Tag: Rainforest

  • Animals of the Rainforest in Ecuador

    Animals of the Rainforest in Ecuador

    Learn about the Animals of the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador.

    We present to you some of the most Popular Animals living in the largest tropical rainforest in the world. Many of them you can also find them in other countries in South America.

    Get familiar with their life history, sounds, and many videos of the animals can find during our  Amazon Nature Trips.

    What types of animals live in a tropical rainforest?

    Rainforests are tremendously rich in animal life. Rainforests are populated with insects (like butterflies and beetles), arachnids (like spiders and ticks), worms, reptiles (like snakes and lizards), amphibians (like frogs and toads), birds (like parrots and toucans), and mammals (like sloths and jaguars).

    Where do animals live in the rainforest?

    All Life lives in different strata of the rainforest. For example, birds and tree frogs live in the upper leaves of the trees (canopy) and in the emergent trees, other creatures like howler monkeys and sloths also live in the canopy.

    Large animals (like jaguars anteaters, tapirs, and deers) generally live on the forest floor also known as the understory,  Insects are found almost everywhere.

    Anacondas, dolphins in the water, electric ells in the black water system.

    Many species of rainforest animals are endangered and many others have gone extinct as the number of acres of rainforests on Earth disappears.

    How animals can live in the rainforest?

    Animals are always in danger of being eaten and have developed many methods of protecting themselves.

    Hiding: Some animals simply hide from predators, concealing themselves in burrows, under rocks or leaves, in tree hollows, or in other niches where they are hard to find.

    Camouflage: Camouflage is another way of hiding in which the animal blends into its environment. Many animals, like the “walking stick” insect and the  Bia Actorion Butterfly, are camouflaged so well that they are virtually invisible when they are standing still. Sloths are covered with a greenish layer of algae which camouflages their fur in their arboreal environment. Sloths also move very slowly, making them even harder to spot.

    Scaring predators: Some animals try to convince predators that they are bigger and more fierce than they are. For example, the larva of the lobster moth (Stauropus fagi), whose larva looks like a scorpion, but is completely defenseless. Many butterflies have large “eye” designs on their wings. This makes them look like the head of a very large animal instead of a harmless butterfly and scares many predators away.

    Warning colors: Poisonous animals openly advertise their defense methods, usually with bright colors and flashy patterns.

    When a predator eats one member of the group, it will get sick.

    This memory will stay with the predator, who will avoid that type of animal in the future.

    This method sacrifices a few individuals to protect the entire group.

    Examples of poisonous animals include the Monarch butterfly.

    Other animals (poisonous or not) have come to mimic poisonous butterflies, obtaining the benefits of their poisonous “twins.” This is called mimicry.

    Why is Important to Conserve the rainforest?

    The rainforest is home to more than half of the world’s animals. Colorful and unusual animals dwell in all layers of the forest.

    Rainforest is described as a tall, hot, and dense forest near the equator and is believed to be the oldest living ecosystem on Earth that get the maximum amount of rainfall.

    If you don’t know too much about tropical rainforests, then you will probably be surprised to find that there are a few little-known facts out there

    Here you will find some important facts about the tropical rainforest that you may not have known previously.

    Rainforests only cover around 2 percent of the total surface area of the Earth but hold about 50 percent of the plants and animals on the planet.

    Which mammals live in the rainforest?

    Giant Anteater (Myrmecophaga tridactyla)

    The largest living anteater can eat up to 30000 ants a day, its sense of smell is 40 times more powerful than ours. It is one of four living species of anteaters, the only extant member of the genus Myrmecophaga, and is classified with sloths.

    The Giant Anteater is living here for the last 25 Million Years and Counting.

    Amazon River Dolphin (Inia geoffrensis)

    The Amazon River Dolphin looks remarkably different from its more familiar, ocean-faring cousin.

    Its body is pale pink, with an elongated neck that can be moved left and right, a long snout reminiscent of a beak, a rounded head, and a smaller dorsal fin. It feeds on small fish, crabs, and turtles.

    The Amazon River dolphin is the largest. They are also the most intelligent of the five living species of river dolphins.

    Their brain capacity is 40% larger when compared to that of humans. These dolphins do sleep but with one eye open.

    Like many other aquatic animals in the Amazon, the Dolphin is threatened by pollution and various development projects which restrict the river’s natural flow.

    Capybara (Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris)

    The Capybara is the largest rodent in the world, measuring up to 4 feet in length and weighing up to 140 pounds.

    Their name derives from Tupi, which means “grass-eater.”  A fully grown Capybara can eat up to 8 pounds of grass per day.

    They like water and are commonly found in swampy areas, or near lakes and rivers. They’re also very sociable, living in groups of 10 to 30 individuals.

    Capybaras communicate through a combination of scent and sound, being very vocal animals with purrs and alarm barks, whistles and clicks, squeals and grunts

    Giant Armadillo (Priodontes maximus)

    The Giant Armadillo is only found in the Amazon, where it can reach up to 5 feet long and weigh up to 120 pounds.

    The Armadillo’s casing can be used for offense as well as defense, and they also possess long front claws and between 80 and 100 teeth (more than any other mammal).

