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Locations and Past Projects This course is different than other travel courses because it is research oriented and it is collaborative between UW Green Bay, Saint Norbert College, and the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. Rather than visiting several locations in Panama for a short time, we will instead spend several days at 3 or 4 locations in order to collect data for research projects. These projects were chosen because they offer opportunities to explore an important topic related to biodiversity, as well as to provide unique experiences for students to collect meaningful scientific data. Different faculty will be leading the course each year and may introduce new projects to the course, but some projects will be long-term. |
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Gamboa
Location Gamboa will be our main housing and research location near Panama City. It is a small town located 30 km north of Panama City on the east bank of the Panama Canal, north of the Chagres River. It was was originally part of the infrastructure of the Panama Canal providing housing for Canal personal and their families. We will be staying in a former school building that STRI has converted to a dormitory facility for field courses using Soberania National Park and nearby sites. We likely will be developing projects along Pipeline Road, 17+ km corridor that extends into Soberania National Park (Parque Nacional Soberania, or PNS) from Gamboa Township. This road is considered by many to be one of the best birding locations in all of Central America if not the world. The PNS extends for a minimum of 7.5 km in three directions from Gamboa and is entirely covered by tall tropical forests. It has been protected as a National Park since its establishment in 1979. There are 525 species of birds, 105 species of mammals, 55 species of amphibians, and 79 species of reptiles known in the park. At the Gamboa Field Station, STRI provides laboratories and accommodations for researchers who work at the 22,000-hectare Soberania National Park and nearby STRI facilities. The park is a protected area containing a wide variety of forest and freshwater habitats, administered by Panama’s National Authority for the Environment (Autoridad Nacional del Ambiente, or ANAM). Pipeline Road is famous throughout the world among birders for the diversity of birds found there. It is partly paved and well maintained making it an ideal way to access the rainforest. The Panama Audubon society once counted a world record 357 birds in one of their Christmas bird counts there. For the first six kilometers or so the forest is mostly second growth, but as the road continues the forest is mostly old-growth. A few of the birds we might see include Slaty-tailed, Black-throated Trogons, Golden-collared Manakin, White-bellied Antbird, Purple-throated Fruitcrow, and Blue Cotinga. Rarer old-growth species also are possibilities, including Yellow-eared Toucanet and Crimson-bellied Woodpecker. We might also see other vertebrates like anteaters, howler monkeys, white-faced capuchins, Geoffroy’s tamarin, green iguanas, agoutis, coatimundis, or two- and three-toed sloths. Research Projects:
Links Bocas del Toro Location
We will stay at the The STRI Bocas del Toro Research Station, located just outside the town of Bocas del Toro on Isla Colon, in Bocas del Toro Province, Panama. The 61 sq km Isla Colon is situated in the Archipelago de Bocas del Toro along the Caribbean coast just 35 km from Panama ’s border with Costa Rica. The STRI lab is relatively unique because it is in an area of relatively high productivity and high terrestrial input, which has resulted in a wide diversity of marine and terrestrial habitats within 5 or 15 minutes' boat ride from the station. Nearby habitats include seagrass meadows, corals, coastal forest including some patches of old-growth forest, mangroves and sandy beaches. There are several species of frogs endemic to the islands and a new species of small sloth specializing on mangrove leaves has recently been described. Nearby Bastimentos National Park (Parque Nacional Marino Isla Bastimentos) encompasses a large area of Bastimentos Island of the Zapatilla Cayes in Bocas Del Toro Province. This marine park covers approximately 13,000 hectares of both land and ocean and is home to over 200 species of marine fish. We will fly to Bocas from Panama City. Students will be staying in dormitories that house 4 people to a room. Snorkeling equipment will be available at the lab. Research Projects:
Links Fortuna Location Fortuna is a montane forest research station in the mostly unspoiled highlands of the Chiriqui Province, in western Panama. Near the station, 19,500 hectares of forested lands have been given the status of a Hydrological Reserve by the National Authority for the Environment (ANAM). The reserve is administered jointly by ANAM and EGE Fortuna, S.A (http://www.fortuna.com.pa/). STRI administers one building, "Centro de Investigaciones Jorge L. Arauz", and coordinates closely with EGE Fortuna for additional living and research space in two buildings recently refurbished by the company explicitly for investigators. These facilities are located approximately 2km to the north of the “Centro de Investigaciones Jorge L. Arauz”. Research Project
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| Biodiversity Topics: Introduction . Plants . Animals . Mammals . Birds . Reptiles & Amphibians . Arthropods . Spiders . Insects © 2001-2004 The Cofrin Center
for Biodiversity and the University of Wisconsin Green Bay,
All Rights Reserved |
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