FAUNA AND FLORA IN KAIETEUR NATIONAL PARK


Kaieteur National Park is one of few places in the world where you can see endangered species.   The Park supports a micro environment including the local Tank Bromeliads (plants that hold water in their stiff, upturned leafs and which are the second largest in the world) in which the tiny Golden Frog spends its entire life.   The lucky visitor may also see the famous flights of the Swifts or 'Makanaima' birds which nest under the vast shelf of rock carved by the Falls over the centuries.   With luck you may also see the Ocelot, a medium size spotted cat, about twice as large as an average house cat.   On the trail to Johnson's View one can often find the Cock-of-the-Rock with its bright orange feathers sitting on a low branch peering inquisitively at you.
  • GOLDEN FROG

    Golden dart-poison frog (Colostethus beebei), is a small brilliantly colored tree frog that spends its entire life-cycle inside the micro-ecosystem of the cloud forest's bromeliads.   It is an opportunistic sit-and-wait predator whose diet includes many small arthropods, but especially mosquitoes and midges.

    Often described as "jewels of the rainforests," dart-poison frogs, are adorned in various vivid colors to warn potential predators of their deadly toxins.   They have bright patterns of green, red, orange, yellow, blue, white, and/or jet black depending on the species.

    The dart-poison frogs live near rivers, streams, and various small bodies of water, while hunting and living in the foliage and leaf litter of the evergreen forest floor.   A few species have adapted to life in the trees, and other species can be found in the water, too.   Dart-poison frogs, unlike most frogs, are primarily diurnal and can be seen on the forest floor in broad daylight.   Adult frogs receive their nutrition by capturing ants, termites, small insects, and arthropods.   The average lifespan of a dart-poison frog is about 5-7 years, although many live longer than that.

    The mating season, occurring after the rainy season has started, is signaled to begin when sounds of buzzing, humming, chirping, or trilling can be heard all over the forest.   Males attract females through elaborate calls, often after careful planning of the best place to store their eggs until the tadpoles are ready to be placed in water.   After finding the male, the female deposits a few large eggs on a leaf that is in close proximity of a body of water, the site that the male has carefully decided on.   Being near water insures that the eggs will remain moist, which is essential to the tadpoles' growth and development.   The leaf usually hangs about 1.2 meters above the forest floor.   The male then fertilizes the eggs and is responsible for guarding the eggs and making sure that they stay wet.   After 2-4 weeks the tadpoles are ready to be transported to other bodies of water where they will develop into adult frogs.   Many times the male frog carries the tadpoles on his back, which contains a sticky mucus.   In some species the female is responsible for transportation, and in a few species both the male and female seek out the best sites for their baby tadpoles to develop.   Many times the parent frogs take each tadpole to a separate place because the tadpoles are cannibalistic.   How they remember the multiple locations is still unknown.   Good sites for developing tadpoles tend to be bromeliad funnels, branches, hollow trees, and bamboo stalks.   One species even uses the rain filled "monkey pots" found on the forest floor that are produced by Brazil nut trees.   The frogs feed the tadpoles unfertilized eggs about once every five days and show parental care.   After about 2-3 months, the tadpoles have completely developed into adult frogs and are ready to pass on their genes to yet another generation of dart-poison frogs.

    The dart-poison frogs secrete alkaloid poisons, which are complex and bitter-tasting.   Alkaloid poisons, which include caffeine, nicotine, cannabidiol, cocaine, and morphine, are some of the most familiar and addictive drugs known to man.   They tend to interfere with liver and cell membrane function, and they can cause cessation of lactation, birth defects, or abortion.   Alkaloid chemicals are harmful to numerous animals, and some species have been found that can be harmful and even deadly to humans: Touching it can be fatal to a human, especially if the toxins get into the bloodstream through a laceration in the skin.   The frogs do not have poison glands on their feet.