    They’re nocturnal animals and live in a complex system of burrows. Sadly, hunting and the black market trade are endangering the Giant Armadillo’s survival:

    Its population numbers have reportedly decreased by 50% over the last 30 years.

    Giant River Otter (Pteronura brasiliensis)

    The Giant River Otter is endemic to the Amazon basin.

    Its body can reach up to around 5 feet in length (plus a 3-foot tail), and it has webbed hands and feet that are perfect for swimming and hunting in the Amazon River’s tributaries.

    It is often seen feasting of fish and other small prey in oxbow lakes, which are created by slow-flowing rivers changing course, and in other slow-flowing rivers and swamps.

    Hunting, water pollution, and habitat loss are the main causes of their decreasing population numbers.

    Jaguar (Panthera onca)

    This is the big cat par excellence of South America, and the Amazon rainforest is one of the Jaguar’s last remaining strongholds.

    Jaguar numbers are decreasing fast because of illegal hunting and loss of habitat. It’s estimated that only around 6000 individuals survive in the Peruvian Amazon.

    These big cats are excellent at climbing, swimming, and hunting in the trees. As a result, you may hear them in the jungle, but it’s very difficult to see them through the dense canopy.

    Jaguarundi (Herpailurus yagouaroundi)

    The Jaguarundi is one of the smaller wild cats found in the Amazon. They have short legs, a long body, and an even longer tail.

    They also have short, rounded ears and a uniformly colored coat, which can be either brownish-gray or chestnut-red.

    They typically measure between 21 and 30 inches, with a tail almost as long as their body, and weigh between seven and 20 pounds.

    Jaguarundis are mainly solitary and active during the day, unlike most felines. Their diet includes small felines, reptiles, and ground-feeding birds, as Jaguarundis hunt more on the ground than in trees.

    Lophostoma Yasuni Bat ( Lophostoma Yasuni)

    There are hundreds of Bat species in the Amazon, and the Lophostoma Yasuni Bat is one of the most peculiar-looking ones. It’s named after Yasuni National Park, where it is endemic.

    With its protruding ears (which can reach up to a third of the length of the body) and proboscis, it looks like a fantasy creature halfway between a Gremlin and a Fennec Fox.

    Like most other Bats, it eats insects. It wasn’t discovered until 2004, so very little is known about it, but scientists suggest it is likely threatened by habitat loss.

    Ocelot (Leopardus pardalis)

    It has been estimated that there are around 150 Ocelots per 62 square miles within Yasunì National Park– a remarkable density, given the scarcity of other big cats.

    The Ocelot is Latin America’s third-largest cat, behind the Jaguar and Puma.

    They’re usually active at night when they’re out hunting birds, fish, or small mammals, and spend the day resting in trees.

    Ocelots look a bit like large domestic cats, and they have golden fur covered in spots. For this reason, they are also known as the “dwarf leopard.”

    Puma (Puma concolor)

    The Puma is the second largest cat in the Americas, after the Jaguar. Their habitat range is the largest of any wild carnivore in the Western Hemisphere.

    They’re found as far north as Yukon and as far south as the Andes. Pumas are solitary by nature and mostly hunt at night.

    Their prey in the Amazon include monkeys, birds, wild pigs, armadillos, and capybara.

    Pumas are more closely related to smaller felines like the house cat, with whom they share behaviors such as purring and the inability to roar.

    Once common, Pumas are increasingly threatened because of loss of habitat and persecution from locals over the fear of livestock attacks.

    Pygmy Marmoset (Cebuella pygmaea)

    There are approximately 150 species of monkeys found in the Amazon. The Pygmy Marmoset is one of the world’s tiniest primate species, and the smallest one found in the Peruvian and Ecuadorian Amazon.

    It weighs just over 3.5 oz, and its height is between 4.5 and 6 inches.

    They live in troops that average around 6 individuals, and they can be found on trees near swamps or streams, feeding mainly on tree sap, insects, small fruit, and nectar.

    Pygmy Marmosets are very small and shy, and thus viewings are extremely difficult.

    South American Tapir (Tapirus terrestris)

    There are four Latin American species of Tapir, all of which are classified as vulnerable or endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

    The South American Tapir is the largest land mammal in the Ecuadorian Amazon, but it ranks among the Jaguar’s favorite prey.

    They can grow up to 6.5 feet long and weigh up to 550 pounds, yet they move quickly on land and are also excellent swimmers. Deforestation and hunting are the main threats to the Tapir’s survival.

    Common Squirrel Monkey (Saimiri sciureus)

    Animals of the Rainforest

    Often seen throughout the Amazon Basin, these monkeys are called “Squirrel” because they’re small and agile and spend most of their life in trees, feeding primarily on fruits and insects.

    However, unlike most other New World monkeys, they can’t use their tail for climbing. On average, Squirrel Monkeys range between 9.8 and 14 inches in height and weigh 1.7 to 2.4 pounds.

    They have short, brown-grey fur on their head and shoulders, and yellow-ochre fur on their back and extremities.

    The fur on their face is black and white, making them vaguely resemble a skeleton. For this reason, the German name for Squirrel Monkeys is Totenkopfaffen, meaning “Death’s Head Monkey.”

