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Articles About Panama Tours And Travel | The Red Frogs of Panama

Usually referred to as the red frog, the strawberry poison dart frog (dendrobates pumilio) is native to Central America from Nicaragua to Panama. The striking combination of a scarlet red body with royal blue legs is the most common variety, dubbed "blue pants" or "blue jeans." This tiny creature, under an inch long, inhabits lowland rainforests from sea level to an elevation of 3,000 feet on the Caribbean side of the isthmus.
 
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Dendrobates Pumilio - Strawberry Poison Dart Frog

Widespread but most diverse in Panama
The species is most diverse in Panama with varieties in vivid shades of all red, orange, blue, yellow or green, green and yellow, white with red, orange or black and spotted varieties. The most colorful mix is found in Isla Bastimentos Marine National Park though not all in one place. Colors vary by location. A beach on the north side of the island is named after the species. Two of Southern Explorations' Panama tours visit red frog habitat. Both the eight-day Panama Adventure trip and eleven-day Panama Highlights trip spend time in Isla Bastimentos Marine National Park and the former also goes to Red Frog Beach.
The red frog is not as poisonous as some of its cousins and is not a threat to humans. It subsists on a diet of ants that dine on poisonous plants, providing the red frog its protective skin toxin. Males attract females with a loud quick chirp. To hear the distinctive sound before you depart on your Panama tours, go to the University of Michigan Museum's biodiversity website (www.animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu.) After birth, the tadpoles climb aboard the mother who deposits them in different protected areas where she returns to nourish them by laying infertile eggs nearby until they are ready to swim off on their own.
A luxury resort on Isla Bastimentos called Red Frog Beach Club has conservationists alarmed due to its massive projected size and proximity to red frog habitat. To be built in twelve phases, the 1,700-acre development with three miles of beachfront will consist of two marinas, several restaurants, 250 single family residences, 550 condominium units and all the amenities such destinations offer. Panamanian law allows public access to all beaches, including those privately owned. Action Network, an on-line advocacy organization, is campaigning to stop or slow the resort's development. Some argue, however, that planned high-end tourism is more protective of the environment than ubiquitous tourism. You be the judge. For the conservationist side of the story go to www.actionnetwork.org. You may read the developer's point of view at www.redfrogbeachclub.com.

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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