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Articles About Panama Tours And Travel | The Birds of Panama

Almost a thousand species of birds have been identified in Panama, making the country a heavenly destination for birdwatchers. Of special interest to visitors on Panama tours are the many colorful species. Here one may see five species of macaws, including the endangered great green macaw and eleven species of trogons, most notably, the green winged red breasted resplendent quetzal. This most beautiful of all birds is most common in Panama's western highlands and protected in Volcan Baru National Park. The exotic looking multi-colored blue-crowned motmot lives in Panama rainforests. Several species of toucan are found in Panama, most likely to be spotted on Isla Popa in the Bocas del Toro archipelago.
 
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More about the birds of Panama

An astonishing variety of birds to see in Panama
Both the magnificent and great frigatebirds are seen off the coastlines. Panama is home to four varieties of vultures including the black vulture, distinguished by a white patch on the wings of this otherwise all-black bird. Turkey vultures tend to hang around urban areas. To watch brown pelicans fishing and frigates soaring is a most relaxing way to pass the hours on Panama tours. Cormorants are a frequent visitor to the waters off Panama City. A third of the heron, egret and bittern species inhabit Panama. Visitors on Panama tours will see many wading birds such as Ibises and spoonbills and in the mangroves.
Panama is home to many birds of prey including hawks, kites, eagles and falcons. The critically-endangered harpy eagle is Panama's national bird. With a wingspan of up to seven feet, this magnificent creature should be easy to spot, but its dwindling forest habitat has diminished populations, making sightings rare. Visitors are most likely to see a harpy eagle in their Panama travel to the lowland tropical forests of Darien Province bordering Colombia where the treetops provide nesting and hunting habitat. Harpy eagles grab their prey such as monkeys and sloth right out of the trees. The Peregrine Fund's World Center for Birds of Prey studies the species and maintains a captive breeding program here. In addition to releasing forty young birds into Panama national parks and elsewhere, in 2006 it began releasing adult pairs as well. To learn more, go to www.peregrinefund.org.
Jacanas are fascinating to watch on Panama tours because these waders have huge skeletal feet that allow them to stand on floating vegetation. The elegant jabiru is rarely seen but its black head and bill, red neck and white body make observing this stork a memorable event, especially for photographers on Panama tours. Panama is home to two of the world's three species of tropicbirds, the dramatic red-billed and white-billed varieties. With special permission, one may visit the bird sanctuary on Swan's Cay (Isla de los Pajaros) off Isla Colon in the Bocas del Toro archipelago to see the rare red tropicbird, the species' only nesting site in Panama.
Six of the nine species of boobies and fifty-nine different hummingbirds are found in Panama. Fourteen species of owls and many species of woodpeckers and ovenbirds are also seen here.
For the greatest concentration of species, most birders head to La Amistad International Park on the border with Costa Rica. Santa Cruz de Cana in Darien National Park and the national parks of Soberania and Volcan Baru are great birdwatching locations. Among the country's other top birding locations are the Bocas del Toro archipelago, the Barro Colorado in the Panama Canal's Lake Gatun and Coiba National Park's namesake island in the Gulf of Chiriqui. For water species, birding enthusiasts go to the marshes of Las Macanas (Cienaga de las Macanas) in Herrera Province. The variety of Panama's birds is endless. Southern Explorations includes many of these locations on its Panama tours.

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MORE ARTICLES & INFO.

General Panama Articles
The Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
The Birds of Panama
The Red Frogs of Panama
The Magnificent Coral of Panama
Surfing in Panama
Surfing the Caribbean Coast of Panama
Surfing the Pacific Coast of Panama
Snorkeling & Diving in Panama
Snorkeling & Diving in Pacific Panama
Snorkeling in the San Blas Islands
Snorkeling & Diving in Bocas del Toro
Panama's Marine Turtles
The Marine Turtles of Panama
The Leatherback Turtles of Panama
The Hawksbill Turtles of Panama
The Olive Ridley Turtles of Panama
Indigenous Peoples of Panama
Indigenous Panama
The Kuna People of Panama
The Kuna Yala
The Embera-Wounaan People of Panama
The Ngobe-Bugle People of Panama
The Naso People of Panama
Panama's Islands
The Caribbean Islands of Western Panama
The Caribbean Islands of Central and Eastern Panama
The Pacific Islands of Eastern Panama
The Pacific Islands of Central and Western Panama
About the Panama Canal
French Dreams of a Panama Canal
The French Building of the Panama Canal
Working and Dying on the French Panama Canal Construction Project
The American Building of the Panama Canal
Working on the American Panama Canal Project
Diplomacy and the Start of America's Control of the Panama Canal
Diplomacy and the End of US Control of the Panama Canal