commelinaceae (the spiderwort and dayflower family).

The genus is distributed from Colombia to Amazonian Peru and Brazil.  Aerial shoots unbranched and determinate in length, up to 0.75 m, with a terminal rosette of leaves. The leaves at lower nodes mere tubular leaf sheaths.

All plant parts somewhat succulents and grow on the floor of primary rainforests and possess a shallow underground, short, branching rhizome.

Flowers consist of 3 green-brown sepals, 3 blue, pink or purple petals fringed with moniliform hairs, 4-6 stamens and 3 connate carpels. Its flowers have no fragrance detectable to the human nose.

COSTACEAE

Costus

Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest, Costus COSTACEAE
Costus
COSTACEAE
Costus COSTACEAE

Costus is a genus of perennial herbaceous plants in the family Costaceae, widespread through tropical and subtropical regions of Asia, Africa, and the Americas.

Costus is often characterized and distinguished from relatives such as Zingiber (true ginger) by its spiraling stems. The genus as a whole is thus often called spiral gingers,

FABACEAE

Abarema

Abarema is a neotropical genus of large trees in the legume family. They grow from Mexico to Bolivia.

Most of the species can be found in the Amazon Basin and the Guyana Highlands. They have deep-green fernlike foliage, with bipinnately compound leaves.

For lack of a better name, they are collectively called abaremas.

Calliandra

Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest. Calliandra.
Calliandra is a genus of flowering plants in the pea family.

Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest. Calliandra.

Calliandra is a genus of flowering plants in the pea family, Fabaceae, subfamily Mimosoideae. It contains about 140 species that are native to tropical and subtropical regions of the Americas.

The genus comprises herbaceous perennial plants, shrubs and rarely small trees growing 0.5–6 m tall, with bipinnate leaves.

The flowers are produced in cylindrical or globose inflorescences and have numerous long slender stamens which give rise to the common names powder-puff, powder puff plant, and fairy duster. These plants flower all year round.

Brownea

Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest, Brownea Flowers
Brownea brings all kinds of insects.

Brownea is a genus of about 30 species in the family Fabaceae. The genus is native to tropical regions of the Americas. The species are shrubs and trees growing to 20 m tall.

Zygia

Zygia is a genus of flowering plants belonging to the legume family (Fabaceae). They are trees or shrubs, unarmed; Hermaphrodite plants.

The bipinnate leaves, with a single pair of pinnacles; The petioles are very reduced, and glandular. Inflorescences fascicles of chaplets or cauliflorous spikes; Stamens more than 10, monadelphous.

The fruit is flat, straight, slightly curved or rolled, membranous or coriaceous, dehiscent or indehiscent; Spherical-flattened or quadrangular seeds, papyraceous test, without aril.

GESNERIACEAE

Nautilocalyx

Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest, Nautilocalyx Flower
Nautilocalyx is visited by bees.

Nautilocalyx is a genus of plants in the family Gesneriaceae.

Characterized by an obligate terrestrial habit; leaf blades that are cuneate to attenuate at the base; and funnelform corolla with an oblique limb and reflexed petal lobes with glandular trichomes clustered on the lateral and lower inner surfaces of the throat.

HELICONIACEAE

Heliconia

Heliconia is a Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest
Heliconia HELICONIACEAE

Heliconia is a genus of flowering plants in the Heliconiaceae. native to the tropical Americas, but a few are indigenous to certain islands of the western Pacific and Maluku. Many species of Heliconia are found in rainforests or tropical wet forests of these regions.

These herbaceous plants range from 0.5 to nearly 4.5 meters (1.5–15 feet) tall depending on the species. The simple leaves of these plants are 15–300 cm (6 in-10 ft). They are characteristically long, oblong, alternate, or growing opposite one another on non-woody petioles often longer than the leaf, often forming large clumps with age.

Wildflowers of Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest, Heliconia
Heliconia
HELICONIACEAE

Their flowers are produced on long, erect, or drooping panicles, and consist of brightly colored waxy bracts, with small true flowers peeping out from the bracts.

The growth habit of heliconias is similar to Canna, Strelitzia, and bananas, to which they are related.

The flowers can be hues of reds, oranges, yellows, and greens, and are subtended by brightly colored bracts. The plants typically flower during the wet season.