    READ MORE: New Amazon Animals Discovered!

    Which birds live in the rainforest?

    Blue-and-Yellow Macaw

    The Blue-and-Yellow Macaw is one the largest birds in the forest by length, measuring 81 – 91 cm from the tip of its tail to the top of its head. Blue-and-Yellow refers to the color of its feathers, which are blue on the entire body with some yellow chest.

    Along with the Scarlet and Chestnut-fronted Macaw, Blue-and-yellow Macaw can be seen crossing in the skies of the Amazon Rainforest.

    Their diets mainly consist of fruit and nuts from native Amazonian trees and palms, which they break with their strong hooked beaks.

    They use their tongue to reach into the shell of nuts, and their talons to hang onto trees. Sadly, Blue-and-Yellow Macaw has endangered: Their main threat is the illegal pet trade and habitat fragmentation.

    Hoatzin (Opisthocomus hoazin)

    Animals of the Rainforest in Ecuador
    Hoatzin is the most bizarre bird in the Amazon Rainforest. Yasuni Biosphere Reserve.

    Hoatzin is genetically enigmatic, whose chicks possess claws on two of their wing digits and is also colloquially known as the Stinkbird due to the manure-like odor caused by its unique digestive system.

    The noises they make are just as odd, including a bizarre variety of groans, croaks, hisses, and grunts that are often associated with their body movements.

    King Vulture (Sarcoramphus papa)

    Common throughout Central and South America, King Vultures are arguably among the most beautiful birds of the Amazon Rainforest.

    They measure between 26 and 32 inches, with a 4-7 foot wingspan. After the Condor, they’re the largest of all the New World vultures.

    It’s believed that the “King” in their name derived from an old Mayan legend that saw King Vultures as messengers between the living and the gods.

    Their body is mainly white, with long black feathers on their wings and tails.

    They have no feathers on their head and neck, but their skin is vividly colored in red and purple shades on the head, orange on the neck, and yellow on the throat.

    Like all vultures, they’re scavengers helping to keep the ecosystem clean of carrion.

    Spectacled Owl (Pulsatrix perspicillata)

    The Spectacled Owl is the only owl species found in the Amazon rainforest. It’s medium-sized, measuring approximately 18-20 inches in height.

    It has a rounded head and no ear tufts, and a dark-feathered face with markings resembling spectacles made of white eyebrows and other white streaks on the cheeks.

    The favorite habitat of Spectacled Owls is thick, primary rainforest, but they sometimes move to sparser woodlands when hunting.

    They’re solitary birds, most active during the night.

    They hunt very effectively by swooping down from their roost to catch their prey.

    Any kind of rodent or small mammal can potentially fall prey to the Spectacled Owl… even Sloths!

    White-throated Toucan

    The White-throated Toucan is the largest and best-known of the Seven Toucan Species of the Ecuadorian Amazon.

    The black plumage with a white throat and breast bordered below with a narrow red line. The rump is bright yellow and the crissum (the area around the cloaca) is red.

    The bare skin around the eye is blue. The most striking feature is their oversized bill, which is The bill has a yellow tip, upper ridge, and base of the upper mandible, and the base of the lower mandible is blue.

    The rest of the bill is mainly black and mainly reddish-brown and measures between 12.2 to 22 cm. Since total length It has a total length of 50–61 cm (19.5–24 in), they look awkward when flying. But their bill is quite light since it’s hollow.

    toucans are sociable birds and are often seen flying in small groups, especially at sunset.

    They’re omnivores, using their bill to reach for insects, fruit, and small reptiles, as well as other birds and their eggs.

    READ MORE: Guide to Ecuadorian Amazon Birds

    Which reptiles and reptiles live in the rainforest?

    Spectacled Caiman (Caiman crocodilus)

    The Spectacled Caiman is known as the common caiman, a medium-sized crocodilian, with a total length in males 2.7 m;  is extremely adaptable in terms of habitat requirements, occupying rivers, creeks, lagoons, lakes, borrow pits, swamps, and wetlands.

    Female Spectacled Caimans reach sexual maturity at about 1.2 m total length and lay an average of 28-32 eggs in a mound nest, usually during the annual wet season.

    Spectacled caiman behavior includes complex sound signals: “warning calls” emitted by females to the young; “distress calls” emitted by juveniles; and, “group cohesion calls” emitted by all individuals.

    Males display social behaviors: “vertical tail” and “arch tail” with sub-audible vibrations, barks, and visual displays.  The hatchlings and juvenile groups remain together under female care for 12-18 months.

    Anaconda

    It is the largest snake native to the Americas and found in the northern part of South America (including the Amazon),

    In the genus, Eunectes (“good swimmer” in Greek), Anaconda is the heaviest and one of the longest known snake species.

    It usually measures about 17-20 feet long, with a weight ranging between 60 and 150 pounds.

    They’re non-venomous snakes, killing their prey by wrapping around and adjusting the pressure at every breath, Anacondas dislocate their jaws for swallowing it whole.

    They can kill large animals such as Capybara, Tapirs, or even Jaguars, but there’s little evidence of attacks on humans.

    Anacondas spend most of their time near water: For this reason, they’re also commonly known as “Boas.”