    The alkaloid toxins affect muscles and nerves, many times causing respiratory and heart failure.   The Choco Indians of western Columbia use these frogs in hunting by placing the toxins on the tips of arrows or darts.   The tribes boil the frogs and then dip the darts in the poison, or they hang the frogs over a fire by forcing a sharp stick into their mouths.   The heat causes the poison to moisten the back of the frog in the form of a white froth, making it easy to get on the tip of a dart.   One frog can produce enough toxin to coat 50-100 arrows, and the darts remain toxic for about a year.   The Indians use the darts to kill spider and howler monkeys, as well as other small animals.   The batrachotoxin, the most toxic of the alkaloids, can aid in the hunting of jaguars, deer, and birds.   Frogs of the species Phyllobates terribilis do not have to be killed for their poison.   The Indians just rub the darts on their backs and the poison is secreted.   Studies of the toxins from different species have shown that frogs of similar species have vastly different alkaloid chemicals.

    Due to the rapid destruction of their habitats, these frogs are currently on the threatened list.   Scientists have recently been exploring the possible link between the frogs' diet of ants and the ability to produce alkaloid poisons.   More alkaloids are found in ant species than in any other group of insects, and it has been observed that ants comprise from 50-73% of the dart-poison frogs' diet.   Further research has shown that other non-toxic frog species have diets with only about 12-16% ants.   The consumption of ants that contain alkaloid compounds may be the primary character that led to the development of toxic skin and the radiation of poisonous species.   Researchers are now trying to find ways of raising ant species to feed frogs in captivity in hopes that someday the captive frogs can produce enough alkaloid substances for more substantial findings.   Without these toxins being produced in large accessible quantities, research can be minimal at best.

    Without measures to protect their natural habitats, the dart-poison frogs may become extinct.   Their extinction will decrease the diversity of animal life and prevent many new chemicals from being discovered.   These new chemicals could provide biomedical researchers with information that will help to develop drugs that can be extremely important to humans.   Saving the frogs' natural habitat will prove to be beneficial to everyone.   Who knows....one day, your life may literally be saved by a frog! From: Ecology Of Dart-Poison Frogs, by: David and Ryan, students at Erskine College, Due West, SC, USA

  • SCISSORS TAILED SWIFT

    The white-chinned and white-collared swifts (Cypseloides Cryptus) are easily recognized by their rapid, fluttering flight, and long, narrow wings.   Though the swifts of Kaieteur do not look all that different from any other swift, they are remarkable; they make their home on the nearby cliffs of the plateau as well as behind the Falls itself.   These insect-eating birds fill the air at dawn and dusk, and they spend most of their waking time in the air, skimming around Kaieteur Falls and feeding on flying insects.   At night they sweep down at amazing speed to settle in their roosts.   The roar of the torrent is immense, yet these tiny birds dive through the raging water to safety behind.


  • BUTTERFLIES

    Butterflies, including glorious morphos, abound in the gorge of Kaieteur Falls.   Within a few minutes and at several locations, one can identify nearly all the seven or eight species of morphos present, among them Morpho hecuba, South America's largest butterfly, with wings that span eight inches.   The upper side of this majestic glider is a rich dark brown, with a flamelike burst of russet and pearl.   Blue morphos include M. rhetenor, whose glittering royal-blue wings are among the most brilliant sights on earth.   Morphos range in wingspan from 7.5 cm (3 in) Morpho rhodopteron to the imposing 20 cm (8 in) Morpho hecuba.   The entire lifecycle of the Morpho butterfly, from egg to death is approximately 115 days.   Adults live for only a month

    When disturbed Morpho caterpillars emit a smell like rancid butter from fluid-filled tissues on their undersides.   This repels parasitic wasps that try to lay eggs on the caterpillars.   The caterpillars are nocturnal, and feed on a variety of leguminous plants, while the adult butterflies feed on rotting fruit or dead animals, wastes, saps from damaged plants, and fungi

    Morpho Hecuba
    Sun Butterfly With close to an 20 centimeter (8 inch) wingspan, Morpho hecuba is the largest butterfly in South America.   The underside is dark reddish-brown decorated with black spots and lines each outlined with yellow and white.   The female is similar to the male but slightly smaller.