These bracts protect the flowers; floral shape often limits pollination to a subset of the hummingbirds.

LECYTHIDACEAE

Grias

Fruits of the Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest, Grias
Grias LECYTHIDACEAE

Grias is a genus of flowering plants in the family Lecythidaceae, It is native to northwestern South America, Central America, and Jamaica.
They are small to medium-sized trees, growing to 5-15 m tall. The leaves are evergreen, alternate, simple, broadly lanceolate, very large, up to 1 m long, with an entire or waved margin. The flowers are creamy white to yellow, with four petals; they are cauliflorous, produced in clusters on the trunk and stouter branches. The fruit is 6-15 cm long, with a fleshy coat; it is edible in several species.

Gustavia

Gustavia belongs to the part of the Lecythidaceae that has regular or actinomorphic flowers and is considered basal among the Neotropical genera.

It is widely distributed along rivers margins throughout Amazonia and in the Guianas and the distribution extends as far into north-eastern Brazil.

MARANTACEAE

Calathea

Calathea MARANTACEAE
Calathea MARANTACEAE

Calathea is a genus of plants belonging to the family Marantaceae. There are several dozen species in this genus.

Native to the tropical Americas;  the large and tough leaves are popular for holding small items and wrapping forest food. many of the species are popular as pot plants due to their decorative leaves and, in some species, colorful inflorescences.

Calathea foliage is of importance to some herbivores, such as the caterpillars of the Owl Butterfly (Caligo sp). Due to habitat destruction, several species are threatened with extinction.

Calathea flowers are pollinated mainly by bees and other bugs. Hummingbirds visit the Calathea flowers throughout the forest. Calathea flower bracts come in various shapes – from beehive shape flower bracts to rattlesnake tail shapes.

MARCGRAVIACEAE

Marcgravia

Marcgravia is a genus of plant in the family Marcgraviaceae, native to the Caribbean Islands, Central America, and South America. Marcgravia is also is known as Shingle Vine.

It’s a fast-growing flowering vine found in moist, humid conditions of the rainforest climbing high on trees. It’s flat-leaved vines grab hold of tree trunks with aerial roots. Once it climbs high enough,

Marcgravia sends out lateral branches and blooms with pendulous flower clusters which are pollinated by birds and bats.

MELASTOMATACEAE

Miconia

Miconia
Miconia MELASTOMATACEAE

Miconia is a genus of flowering plants in the glory bush family, Melastomataceae, native to warm temperate tropical regions of the Americas.

The species are mostly shrubs and small to medium-sized trees up to 15 m tall. Some species are known by the common name “Johnny Berry”.

Miconia fruit is a favorite food of many birds. The leaves of some species are eaten by caterpillars of the interesting moth-butterflies (Hedylidae).

Many species are threatened by habitat destruction in their native range, and some are feared to be on the brink of extinction.

On the other hand, Miconia. is a contributing factor in the decline and maybe even extinction of other plants: it has become a highly invasive weed on a number of Pacific Islands where it was introduced.

SIPARUNACEAE

Siparuna

Siparuna is a genus of plants belonging to the family Siparunaceae. Dioecious or monoecious sarmentose shrubs, treeless, or trees to 40 m high, aromatic due to abundant quantities of volatile oil in oil cells throughout the plant, sparsely or densely pubescent, found throughout the Neotropic ecozone

Leaves decussate or in whorls of 3-6, simple, exstipulate, those of a pair occasionally unequal in size, with stellate, lepidote, or simple hairs, the margin variously serrate, dentate, or entire. Inflorescences axillary or cauliflorous, cymose, sometimes fasciculate.

Fruit consisting of the fleshy receptacle which at maturity splits irregularly to expose (1-) 3-25 small drupelets with a conspicuous red or orange aril (in the neotropical species), the endocarp stony.

PASSIFLORACEAE

Passiflora

Passiflora PASSIFLORACEAE
Passiflora
PASSIFLORACEAE

Passiflora is a genus of the family Passifloraceae.

Known also as the passion flowers or passion fruits, They are mostly vines, with some being shrubs, and a few species being herbaceous.  

The family Passifloraceae has a pantropical distribution. Passiflora itself is absent from Africa, where many other members of the family Passifloraceae occur (e.g. the more plesiomorphic Adenia). Most species are found in South America, eastern Asia, southern Asia, and New Guinea.