    Poison Dart Frogs

    The Ecuador Poison Dart Frog (Ameerega bilinguis), in the family Dendrobatidae found in Colombia, Ecuador, and possibly Peru.

    Its natural habitats are forests, rivers, intermittent rivers, freshwater marshes, and intermittent freshwater marshes. It is threatened by habitat loss.

    The flashy and brilliant colors of this species constitute a warning for its potential predators that its skin produces poison, a feature that makes it an undesirable food source.

    It is very common to hear the male singing from slightly elevated areas in search of a female. After the eggs hatch, the adults transport the tadpoles on their backs to ponds, where the tadpoles complete their development.

    South American River Turtle

    The South American River Turtle (Podocnemis expansa), is the largest freshwater turtle in the Amazon.

    It can grow up to 200 pounds and measure around 3.5 ft long. They’re mostly vegetarian and play an important role in maintaining a healthy riverine ecosystem.

    The South American River Turtle (Podocnemis expansa) are scavengers, so they keep the rivers clean by removing dead organic materials.

    The presence of River Turtles in the Amazon is considered a sign of the ecological well-being of a given area of the river.
    Today, they are now under threat because of hunting, egg collection, habitat loss, and pollution.

  • Frogs of the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador

    Frogs of the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador

    Learn about the Frogs living in the Amazon Rainforest of Ecuador.

    We invite you to check in the fascinating world of the Frogs of the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador

    Until three decades ago, the site considered as the most diverse in the world in amphibians and reptiles was the town of Santa Cecilia, The studies while the forest was being deforested and the soil moved with excavators in 1978. in Sucumbíos, Ecuador.

    Frogs of the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador
    Bromeliad Tree Frog

    In a closer region with high species richness, Leticia in the Amazon Colombia reported 98 species of anurans species.

    Another remote region with high species richness reported 111 species of amphibians for the Manú National Park in Peru.

    The next area with an exceptional diversity of amphibians in the Yasuní National Biosphere, where more than 130 species of amphibians have been recorded in a single locality.

    Upon seeing all these comparisons, the high richness of amphibian, as well as the extreme concentration of diversity in a small area, clearly indicates the importance of the Yasuní, it is mandatory to conserve one of the richest herpetofauna communities in the entire world.

    There are many species frogs that remain to be described for science, we know little or nothing about their natural history of Amazonian amphibians, their state of conservation and risk of extinction in the face of factors such as the destruction of habitats or climate changes at local, regional and global scales

    Frogs of the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador
    Trachycepahlus Tree Frog ~ Shiripuno Lodge ~ Amazon Herping Week

    The Ambihians Numbers 

    The local diversity (alpha diversity) of amphibians in Ecuador reaches its highest value in the Tropical Amazonian Humid Forest.
    The endemism in the Amazon Tropical Rainforest in Ecuador rach only 15.9 %.
    The greatest species richness is concentrated in the Amazonian provinces: Napo, Sucumbíos, and Pastaza. Notably, the diversity of the province of Napo (199 species) surpasses that of entire countries such as Argentina or Canada.

    Frogs of the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador
    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.

    Conservation of the Frogs in the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador

    About 19 amphibian species that were unknown to science up to that time. Ten of these species have been described in recent years based on specimens collected in Ecuador

    • A species of toad: Rhaebo ecuadoriensis
    • Five species of tree frogs: Osteocephalus Yasuni, Boana alfaroi, Boana maculateralis, Boana nympha, and Dendropsophus shiwiarum
    • A species of rocket frog Hyloxalus yasuní
    • Three species of cutish frogs Pristimantis aureolineatus, Pristimantis omeviridis, Pristimantis waoranii.

    Still, there are to describe at least three species of the genus of toads Rhinella, a Boana tree frog, at least two species of cutin frogs Pristimantis.

    Nine species were reported for Ecuadorian Amazon Rainforest, including frogs like:

    • Noblella myrmecoides.
    • Pristimantis orcus.
    • Pristimantis eurydactylus.
    • Pristimantis skydmainos.
    • Dendropsophus delarivai.
    • Cochranella ritae.
    • Rhaebo guttatus.

    Besides, very rare records for the country, such as the Gastrotheca longipes, Dendropsophus miyatai, Cochranella resplendens.

    Amazon Marsupial Tree-Frog (Gastrotheca longipes) in the Yasuni

    In comparison with other Amazonian sites very diversified and well sampled, the anuran species richness of Ecuador It is greater in all cases.

    Frogs of the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador
    The families of amphibians with the highest number of species are frogs Hylidae arboreal, Strabomantidae land frogs, Bufonidae toads, and Leptodactylidae thin-toed frogs, followed closely by members of the Poisonous frogs (Aromobatidae and Dendrobatidae families)

    List of Frogs you can find the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador

    Anywhere in the Rainforest, eventually you will cross with a frog but if you are trying to find them as soon as you arrive. First, get your bearings right, let know others where are you heading.