    Morpho Peleides (Blue Morphos)
    Blue Morphos and similar species are reared en masse in commercial breeding programs.   The iridescent wings are used in manufacture of jewellery and as inlay in woodworking.   The lamellate structure of their scales has been studied as a model in the development of fabrics, dye-free paints, and anti-counterfeit technology such as that used in currency

  • OCELOT

    Ocelot(Leopardus pardalis), a medium-size spotted cat is about twice as large as the average house cat, weighing on average about 14 kg (30 pounds).   The fur of the Ocelot, with its dark brown irregular shaped spots and stripes, edged with black on a yellow/tawny background give this lithe, medium size cat a most distinctive appearance.

    The ocelot's hunting technique is varied and is carried out mostly by night - its prey includes small deer, rabbits, rodents, reptiles and when available, fish.   The ocelot swims well and although not as adept in climbing as the Margay, will hunt for birds and also sleep in the lower branches of trees in its forest habitat.   Male and female cats often share territories which can be up to 3 square miles in area.

    As far back as the ancient Aztec civilization, the ocelot has been hunted and prized for its fur.   Today, hunting of the animal, along with deforestation in much of its habitat, has led to the cat's virtual extinction in some of its range.   Once found in many areas of southern North America, Central America and much of South America - the animal has now almost completely disappeared form its range in the southern US.   In Central America and the northern countries of South America the ocelot is still to be found in forested areas but is at risk through hunting for its fur and also through trapping for the pet trade.   Generally the ocelot population has fallen to such low levels it is listed in CITES Appendix 1 as an endangered species.   © 1997 Andrew Garman

  • COCK-OF-THE-ROCK

    The Cock-of-the Rock is one of the world's most spectacular birds.   Its is an important disperser of the seeds of fruit bearing trees in tropical forests and its courtship behavior concentrates these seeds at certain localities, influencing the kinds of trees and shrubs that are predestined to grow there.   Its fantastic plumage and colorful courtship display can equal those of any bird of paradise.

    Two species are recognized: (1) the Andean Cock-of-the Rock (Rupicola peruviana), and (2) the Guianan Cock-of-the Rock (Rupicola rupicola).   Both are restricted to mountainous areas of northern South America.   The Andean Cock-of-the-Rock is distributed in the Andes from Venezuela south to Bolivia, while the Guianan Cock-of-the Rock is found in the more ancient, and highly eroded mountains that lie east of the Andes and north of the Amazon River (i.e. in the Guianas and adjacent areas of Venezuela, Brazil and Colombia).

    Their nests are built on the rock faces of cliffs, large boulders, caves or steep gorges.   The female Cock-of-the-Rock builds her nest and raises the young without assistance from the male.   The normal clutch size is 2 eggs.   Adult Cock-of-the-Rock males spend much of their time at communal courtship sites called leks, where they defend ground and/or nearby perches from other males.   Here they 'display' to Cock-of-the-Rock females visiting the lek who in turn select which males to mate with (Snow 1982).  

    Courtship and nesting behavior of the Cock-of-the-Rock increases local plant diversity When the Cock-of-the-Rock eats fruit, it swallows many of the seeds whole and most of these are not damaged when they pass through its digestive system.   Thus, many seeds remain capable of germinating when the Cock-of-the-Rock defecates or regurgitates them at considerable distances from the parent trees.

    Since the adult male Cock-of-the-Rock concentrates his time and activities around the lek, and the adult female concentrates her time and activities around cliff nest sites (where several females may build nests in close proximity to each other), seeds are deposited more frequently at leks as well as at the female nest sites.   For example, at a lek of the Guianan Cock-of-the-Rock in French Guiana, Thery and Larpin (1993) found seeds of 21 species of plants under the perches of males.   All were believed to have been defecated or regurgitated by the males.   Likewise, Erard et al. (1989) collected droppings under a nest of the Guianan Cock-of-the-Rock in French Guiana, and found in them the seeds of 52 plant species.   In an earlier study, Benalcazar and Benalcazar (1984) collected droppings under 7 nests of the Andean Cock-of-the-Rock at a site west of Cali, Colombia, and in them found the seeds of at least 35 plant species.