The size and structure of flowers of other Passiflora species is optimized for pollination by hummingbirds (especially hermits like Phaethornis), bumble bees, Carpenter bees, wasps or bats, while others are self-pollinating.

The sword-billed hummingbird (Ensifera ensifera) with its immensely elongated bill has co-evolved with certain passion flowers, such as P. mixta.
The leaves are used as food plants by the larva of a number of lepidopterans (Heliconius and Agraulis).

To prevent the butterflies from laying too many eggs on any single plant, some passion flowers bear small colored nubs which resemble the butterflies’ eggs and seem to fool them into believing that more eggs have already been deposited on a plant that actually is the case.

Also, many Passiflora species produce sweet nutrient-rich liquid from glands on their leaf stems.

These fluids attract ants which will kill and eat many pests that they happen to find feeding on the passion flowers.

POACEAE

Pariana

Pariana is a genus of the grass family Poaceae tropical American plants in. It is native to South America. Plants can be tall and stout, evergreen, perennial grass with densely leafy culms, usually growing 1 meter tall.

RUBIACEAE

Capirona

Capirona is a monotypic genus of flowering plants in the Rubiaceae family. The genus contains only one species,

A tree can grow up to a height of 30 meters. A canopy tree, which is native to northern South America. It grows white or green flowers between March and April.

It fruits between July and November, seeds are dispersed by the wind and water. Its wood is used for lumber.

During the flowering months, it produces an abundance of white, aromatic flowers, which are followed by elongated seed pods with 3-5 seeds inside.  

Its bark is shed periodically to avoid lichens, fungi, epiphytes, and lianas. Bark has antifungal properties for the skin.

Faramea

Faramea is a genus of plants in the family Rubiaceae.

Plants can be Shrubs or small trees, usually glabrous. Stipules are persistent, connate at the base, spit or arist at the apex. Inflorescence axillary, umbellate, with few flowers. Fruit drupaceous, coriaceous, subglobose; a seed.

The genus Faramea consists of more than 200 species distributed from Mexico to southern Brazil. In Ecuador there are 20 species best represented in the lowlands; 4 species have been recorded in the Andean forests:

Palicourea

Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest, Palicourea
Coffee cousin brings hummingbirds when flowering
Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest, Palicourea RUBIACEAE
Palicourea attracts hummingbirds of several species. RUBIACEAE

Palicourea is a plant genus in the family Rubiaceae. A wide range of habits from shrubs to small trees distributed widely in the New World tropics.

Palicourea plants are typically found in the understory and subcanopy of moist to wet tropical forests, from low to high elevations.

Palicourea flowers have well-developed tubes and are odorless, mostly brightly colored, and assumed to be pollinated by hummingbirds, and their fleshy blue or purple-black fruits are dispersed by birds.

Nearly all Palicourea species are distylous; this appears to be the ancestral condition for the genus, and it seems to have been lost in at least a few species on Caribbean islands

In Ecuador, at least 50 species are represented; 28 have been recorded in the Andean forests:

Psychotria

Psychotria is a genus of flowering plants in the Rubiaceae family. It is one of the largest genera of flowering plants.

The genus has a pantropical distribution and members of the genus are from low to mid-elevation understorey trees in tropical forests.

This heterostylous plant is hummingbird-pollinated, though it is visited by other insects such as butterflies, and its small blue fruits are dispersed by birds.

The presence of alkaloids has led to its common use as a medicinal plant within indigenous populations

Warszewiczia

Flowers structure of Warszewiczia plants. RUBIACEAE
Warszewiczia RUBIACEAE

Warszewiczia is a genus of flowering plants in the Rubiaceae family. They are primarily tropical Central and South American trees and shrubs.

The inflorescences show leaf-shaped, bright-colored calycophylls, and expanded foliaceous structures made from floral petaloid with enlarged showy calyx-lobes.

Their main task is to attract pollinators such as butterflies.  Perhaps the most famous member of the genus is W. coccinea (Chaconia), which is the national flower of Trinidad and Tobago.

MALVACEAE

Herrania

Herrania is a genus of flowering plants in the family Malvaceae. Small tree. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests; it is fragmented due to colonization, mining, and deforestation

Clavija

Clavija is a strange and little-known genus in the Primulaceae from the tropics of the new world.