    Family: Aromobatidae, Nurse Frogs, Jumping Frog

    • Allobates femoralis, Jumping frog with bright thighs
    • Allobates fratisenescus, Mera Jumping Frog
    • Allobates insperatus, Santa Cecilia Jumping Frog
    • Allobates kingsburyi, Jumping Frog from the Topo River
    • Allobates trilineatus, Trilineated Jumping Frog
    • Allobates zaparo, Jumping Frog Zápara

    Family: Bufonidae Toads, Jambatos, Harlequin Frogs

    • Amazophrynella siona, Sapito Siona
    • Atelopus boulengeri, Jambato of Boulenger
    • Atelopus palmatus, Jambato of Andersson
    • Atelopus planispina, Jambato of Planispina
    • Atelopus spumarius, Jambato Amazónico
    • Rhaebo ecuadorensis, Ecuadorian Giant Toad
    • Rhaebo guttatus, Cuyabeno Giant Toad
    • Rhinella ceratophrys, cuckold Termite Toad
    • Rhinella dapsilis, Sapo orejón
    • Rhinella festae, Toad Valley Santiago
    • Rhinella margaritifera, Sapo common South American
    • Rhinella marina, Cane toad
    • Rhinella poeppigii, Toad of Moyobamba
    • Rhinella proboscidea, Toad snout
    • Rhinella roqueana, Toad of Roque

    Family: Centrolenidae, Glass Frog

    • Centrolene charapita, Frog of c Ristal charapita
    • Cochranella resplendens, Glass frog resplandeciente
    • Espadarana durrellorum, Rana crystal iaspidiense Jambué
    • Hyalinobatrachium, Rana crystal Yuruani
    • Hyalinobatrachium munozorum, Glass Frog Santa Cecilia
    • Hyalinobatrachium pellucidum, Glass frog fantasma
    • Hyalinobatrachium ruedai, Rana crystal Rueda
    • Hyalinobatrachium yaku, frog yaku
    • Nymphargus glass chancas , Crystal tree frog from Peru,
    • Nymphargus cochranae, Crystal frog from Cochran,
    • Nymphargus laurae, Crystal frog from Laura,
    • Nymphargus mariae, Crystal frog from Maria
    • Rulyrana flavopunctata, Yellow spotted glass frog,
    • Rulyrana mcdiarmidi, Crystal frog from the Jambue River,
    • Teratohyla amelie, Amelie crystal frog,
    • Teratohyla midas, Aguarico
    • Vitreorana ritae glass frog, black-spotted glass frog

    Family: Ceratophryidae, Bocon frogs

    • Ceratophrys cornuta, Great Horned toad
    • Ceratophrys testudo, Ecuadorian toad

    Family: DendrobatidaeFamily: Dendrobatidae Poisonous Frogs, Rocket Frogs

    • Ameerega frogs bilinguis, poison frog ecuatoriana
    • Ameerega hahneli, poison frog Yurimaguas
    • Ameerega parvula, poisonous frog Sarayacu
    • Excidobates captivus, poisonous frog Santiago
    • Hyloxalus cevallosi river, Rana rocket Palanda
    • Hyloxalus elachyhistus, Rana rocket Loja
    • Hyloxalus italoi, Rana rocket Pastaza
    • Hyloxalus maculosus, Rana rocket Puyo
    • Hyloxalus nexipus, Frog rocket from Los Tayos
    • Hyloxalus sauli, Rana rocket from Santa Cecilia
    • Hyloxalus yasuni, Rana rocket from Yasuní
    • Leucostethus fugax, Frog from Pastaza
    • Ranitomeya reticulata, Reddish poisonous frog
    • Ranitomeya variabilis, Poisonous frog from yellow lines
    • Ranitomeya ventrimaculata, Poisonous frog from Sarayacu

    Family: Eleutherodactylidae Immigrant frog

    • Adelophryne adiastola, Frog of Yapina

    Family: Hemiphractidae, Marsupials Frogs and related

    • Gastrotheca andaquiensis, Marsupials Frog of Andaqui
    • Gastrotheca longipes, Marsupials Frog of Pastaza
    • Gastrotheca testudinea, Marsupials Frogof Jimenez de la Espada
    • Gastrotheca weinlan dii, Weinland Marsupials Frog
    • Hemiphractus bubalus, Triangular head frog from Ecuador
    • Hemiphractus helioi, Triangular head frog from Cuzco
    • Hemiphractus proboscideus, Triangular head frog from Sumaco
    • Hemiphractus scutatus, Triangular head frog horned incubator

     