    When Cock-of-the-Rock males display at courtship leks, they attempt to attract females with loud noises, brilliant colored plumage and active display.   Unfortunately, such conspicuous advertising also attracts predators to Cock-of-the-Rock leks.   In Suriname, Trail (1987) found that the calls of Guianan Cock-of-the-Rock males displaying at leks could be heard several hundred meters through the forest.   A diverse group of predators was attracted to the leks he studied.

    Cock-of-the-Rock females build their nests on vertical rock faces, in caves or crevices (Snow 1982).   They construct the nest primarily of mud, mixed with saliva and some plant material (Gilliard 1962).   The interior is lined with plant fibers (Gilliard 1962; Benalcazar & Benalcazar 1984).

    Whether the nest-site is in the entrance or interior of a cave, or on a vertical rock cliff, it usually has certain general characteristics.   For example, in the Brazilian Amazon, Guianan Cock-of-the Rock nest sites usually have the following four elements present: (1) closeness to a watercourse, (2) shade or half-light rather than full sunlight, (3) humidity, (4) slits, cracks, fissures or cavities in the rock on which the nest is built (Omena 2003).   If these characteristics are not present, the nest will dry out and then fragment when the female sits on it (Omena 2003).   For this reason, dry cliffs and caverns are never used for nesting (Omena 2003).   By Dr. Paul D. Haemig, Ecology Online Sweden, (PhD in Animal Ecology).

  • TANK BROMELIAD

    The most eye-catching plant in Kaieteur National Park is Brocchinia micrantha, a thick-stalked terrestrial Bromeliad that can grow 3-3.5m (12 feet) high.   Found only here and several nearby areas stimulated by the unique microclimate that Kaieteur Falls has created, this plant collects water in a "tank" formed by the base of its leaves.   The tank is often home to the small Golden Frog (Colostethus beebei).

    Members of the plant family Bromeliaceae are commonly known as 'bromeliads'.   The family contains about 2,700 species and members are characterised by a condensed stem formed by a tight rosette of overlapping leaves.   Bromeliads are restricted in distribution to the neotropics except for one species endemic to West Africa (Pitcairnia feliciana).

    'Tank bromeliads' possess modified rosettes that collect rainwater and organic debris.   Many grow on other plants without parasitizing them.   Tank bromeliads are able to live this way because the tank provides them with an alternative source of water and nutrients other than the ground soil.   Light can be a major limiting factor for plants on the forest floor and the epiphytic lifestyle offers the advantage of access to higher light concentrations without costly investment in large trunks and roots as used by trees.
  • Agouti

    Family
    Dasyproctidae (agoutis and acouchies)
    Dasyprocta leporina (red-rumped agouti)

    The agouti is a medium sized rodent, as big as the largest guinea pigs, with longer, thinner legs.   They have a largish head and a plump body.   Their short, shiny, thick hair that lies flattened has a yellow tinge.   Their medium sized ears are nearly hairless.  They are not endangered and can be found most often in areas with good undergrowth cover, around large tree falls and near streams, rivers and swamps.   Sometimes they inhabit domestic gardens and plantations.   If the soil is suitable they tend to dig burrows.   Their coarse hair is longer on the hindquarters where it is usually bright orange or gold.   When the animal is alarmed or aggressive, these hairs raise.   The head of the agouti is rat like with relatively large, pinkish ears.   The animal is about 20 inches long with a short, hairless tail and long legs that bear five toes on the fore feet and three on the hind feet.   When undisturbed the agouti is said to be diurnal, but in most cases they are considered nocturnal animals.   They spend their days inside holes in trees or burrows that are scraped in the ground in soft limestone boulders or under the roots of trees.   Burrows of this animal are 2 to 3 feet deep and covered over by twigs or leaves.   One animal or a small group consisting of a family occupies each burrow.