It is a palm-like, sparsely branched shrub to about 4 m tall, native to lowland forests in Colombia and Ecuador with long, undivided leaves, thick, waxy, scented flowers that are followed by edible, plum-sized, round, yellow fruits with a sharp taste.

MALVACEAE

Apeiba

Apeiba is a genus of flowering plants in the Malvaceae family. A fast-growing canopy tree in disturbed primary forest and the more open, secondary formations tree that can grow up to 30 meters tall.

The wood of Apeiba is soft and lightweight and used for rafts, the bark is fibrous and used for making rope.

The fruits are conspicuous woody-capsules, globose to flattened-globose, and covered with spines or bristles, giving the plant the local name of “monkey’s comb”

VERBENACEAE

Vitex

Vitex is a genus of flowering plants in the family Verbenaceae, a genus of shrubs and trees up to 35m tall. Some species have whitish bark that is characteristically furrowed. Leaves are opposite, usually, compound. The fruit is a drupe.

Easy Plants to Remember from the Amazon Rainforest of Ecuador

Check some of the Easy Plants to Remember from the Amazon Rainforest of Ecuador.

The first time you enter the Amazon Rainforest, you will feel overloaded with Shapes, Colors, Textures, Odors, and Taste from the vast community of plants living in here.

All trees, lianas, shrubs, epiphytes, and parasites are living in chaotic harmony, you will soon discover that everything in the Rainforest is connected and those connections start revealing in front of your eyes, we call it Wild Learning!

Easy Plants to Remember from the Amazon Rainforest of Ecuador
Nautilocalyx GESNERIACEAE
Easy Plants to Remember from the Amazon Rainforest of Ecuador
Heliconia HELICONIACEAE

The Amazon Rainforest is home to as many as 80,000 plant species from which more than 40,000 species play a critical role in regulating the global climate and sustaining the local water cycle.

Easy Plants facts from the Yasuni to Remember
Miconia MELASTOMATACEAE

The Yasuní Biosphere Reserve is known to be one of the most biodiverse places on Earth.

Check some Easy Plants facts from the Yasuni to Remember

In just one hectare in Yasuní, there are more tree, shrub, and liana (woody vines) species than anywhere else in the world. Check the numbers.

In a single hectare of the Yasuni (2.47 acres) 655 species of trees, were found which is equal to the continental US and Canada combined.

In a research plot of 25 hectares of primary Rainforest of the Yasuni, the number of tree species rises to 1,100.

Here is a list of the easy plants to recognize when exploring remote villages, or national park while you are visiting the Amazon Rainforest.

Get familiar with the Common Plants of the Amazon Rainforest of Ecuador.

  • Aphelandra ACANTHACEAE)
  • Philodendron (ARACEAE)
  • Anthurium (ARACEAE)
  • Begonia (BEGONIACEAE)
  • Centropogon (CAMPANULACEAE)
  • Dichorisandra (COMMELINACEAE)
  • Geogenanthus (COMMELINACEAE)
  • Costus (COSTACEAE)
  • Abarema (FABACEAE)
  • Calliandra (FABACEAE)
  • Brownea (FABACEAE)
  • Zygia (FABACEAE)
  • Nautilocalyx (GESNERIACEAE)
  • Heliconia (HELICONIACEAE)
  • Grias (LECYTHIDACEAE)
  • Gustavia (LECYTHIDACEAE)
  • Calathea (MARANTACEAE)
  • Marcgravia  (MARCGRAVIACEAE)
  • Miconia (MELASTOMATACEAE)
  • Siparuna (SIPARUNACEAE)
  • Passiflora (PASSIFLORACEAE )
  • Pariana (POACEAE)
  • Capirona (RUBIACEAE)
  • Faramea (RUBIACEAE)
  • Palicourea (RUBIACEAE)
  • Psychotria (RUBIACEAE)
  • Warszewiczia (RUBIACEAE
  • Herrania (MALVACEAE)
  • Clavija (PRIMULACEAE)
  • Apeiba (MALVACEAE)
  • Vitex  (VERBENACEAE)
Grias
Grias LECYTHIDACEAE

Download An illustrated list of Conspicuous Plants plants of the Amazon Rainforest of Ecuador.

The Birds Living in the Amazon Rainforest

The Birds Living in the Amazon Rainforest of Ecuador.