    Family: Hylidae,  Treefrogs

    • Agalychnis buckleyi, Buckley monkey frog
    • Agalychnis hulli , Amazon monkey frog
    • Boana alfaroi, Alfaro tree frog
    • Boana almendarizae, Almendáriz tree frog
    • Boana boans, Gladiator frog
    • Boana calcarata, Spur tree frog
    • Boana cinerascens, Frog granosa
    • Boana fasciata, Gunther tree frog
    • Geographical frog, Geographical frog
    • Boana lanciformis, Common lanceolate frog
    • Boana maculateralis, Spotted tree frog
    • Boana nympha, tree frog nymph
    • Boana punctata, dotted frog
    • Boana tetete, Tree frog of the Tetetes
    • Cruziohyla craspedopus, Amazonian leaf frog
    • Dendropsophus bifurcus, Small clown frog
    • Dendropsophus bokermanni, Bokermann tree frog
    • Dendropsophus brevifrons, tree Frog of Crump
    • Dendropsophus marmoratus, Infant marmorea
    • Dendropsophus minutus, yellow Infant común
    • Dendropsophus miyatai, tree Frog of Miyata
    • Dendropsophus parviceps, Infant caricorta
    • Dendropsophus reticulatus, Infant reticulada
    • Dendropsophus rhodopeplus, Infant bandeada
    • Dendropsophus riveroi, tree Frog of Rivero
    • Dendropsophus sarayacuensis, Frog of Sarayacu
    • Dendropsophus shiwiarum, Infant shiwiar
    • Dendropsophus triangulum, Triangular frog
    • Hyloscirtus albopunctulatus, White spot torrent frog
    • Hyloscirtus phyllognathus, Roque torrent frog
    • Nyctimantis rugiceps, Canelos tree frog
    • Osteocephalus alboguttatus, Sarayacu hull frog
    • Osteocephalus buckleyi, Buckley hull frog
    • Osteocephalus cabrerai, Cabrera hull frog
    • Osteocephalus cannatellai, Helmet frog Cannatella
    • Osteocephalus deridens, Mocking Helmet Frog
    • Osteocephalus festae, Helmet frog of Festa
    • Osteocephalus fusciis, Napo
    • Osteocephalus mutabor helmet frog, Pucuno helmet frog
    • Osteocephalus planiceps, Arboreal helmet frog
    • Osteocephalus taurinus, Taurine hull frog
    • Osteocephalus verruciger, Verrucose hull frog
    • Osteocephalus vilmae, Vilma helmet frog
    • Osteocephalus yasuni, Yasuni hull frog
    • Phyllomedusa coelestis, Frog monkey celestial
    • Phyllomedusa palliata, Frog monkey jaguar
    • Phyllomedusa tarsius, Frog monkey lemur
    • Phyllomedusa tomopterna, Frog monkey green orange
    • Phyllomedusa vaillantii, Frog monkey with white lines
    • Scinax cruentomma, Rain frog from the Aguarico river
    • Scinax funereus, Moyabamba rain frog
    • Scinax garbei, Trumpet rain frog
    • Scinax ruber, Frog of rain listed
    • Spheenorhynchus carneus, Lemon tree frog
    • Sphaenorhynchus dorisae, Leticia lake frog
    • Sphaenorhynchus lacteus, Milk lake frog
    • Tepuihyla tuberculosa, Canelos owl frog
    • Trachycephalus coriaceus, Surinam horn frog
    • Trachycephalus cunauaru, Tuberculous hull frog
    • Trachycephalus macrot is, Pastaza dairy frog

    Family: Leptodactylidae Gualag frogs, Smoked rhea, Túngara rheas and related

    • Adenomera andreae, André terrestrial frog
    • Adenomera hylaedactyla, Napo terrestrial frog
    • Edalorhina perezi, Rana vaquita
    • Engystomops petersi, Petersana sparrow-like frog
    • Laptodactylus discodactylus, Vanzolini terrestrial frog
    • Leptodactylus knudseni, Ground toad amazónico
    • Leptodactylus leptodactyloides, Rana land común
    • Leptodactylus mystaceus, toad-frog terrestrial común
    • Leptodactylus pentadactylus, Rana land gigante
    • Leptodactylus petersii, Rana termitera of Peters
    • Leptodactylus rhodomystax, terrestrial frog Boulenger
    • Leptodactylus stenodema, terrestrial frog Moti
    • Leptodactylus wagneri, terrestrial frog Wagner
    • Lithodytes lineatus, Rana land rayada

    Familia: Microhylidae Frogs Leaf Litters

    • Chiasmocleis anatipes, Leaf litter frog from Santa Cecilia
    • Chiasmocleis antenori, Leaf litter frog from Ecuador
    • Chiasmocleis bassleri, Leaf-nosed frog beetle
    • Chiasmocleis parkeri, Frog leaf litter of Parker
    • Chiasmocleis tridactyla, Peruvian leaf litter frog
    • Chiasmocleis ventrimaculata, Pastaza river leaf frog
    • Ctenophryne geayi, Brown leaf frog Bolivian hibiscus, Bolivian leaf frog
    • Synapturanus rabus, Colombian leaf frog