    Agoutis are strictly herbivorous and in the wild feed mostly on fallen fruits and nuts, attracted to the sound of ripe fruits hitting the ground.   Agoutis and the other numerous rodents in South America are the ecological equivalent of African grazing hoofed mammals such as antelope and zebras.

    When these delicate eaters are seen eating, they will be sitting back on their hunches, holding their food with their fore feet and peeling their food carefully with their teeth before eating it.   Agouti hoard their food in small stores, which are buried near their landmarks.   They have been known to occasionally eat the eggs of ground nesting birds and have even been seen at the seashore searching for shellfish.   They can open brazil nuts and coconuts with one bite

    When the agouti is disturbed it will first freeze in an attempt to avoid being detected.   It will sit with its body upright and ankles flat on the ground ready to leap off at full speed.   When the agouti leaps away from a predator, it will scream shrilly and has the ability to dodge obstacles with an amazing agility.   Its main predators include the ocelot, jaguar and man.   The agouti is a fast runner, known to escape predators more by speed than hiding.   These very agile animals bound through the under growth, undaunted by precipices on which they display the agility of goats.   Some have been recorded leaping 20 feet from a standing start.

  • Red-and-Green Macaw

    Family (Ara chloroptera)

    Often confused with the Scarlet Macaw, the Green-winged Macaw is mostly red, with blue and green wings, a blue tail and gray legs.   Their face is white and striped with small red feathers; their upper beak is whitish and the lower beak is black.   One of the largest of the Macaws, the Green-winged Macaw can grow up to three feet in length and three and half pounds in weight

    Macaws are to be found in the humid evergreen forest of the Orinoco and Amazon Basins although they can be found in savannahs where there is gallery woodland.   They nest either in holes in trees or in holes in cliffs

    They feed on a variety of seeds and fruits and and some vegetable matter foraged from trees.   They are able to eat some poisonous fruits due to their practice of eating river clay, which appears to neutralize the toxins.

    Boa constrictors, hawks, opossums and rats prey on Green-winged Macaws and their eggs in the wild.   The largest dangers to all Macaws are the illegal bird trade and habitat destruction.

    Green-winged Macaws are frequently seen in pairs or family groups and occasionally gather in small flocks of six to twelve birds.   Larger groups are found in feeding trees or on clay banks, where they may group with other Macaws.   They are fairly shy birds and are difficult to see in foliage.   Usually only heard within the forest, Green-winged Macaws will fly off making loud screeches when alarmed

  • Giant River Otter (Pteronura brasiliensis )

    Otters are mammals, are covered with fur, nurse their young with milk and breathe oxygen from the air.   They belong to the weasel family - Mustelidae and are related to skunks, mink, martens, and badgers.   Otters feed on fish and small animals such as crayfish.   They can crush shells and slice fish with their strong sharp teeth.   They also eat snakes, clams, snails, frogs, and even earthworms.

    The giant river otter is the largest of the 13 otter species and is found only in the rainforests and rivers of South America.   Nicknamed in Spanish "lobos de rio" or "the river wolves," the giant otter (Pteronura brasiliensis) can grow up to seven feet long (2m) and weight up to 70 pounds (32 kg).   The giant otter hunts in packs of four to ten adults and has a remarkable predatory instinct and unusual feeding habits.   Though primarily feeding on fish, the giant otter has been seen attacking and devouring anaconda snakes and caiman.   Even stranger, it eats all of its fish prey, including the bones.   Using its wolf-like teeth, water current-sensing whiskers, and strong webbed forehands, the giant otter is quite an effective water hunter.  

    Giant otters are extremely social animals and prefer to stay in familial groups.   During the day, they often groom one another, which according to scientists, promotes group unity.   At night, they retire to communal dens, dug ten feet into the ground along shorelines.   The dens provide safety as well as warm birth quarters for new pups.   Usually, only one pair of giant otters breed within a pack, producing on average four pups.

