Steven Dutch, Natural and Applied Sciences, University
of Wisconsin - Green Bay
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The macaws were out but we never got as good a view as we did on January 2. Below: Prop roots and Buttress Roots. | |
| This bridge is a legacy from a past trip. | |
| The UWGB Bridge | |
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Termite mound Below: views of the canopy | |
| Left and below: strangler fig. | |
| Palm fruit. | |
| Termite nest. | |
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Part of the agreement with Carara National Park is that students perform
four half-days of work. This year the details included raking trails,
painting the Quebrada Bonita Bridge, and beginning work on repairs to
another bridge. Maintaining structures here is a constant battle with the
Second Law of Thermodynamics. Below: Quebrada Bonita | |
| Sara Glaeser hauling rocks. The rocks are for the foundation of another bridge. | |
| Throwin' rocks at the professor? Ooh, you better believe that's a flunkin'. | |
| Jesse Berger piling rocks. Matt Dornbush and Phil Hahn assisting. | |
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Alice Billing (in red), Teresa Arnold (in the cap) and Sarah Glaeser formed
a human conveyor belt. Below: loading rocks. | |
| Above: ant freeways | Below: iguana |
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Left: the iguana seeks cover in a pile of debris. Below: an urticating caterpillar. The spines are venomous and break off in the skin, leaving you in a world of 'urt. | |
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Matt Dornbush explains the rules of the plant scavenger hunt, which was to find
representatives of ten plant families. We figured out that the key to botany was to mumble a few syllables and add "-aceae" at the end. For ornithology, it's "-formes," for geology, "-ite." | |
| The Research Station | |
| The canopy over the Research Station. | |
| Costa Rica license plate. | |
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Wild Ginger. We never saw the Professor or Gilligan. Below: the Visitor Center, about 800 meters or half a mile north of the Research Station. | |
| Above: heliconians | Below: Iguana (left) and ctenosaur (right). I nicknamed the ctenosaur Fred. |
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The trail from the Visitor Center leads south to Quebrada Bonita and the two
loops near teh Research Station. Below: entrance to a leaf-cutter colony. Two streams of workers converge on the hole from opposite directions. |
| The forest north of Quebrada Bonita wasn't as intensively disturbed as the forest to the south so the trees are bigger. | |
| The trail provides access to Quebrada Bonita at a couple of spots. | |
| Bracket Fungus. | |
| Freshly painted Quebrada Bonita Bridge. | |
| Wet Paint in English and Spanish. |
| The Tarcoles River has one of the largest and most easily viewable populations of American crocodiles, and the bridge is a major stop for locals and tourists. | |
| Left and below: views up the Tarcoles valley. | |
| Left and below: crocodiles. Lots of crocodiles. | |
| Below: sunset on the mountains. | |
| From left: Bridget Engebose, Jesse Berger and Dan Meinhardt. | |
| From left: Teresa Arnold, Alice Billing and Teri Huben. | |
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Terrace deposits on the Tarcoles bank. Below: west of the bridge the crocodiles lined up in formation. Five are easily visible in the first two pictures. | |
| Below: when the cow comes down to drink, the crocs moo-ve out of the way. | |
| Our best sunset was this one on the Tarcoles. | |
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Created 18 January 2008, Last Update 21 January 2008
Not an official UW Green Bay site