    Family: Pipidae Surinam toad

    • Pipa pipa, Surinam toad

    Family: Ranidae comunes

    • Rana palmipes, Common Frog River Amazonas

    Family: Strabomantidae frogs cutín

    • Hypodactylus nigrovittatus, fat frog amazónica
    • Noblella myrmecoides, southern frog quixensis Loreto
    • Oreobates, Sapito loudmouth amazónico
    • Pristimantis acuminatus, Cutin puntiagudo
    • Pristimantis albujai, Cutin of Albuja
    • Pristimantis altamazonicus, Cutin amazónico
    • Pristimantis altamnis, Cutin of Carabaya
    • Pristimantis aureolineatus, Cutin of golden band
    • Pristimantis barrigai, Cutín de Barriga
    • Pristimantis brevicrus, Cutín of Andersson
    • Pristimantis carvalhoi, Cutín de Carvalho
    • Pristimantis churuwiai, Cutín of Churuwia
    • Pristimantis citriogaster, Cutí n belly amarillo
    • Pristimantis conspicillatus, Cutin of Zamora
    • Pristimantis croceoinguinis, Cutin Santa Cecilia
    • Pristimantis Delius, Cutin coffee rayado
    • Pristimantis diadematus, Cutin of diadema
    • Pristimantis enigmaticus, Cutin enigmático
    • Pristimantis Galdi, Cutin green amazónico
    • Pristimantis katoptroides, Cutin of Puyo
    • Pristimantis kichwarum, Cutin kichwa
    • Pristimantis lacrimosus, Cutin lanthanites llorón
    • Pristimantis, Cutin metálico
    • Pristimantis librarius, Cutin spots cafes
    • Pristimantis limoncochensis, Cutin of Limoncocha
    • Pristimantis luscombei, Cutin of Loreto
    • Pristimantis malkini, Cutin the Ampiyacu
    • Pristimantis martiae river, Cutin of Martha
    • Pristimantis matidiktyo, Cutin eye reticulados
    • Pristimantis metabates, Cutin of Chiriaco
    • Pristimantis miktos, Cutin Mezclado
    • Pristimantis minimus, Cutin Diminuto
    • Pristimantis nigrogriseus, Cutin of Baños
    • Pristimantis omeviridis, Cutín de Tambococha
    • Pristimantis orestes, Cutín de Urdaneta
    • Pristimantis orphnolaimus, Cutín de La go Agrio
    • Pristimantis paululus, Cutin of estribaciones
    • Pristimantis peruvianus, Cutin of Perú
    • Pristimantis petersi, Cutin of Peters
    • Pristimantis prolatus, Cutin oculto
    • Pristimantis pseudoacuminatus, Cutin of Sarayacu
    • Pristimantis quaquaversus, Cutin the Coca
    • Pristimantis rubicundus river, Cutin rubicundo
    • Pristimantis skydmainos, Cutin of Manu
    • Pristimantis trachyblepharis, Cutin strip blanca
    • Pristimantis variabilis, Cutin variable
    • Pristimantis ventrimarmoratus, Cutin belly marmoleado
    • Pristimantis waoranii, Cutin waorani
    • Pristimantis Yantzaza, Cutin of Yantzaza
    • Strabomantis cornutus, Cutin bocón of cuernos
    • Strabomantis sulcatus, Cutin bocón of Nauta

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  • The Common Trees of the Amazon Rainforest

    The Common Trees of the Amazon Rainforest

    Learn about the Common Trees of the Amazon Rainforest living in the Yasuní.

    Common Trees of the Amazon Rainforest
    Amazon Rainforest or Amazon Basin is an Ocean of Trees.

    During your Trip to the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador, you will be learning about trees, their life history, ecological relationships with other forest creatures and also watch local people use it.

    It seems endless, Yes! The Amazon Rainforest is an ocean of trees.

    Common Trees of the Amazon Rainforest
    The Wildlife of the Amazon Rainforest have all kinds of use for trees.

    You will learn about the Common trees living in the Yasuní Biosphere Reserve, which comprises the Yasuní National Park, the Waorani Ethnic Reserve, and the 10 km Buffer Zone.

    The Yasuní National Park was established on 29 July 1979 and the Waorani Ethnic Reserve was established in 1990.

    The Yasuní Biosphere Reserve was established in 1989 by the UNESCO as a Mankind Biosphere Reserve for the future generations of the world.

    The most important rivers in the Yasuní are the Napo River, Tiputini River, Tivacuno River, Shiripuno River, Yasuní River, Nashiño River, Cononaco River, and Curaray River.

    Common Trees of the Amazon Rainforest
    Ceiba Tree or Kapok is the largest tree found in the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador.

    What Weather is needed for An Ocean of Trees?

    The trees have adapted to live in Tropical Humid with no seasons, with an average of 3200 mms of rainfall and an average temperature between 24 – 27 °C with the absolute extreme of 15 – 38 °C.

    Common Trees of the Amazon Rainforest
    The Trees in the Amazon Rainforest have all kind of uses, for navigation is selected the water-resistant species of trees.

    What Soil types Trees of the Rainforest Prefer?

    The Soil of the Yasuní derived from tertiary drained sediments and volcanic sediments, like in many northern Amazonian, the Yasuní it has a wide range of topographic variations causing important changes in the type of soil and vegetation.

    The Terra Tirme soils are well drained and oxygenated with a high content of clay and poor in organic matter. There is a significant variation in the nutrients accumulation related to inclination and elevation.

    List of the Trees that can be found in Terra Firme:

    • Anacardium excelsum (Bertero & Balb.) Anacardiaceae
    • Calophyllum longifolium (Willd.) Clusiaceae
    • Dipteryx panamensis (Pitt.) Papilionoideae
    • Gustavia superba (H.B.K.) Berg. Lecythidaceae
    • Tabebuia rosea (Bertl.) Bignoniaceae
    • Virola surinamensis (Rol.) Warb. Myristicaceae
    Common Trees of the Amazon Rainforest
    Many Mammals of the Amazon Rainforest uses trees to hide in plain sight!!