    Giant otters are rare sights and found only in isolated jungle regions.   Scientists are currently studying the giant otter's ecological niche to help better protect their species from extinction.

    Adult male river otters weigh 4.5 to 14 Kilograms.   They measure up to 1.4 meters long, including the tail.   Females are somewhat smaller.   Otters can hold their breath and stay under water for up to four minutes.

    River otters have good eyesight and a very keen sense of smell.   They make many different sounds.   They chatter, chuckle, grunt, snort, and growl.   They also warn other otters of danger with a shrill whistle.   River otters mark their territory by rubbing musk on logs and stones.   Musk is a sweet smelling liquid produced by scent glands near the tail.   Otters have dens, or homes, on land, in the banks of rivers and ponds.

    With an estimated total population of only 1,000 to 5,000 individuals, the giant river otter is considered highly vulnerable to extinction.   In a recent analysis conducted by World Wildlife Fund, the species was assessed as the large Neotropical vertebrate species most vulnerable to extinction

  • The Giant Otter in the Guianas

    In the Guianas, the Giant otter enjoys relative security, particularly in the more remote areas.   The first detailed study of Giant otters in the wild was made by Nicole Duplaix in Suriname in 1976-1978, much of it in Kaburi Creek, Giant otters prefer slow-flowing clear black water creeks and rivers, particularly during the dry season when they prey heavily on fish, such as Hoplias and catfish, that rest on the bottom in shallow water.   They are seen in groups ranging in size from two (a pair) to an extended family group of 7.   Larger groups of 14 or more otters have been seen but were probably two family groups traveling together from their dry season area to their rainy season area.

    Threats to Giant Otters in the Guianas include logging, fishing, hunting, habitat disruption and water pollution.   Although the pelt trade is not a threat to either otter species in Suriname, it has been reported in French Guiana and Guyana.   Goldmining is also a threat to the Giant otter.   Mercury levels in Hoplias, for instance, have been found to have very high levels of mercury in the Coesewijne River where Giant otters regularly occur (WWF).



  • Tapir (Tapirus)

    Amazonian tapirs (also known as lowland or Brazilian tapirs) are one of the largest mammals found in South America.   They belong in the odd-toed group of mammals (horses, rhinoceros, etc.  ) and are the only South American representatives of that group

    Weighing in at anywhere between 350 to 600 pounds, adult tapirs have rather corpulent bodies.   Unusual in appearance, tapirs have thick necks, stumpy tails, and large ears.   Short trunks, used for lifting food into their mouths, are also characteristic of the tapir.   They are a tan to dark brown color, and have a ridge with a fringe of hair running along the backs of their necks.   Baby tapirs are born with spotted and striped coats for camouflage; this will darken as the tapir ages.   The 3-4 toes on each foot are spread out to help them navigate on soft, muddy ground.   Tapirs have a sharp sense of smell and hearing that are useful in evading predators.

    Tapirs are generally most active at night, although they are often active during the day.   Known for their reclusive, solitary lifestyles, tapirs are difficult to see in the wild.   Although they appear to be sedentary, tapirs are able to cover great distances in the forest.   Adaptable to different habitats, tapirs may be found in swamp and hillside areas, savannah, and in cloud forests and rainforests.   Preferring moist areas, they are often found near waterways where they can feed, rest and bathe.  

    Amazonian tapirs are considered browsing herbivores, feeding on herbaceous vegetation and fruits (with a particular affinity for bananas).   As they swim well and can walk on pond bottoms, they will also feed on aquatic plants.

    Being such a large mammal means also being a great source of protein; tapirs are widely hunted by indigenous people in the forest.   Although they are rather large, tapirs are quite defenseless, and it is believed that pumas, jaguars and alligators may prey on small tapirs.   Low reproductive rates and habitat loss due to deforestation have also led to diminishing populations.   Due to their large size, tapirs have been heavily hunted and are increasingly rare in the wild.  