The Birds Living in the Amazon Rainforest
The Yellow-browed Antbird lives inside terra firme on the Southern bank of the Napo River.

All the Living Birds of the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador can be found in all the forest formations, the birds have adapted to live with all the resources provided by the Western Amazon Basin.

Habitats where the Birds of the Amazon Rainforest lives:

  • Terra Firme
  • Varzea
  • Forest Swamp
  • Forest Streams
  • Moriche Swamp

The Birds living in the Amazon Rainforest are very diverse in their lifestyle, with many species living in the ground,  many others at mid-level in the forest and a lot of action happens in the canopy, many species trail throughout the forest in small social clubs that we call mixed species flock, many would surprising us in size, colors, sounds, behaviour.

We list some of the most diverse families of birds found in the largest tract of rainforest in Ecuador, found in terra firme, varzea, flooded forest, forest swamps, moriche swamps, rivers, forest streams, oxbow lakes and roadsides

Depending in the spectrum of the habitats in a determined area, the abilities of the species to establish in that area, birds can be found almost everywhere you go, colorful tanagers, skulking antbirds, dancing manakins, oropendolas, macaws.

The Most Diverse Amazonian Bird Families

The most diverse amazonian bird families found at Shiripuno Amazon Lodge, recorded over 10 years of observations:

  • Flycatchers: 80 species
  • Antbirds: 50 species
  • Tanagers: 37 species
  • Ovenbirds: 27 species
  • Kites, Eagles & Hawks: 26 species
  • Hummingbirds: 26 species
  • Parrot & Macaws: 18 species
  • Woodpeckers:17 species
  • Woodcreepers: 17 species
  • Manakin: 12 species
  • Puffbirds: 12 species

Quick Fact:

The largest bird living in the Amazon Rainforest is: The King Vulture (Sarcoramphus papa) with an overall length ranges from 67–81 centimeters (27–32 in) and its wingspan is 1.2–2 meters (4–6.6 ft). Its weight ranges from 2.7–4.5 kilograms (6–10 lb). And the smallest is also one of the smallest birds on Earth: The Short-tailed Pygmy Tyrant (Myiornis ecaudatus)  with a body length of 6.5 centimeters, and its weight 4·2 grams.

Download Our Bird List

 

The Yasuni Amphibians and Reptiles in Ecuador

The Amazon Rainforest Amphibians & Reptiles: Yasuni Biosphere Reserve.

Bromeliad Tree Frog - Herping
Bromeliad Tree Frog are active during the night, it moves in the canopy and occasionally comes down to check what to eat.

The Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador is home of several hundred species of Amphibians & Reptiles, the Yasuni Biosphere Reserve holds one the highest diversity in this forest creatures.

Watch Amazon Rainforest Amphibians & Reptiles: Yasuni Biosphere Reserve

We have created a video to showcase a collection of images and videos of many species found in the Yasuni. Its ten minutes of interesting tree frogs, colorful dart poison frogs, venomous snakes,  many tree snakes and giant anacondas, the odd-shapes turtles and marsupials tree frogs and many species more.

The Amazon Rainforest is home of these extraordinary group of forest creatures, some of them are active during the day in the forest litter sharing it with other critters, the ground can be a busy place for some, they make a better living up in the canopy in colonies of bromeliads or tree holes can be suitable for some forest rarities.

Listen to Rainforest Frogs

Amazon Leaf Frog (Cruziohyla craspedopus)

The Yasuní Biosphere Reserve has outstanding global conservation significance due to its extraordinary biodiversity and potential to sustain this biodiversity in the long term.

The Yasuni is the world’s greatest amphibian diversity on a landscape scale is found in the upper Amazon Basin of Ecuador and Peru, and in the Atlantic Forest of eastern Brazil.

Join our Amazon Herping Week Trip Here

Downdload Free Sounds of the Amazon Rainforest

Download Free Sounds of the Amazon Rainforest!

The sounds of the Amazon Rainforest can be counted only by millions given the size of the Diversity of Life. Find Songs and Calls in every corner of it, whether it lives in the canopy surrounded by a green ocean of trees or live in the leaves litters; all of them need to communicate with each other.

We brought the Amazon Experience a little bit closer to you, experience unique records from the Yasuni Biosphere Reserve in Ecuador, where Shiripuno Amazon Lodge is located, surrounded by miles of unbroken forest.

