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Posts Tagged "Mangrove"

Orange-fronted Parakeet (Eupsittula canicularis)

Posted on Mar 9, 2015

Orange-fronted Parakeet (Eupsittula canicularis)

While searching for nighthawks in the mangroves in Costa Rica this winter RTPI Affiliate Sean Graesser came upon two Orange-fronted Parakeets (Eupsittula canicularis) in the midst of excavating their nest. This one of the pair swung around and took a moment to look at him before heading back to work.  

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Curu Wildlife Refuge

Posted on Jan 14, 2015

Curu Wildlife Refuge

Curu Wildlife Refuge is home to endless amounts of trees fruiting with coconuts, mangrove estuaries, and rows upon rows of mango trees that have long since forgotten how to fruit. Amongst one of these patches of mango trees is our other banding station, and tucked along the trails that bisect a unique edge habitat of White Mangrove trees are our nets. We placed the 22 nets strategically so they would bisect the many attributes of this unique habitat. We catch a wide variety of resident species, whose unique attributes and colors blend them into the harsh environment of this unique tropical...

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Recaptured Northern Waterthrush

Posted on Jan 10, 2014

Recaptured Northern Waterthrush

RTPI Affiliate Sean Graesser discusses a recaptured Northern Waterthrush (Parkesia noveboracensis) that has been spending multiple winters in Costa Rica’s Curu Wildlife Reserve. He talks about the importance of such a finding and the goals of this tropical research as well as why the birds of our backyards need our help. Video by RTPI President Twan Leenders in December 2013.

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Prothonotary Warbler (Protonotaria citrea) recapture by Sean Graesser

Posted on Jan 4, 2014

Prothonotary Warbler (Protonotaria citrea) recapture by Sean Graesser

This Prothonotary Warbler was originally banded in 2011 as a bird of at least two years of age. We recaptured this bird this year at our site. This mean the bird has traveled at least 27,000 miles so far in his life. It has returned to the same site in a Mangrove estuary in Costa Rica now for three years. It always amazes me to think about the incredible journeys these songbirds make and the need to preserve the habitat on both ends of their life cycles.

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