    They are officially endangered

    A juvenile tapir (as shown here) has coloration that helps it blend in with surrounding vegetation.   The adult tapir is a uniform brown.   Young tapir are vulnerable to carnivores such as jaguars, ocelots, and large caimans.
  • Black Howler Monkey(Alouatta caraya)


    The howler monkey, the most widespread primate in South America, gives the sloth a run for the money when it comes to sluggishness.   They breed throughout the year and have a lifespan in the wild of from sixteen to twenty years.   A good portion of a howler's diet is comprised of leaves from emerging trees (though they prefer buds, flowers, fruit and particularly figs), which means that the monkey spends a good deal of its daytime energy digesting and resting.   With such low metabolism, howler monkeys have to move into the sunlight to warm up after cold nights.  

    One stirring thing the howler monkey can do is howl.   When the first explorers came to Amazonia, they fled at the sound of roaring howlers, believing that some terrible creature was readying to attack.   Howler monkeys are able to produce these blood-curdling sounds courtesy of an egg-shaped bone in their windpipes.   This bone helps amplify the sound of their howling, so much so that a male howler can be heard howling for two miles or more

    Reddish in body color and black in face, the howler monkey cautions other animals to stay away by sounding terrifying howls at both dawn and dusk.   These noises alert other howler monkeys of the location of their troops and thus reduce potential conflicts between troops.   The male howler monkey has an enlarged goiter-like hyoid bone that allows it to create its unique, voluminous roars.  

    The howling ritual usually begins with a single male making several low grunts.   To increase the volume and length at which its noise carries through the rain forest, other males in the troop join in and begin to howl.   The howling eventually culminates in one long thunderous roar.   The higher pitched females of a troop also participate in this practice.  

  • Bush Dogs(Speothos venaticus,)


    The bush dog is one of the primitive species in the family canidae.   They are covered with short reddish tan fur and have a long stocky body and short legs.   With small ears and short legs, they look more like weasels or otters rather than dogs.   Although very little is known about this rare animal, their behaviors are being revealed from captive observation.

    It is definitely carnivorous and hunts during the day, preferably in savannahs and tropical and equatorial forests.   Its typical prey is the agouti, a large rodent.   Although it can hunt alone on occasion, the Bush Dog is usually found in small packs of up to 10-12 individuals, which can bring down much larger prey.   It may be the most gregarious among South American canid species.   Most canine species are good swimmers, but, thanks to their webbed feet, the bush dog can swim very well and even dive in the water.   It uses hollow logs and cavities (e.g. Armadillo burrows) for shelter.  

    The gestation period is 63 days, and a litter can have up to six dark grey pups.   Lactation lasts approximately 8 weeks.   The Bush Dog is sexually mature at 1 year and lives for about 10 years.

    Bush dogs can also move very quickly backwards as if having eyes behind their head.   Confronted with enemies, they run backwards to the burrow while keeping their eyes on their enemy.   Just like any other dogs, they mark their territory by urinating; males urinate with a hind leg kicked up, and females do so while balancing on their front limbs as if doing handstand.  

SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH IN KAIETEUR NATIONAL PARK

  • BACKGROUND

    Kaieteur National Park is now attracting researchers from around the world.   Although its value for research has been long recognized (since 1928), it is only recently that scientific research has begun in earnest.   In fact researchers are only beginning to understand the diversity of plants and animals found in the area and there is yet much to be discovered.   The Dean of the Faculty of Natural Sciences at the University of Guyana (UG) has openly emphasized the importance of more biologically based field research efforts in Guyana, particularly in Kaieteur National Park.

    Over the past six years, the University has completed multifaceted research in collaboration with the Smithsonian Institute under the program "Biological Diversity of the Guianas (BDG)" as well as with a group of international research centers for the project "Flora of Guianas".   Major studies were mainly confined to botany but there were lesser studies of vertebrates, birds, amphibians, and mammals as well.  

