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BIRD WATCHING
Costa Rica has long been famous among serious bird watchers,
but many people who would never consider the activity at home
quickly have become interested in the country's spectacular
avian diversity.
With almost 850 species of birds -more than total of what
North America has- packed into an area half the size of Kentucky,
it’s hard not to become enthused about the variety of
feathered creatures one encounters in Costa Rica. And the
country’s travel agencies can provide experienced nature
guides who make any bird watching expedition an educational
experience.
DIVERSITY
One of the reasons for Costa Rica's extraordinary bird life
is the country's great variety of habitats: rain forests,
mangrove swamps, beaches, cloud forest, rivers, etc. And any
two of those ecosystems, with their resident bird species,
are often only a short distance apart.
Birders from North America who visit Costa Rica during the
northern winter invariably recognize familiar faces in the
forest, since many species of warblers, flycatchers, vireos,
orioles, etc. migrate to Costa Rica every winter.
PRESERVATION
The country's exemplary System of National Parks and Protected
Areas provide more than ample stomping grounds for birders,
but just about anywhere you look in Costa Rica, you spot interesting
avian species. Even some of the hotels in the San Jose area
have such colorful critters as blue-grey tanagers, great kiskadees
and crimson-fronted parakeets in their gardens.
However, those interested in bird watching will want to see
the resplendent quetzal, which lives in the cloud forests
of Monteverde, Los Santos region and the Central Volcanic
Mountain Range, and the equally spectacular scarlet macaw,
which can be seen on the Osa Peninsula or the area around
the Carara Biological Reserve.