    Várzea or Seasonal Floodplain soils inundated by whitewater rivers that occur in the Amazon biome composed of alluvial and fluvial Holocene sediments (less than 10,000 years old) loosed from the eastern slopes of the Andes Mountains.

    List of the Trees that can be found in Varzea or Seasonal Floodplain:

    • Carapa guianensis (Aubl.) Meliaceae
    • Pachira aquatica (Aubl.) Bombacaceae
    • Pentaclethra macroloba (Willd. Kuntze) Mimosoideae
    • Prioria copaifera (Griseb.) Caesalpinioideae
    • Pterocarpus officinalis (Jacq.) Papilionoideae
    • Pterocarpus sp. Papilionoideae
    Common Trees of the Amazon Rainforest
    The Trees in the Rainforest provides all kind of resources to the forest creatures. Brownea produces a lot of sugar for hummingbirds and bees and other insect driven by the sugar.

    The Common Genera of Pioneer Trees of the Rainforest

    • Spondias (ANACARDIACEAE)

    Spondias is a genus of flowering plants in the cashew family. They are distantly related to apple and plum trees. There are 7 species native to the Neotropics. They have commonly named hog plums, Spanish plums, in some cases golden apples.

    • Schefflera (ARALIACEAE)

    • Jacaranda (BIGNONIACEACE)

    • Ochroma BOMBACACEAE

    • Cordia BORAGINACEAE

    • Jacaratia CARICACEAE

    • Cecropia CECROPIACEAE

    • Pourouma CECROPIACEAE

    • Terminalia COMBRETACEACE

    • Muntingia TILIACEAE – MUNTINGIACEAE

    • Aparisthmium EUPHORBIACEAE

    • Croton EUPHORBIACEAE

    • Hyeronima EUPHORBIACEAE

    • Margaritaria EUPHORBIACEAE

    • Sapium EUPHORBIACEAE

    • Inga FABACEAE

    • Schizolobium FABACEAE

    • Miconia MELASTOMASTACEAE

    • Cedrela

    • Ficus MORACEAE

    • Triplaris POLYGONIACEAE

    • Zanthoxylum RUTACEAE

    • Guazuma STRECULIACEAE

    • Apeiba TILIACEAE

    • Heliocarpus TILIACEAE

    • Trema ULMACEAE

  • The Monkeys of the Rainforest

    The Monkeys of the Rainforest

    The Monkeys of the Rainforest

    Noisy Night Monkey. Yasuni Biosphere Reserve in Ecuador

    The Monkeys of the Rainforest are the most diverse group of mammals moving throughout the Amazon Basin.

    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.

    Most of them spend their lifetime in the dense canopy covering all kind of habitats monkeys find a way to survive and diversify, many have a prehensile tail, one of the most interesting feature Nature has come out to fix the the challenge of reaching the edge of the trees in the canopy.

    Humboldt’s Woolly Monkey. Yasuni Biosphere Reserve in Ecuador. Photo By Randi Vickers

    The Monkey of the Rainforest are a very important creatures of the forest, in many ways for example: some species feeds on fruits in the forest, they do best dispersing the genes of of thousands of trees and lianas, Other species feeds eats a little bite of everything and they do the best insect control for many species of tree and lianas.

    Napo Saky Monkey . Yasuni Biosphere Reserve in Ecuador. Photo By Randi Vickers

    Many species of Amazon Rainforest Monkeys covers a lot of area in their outing everyday, for fruits, flowers, invertebrates and forest clay licks. The Red Howler (Alouatta seniculus) and the White-bellied Spider Monkey (Ateles belzebuth) come down to forest clay licks to eat clay and drink the water if it is present.

    Napo Saky Monkey. Yasuni Biosphere Reserve in Ecuador. Photo By Randi Vickers

    The Yasuní Biosphere Reserve in Ecuador is the largest tract of Tropical Rainforest in the Western Amazon Basin, one of the most biologically diverse on the planet. Within the forest of the Yasuní is located Shiripuno Amazon Lodge where lives 9 species of monkeys, all of them sharing the forest resources in at this unique area.
    Here is a list of the Monkeys you can find while visiting the Shiripuno Amazon Lodge found in the Yasuní Biosphere Reserve.

    Callitrichidae Familia
    1. Pygmy Marmoset (Cebuella pygmaea)

    Cebidae Familia
    1. Ecuadorian White-fronted Capuchin (Cebus aequatorialis)
    2. Ecuadorian Squirrel Monkey (Saimiri cassiquiarensis)

    Aotidae Familia
    1. Aotus vociferans Mono nocturno vociferante Noisy Night Monkey

    Pitheciidae Familia
    1. Red-crowned Titi (Plecturocebus discolor)
    2. Napo Saki (Pithecia napensis)

    Familia Atelidae
    1. Colombian Red Howler (Alouatta seniculus)
    2. White-bellied Spider Monkey (Ateles belzebuth)
    3. Humboldt’s Woolly Monkey (Lagothrix lagothricha)

  • THINGS TO DO IN COCA

    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!!