Check some of the coolest Nature Sounds we had recorded for you.

You can Listen One by One.

You can Listen All at Once!

Fiery Topaz

Shiripuno Lodge - Fiery Topaz is among the most beautiful hummingbirds from the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador
Shiripuno Lodge – Fiery Topaz is among the most beautiful hummingbirds from the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador

 

The Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador

The Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador is tiny but it is one of the Most Biodiverse places in the World.

The Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador
The Nangaritza River in the Zamora Province. The Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador

The Amazon Rainforest region in Ecuador is about 50% of the country but only represents 2 % of the half of the planet’s remaining rainforests in the world.

The Ecuadorian Amazon has a mosaic of Ecosystems and vegetation types including rainforests, seasonal forests, deciduous forests, and flooded forests.

The Typical Ecosystems of the Lowlands Rainforest in Ecuador.

The different Ecosystems of the Ecuadorian Rainforest holds a huge Diversity of Life, here is a list of the habitats and niches:

    • Terra Firme
    • Várzea or Temporary Flooded Forest
    • Igapo
    • Moriche Swamp
    • Forest Swamps
    • River Islands
Shiripuno Lodge ~ The Amazon Horned Rain Frog, it's a ground-dweller amphibian using its camouflage waits for its prey to pass by, the sit-and-wait technique is used by many species of the Amazon Rainforest.
Shiripuno Lodge ~ The Amazon Horned Rain Frog, it’s a ground-dweller amphibian using its camouflage waits for its prey to pass by, the sit-and-wait technique is used by many species of the Amazon Rainforest.

Major Rivers flowing in The Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador

The Rivers in the Rainforest are the Lifeline and its history plays an important part in the local fauna flora and People.

The Rivers are an import player in the dynamics of the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador, Rivers brings rich volcanic sediments to the Amazon Basin.

Shiripuno Lodge ~ The Amazon Rainforest is home of at least 5 species of cats, all of them can swim and climb trees.
Shiripuno Lodge ~ The Amazon Rainforest is home of at least 5 species of cats, all of them can swim and climb trees.

Here is a list of the Major Rivers, many bring water from the Andes and many are settled by indigenous and settlers today:

  • Putumayo River
  • San Miguel River
  • Napo River
  • Curaray River
  • Cononaco River
  • Aguarico River
  • Cuyabeno River
  • Yasuní River
  • Tiputini River
  • Coca River
  • Payamino River
  • Marañón River (Peru)
  • Tigre River
  • Pastaza River
  • Bobonaza River
  • Palora River 
  • Morona River

The ethnic diversity of the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador.

For thousands of years, the Amazon Rainforest is home for thousands and now millions of people. People live in different locations with perfect conditions to raise their families and keep their cultures alive. Today they are the Guardians of the Rainforest.

  • Kichwa People in the Napo y Pastaza provinces
  • Siona and Secoya People living in Sucumbíos province
  • Cofan People live in the Sucumbíos province
  • Waorani People living in Napo y Pastaza
  • Tagaeri-Taromenani People living in the Pastaza and Orellana
  • Shuar and Achuar People living in the Morona Santiago, Zamora Chinchipe provinces
  • Záparo People living in the Pastaza province
  • Shiviar People living in the Pastaza province

Ecuador protects many of the Amazon Rainforest Ecosystems 

Ecuador put efforts to promote the Conservation of many ecosystems of the Amazon Rainforest in a series of conservation areas and education. Check the big ones below:

  • Cofán-Bermejo Ecological Reserve in Sucumbios with an extension of 55451 ha, it was created in 2002.
  • Cuyabeno Wildlife Reserve in Orellana and Sucumbios provinces with an extension of 590.112 hectáreas, created in 1.979.
  • Limoncocha Biological Reserve in Sucumbios with an extension of 4.613 hectares, it was created in 1.985.
  • Sumaco Napo-Galeras National Park, Orellana and Sucumbíos Province with an extension of 206,749 ha it was created in 1994.
  • Yasuni National Park, Orellana and Pastaza Provinces with 1’022.736 ha, it was created in 1979.
  • El Condor Biological Reserve, in the Morona Santiago province with 2.440 ha, it was created in 1.999