    For further information the reader is directed to: where several relevant research products on Kaieteur National Park can be found including a checklist of plants existing in Kaieteur National Park and The Use of Biodiversity Data in Developing Kaieteur National Park, Guyana for Ecotourism and Conservation.
    A complete set of organisms collected during these studies is deposited in the Center for the Study of Biological Diversity (CSBD) at the University of Guyana, Georgetown..

    The Centre is a non-governmental organization dedicated to the study, documentation, and conservation of nature.   It is now a key instrument within Guyana for the development of a full range of biodiversification education, research and training programs.

    The Center is frequented by both school children and researchers alike and serves as a highly informative place to visit for potential guests of Kaieteur National Park.  For more information on the Center
  • FUTURE RESEARCH PROSPECTS

    To date, studies in Kaieteur National Park have been mainly directed to creating checklists and inventories of plant species to assist policy makers with conservation.   In 1998, these inventories were used to justify the expansion of the Park boundaries.   The difficulty remains, however, that due to the relatively high cost of both logistical support and site access, expanded research into Kaieteur National Park has been limited to the availability of, and reliance on, small amounts of international institutional funding.   Until such time as qualified biodiversity studies of the Park are completed and published, Kaieteur National Park cannot be seriously considered as a unique habitat worthy of international environmental protection status (vis.UNESCO National Heritage Site).

    To meet this challenge UG is planning to:
    • Catalog all biodiversity research completed on Kaieteur National Park to date (ongoing)
    • Identify what biodiversity uniqueness is required (and endangered species verified) to qualify for international environmental protection status;
    • In association with international experts, establish research priorities, benchmarks, and time frames for research component completion;
    • Identify local and international sources of sustainable funding to complete the task;.
    • Invite qualified experts to compete for and complete all phases of research identified and to thereafter have their findings accepted in published journals;
    • Submit application(s) for: 1) "protected status" designation and; 2) the necessary funding to both sustain any protection granted and to complete follow-on research on a continuing basis.

  • RESEARCH FOR COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT

    In the future, University of Guyana acknowledged that more research should be completed where there is a direct and meaningful benefit to nearby communities.   In order to create any meaningful benefit, indigenous communities should be educated as to the nature of the research to be conducted in their area and the benefits that will accrue beyond their villages.   It was added that greater information from researchers on the economic returns of protecting and selectively culling the flora and fauna should be shared as well.   The University of Guyana strongly believes that scientific research can contribute to reducing the social plights that indigenous communities are facing and their active participation as para-taxonomists could help promote an ongoing biodiversity science subculture while simultaneously assisting ecotourism in Guyana

  • SMITHSONIAN COLLABORATION

    The Smithsonian Institute is almost the only institute conducting scientific studies in Kaieteur National Park.   Its history with Kaieteur National Park goes back to 1909 when The Institute began their first rounds of plant identification and collection.   More advanced research began in 1982 with Smithsonian's 'Biological Diversity of Guianas Program' and the 'Flora of Guianas' project undertaken by various other institutions.   The Smithsonian Natural History Museum in Washington now exhibits samples of rock, termites, wood and leaves as specimens collected from the Park.

    The Institute's research to date has focused primarily on completing an inventory of existing plant species, which will in turn stimulate research in many other fields.   The Institute carried out their studies independently until 1998 when the Government of Guyana requested their assistance with information gathering for the Kaieteur National Park.   Utilizing Conservation International and World Bank funding, the Institute gathered and provided information on land use, biodiversity, GIS mapping and comprehensive recommendations on Kaieteur National Park development.

    In addition to collecting plants, The Institute has lobbied hard to secure funding for the CSBD building at UG and provides research grants for enthusiastic young Guyanese scientists while implementing capacity building activities in partnership with UG in areas of GIS, Para taxonomy and Remote Sensing Laboratory etc.

  • ARE YOU INTERESTED IN RESEARCH IN KAIETEUR NATIONAL PARK?

    Those who wish to conduct biodiversity research in Kaieteur National Park are invited to visit http://www.epaguyana.org/biod/research.htm where you will find all relevant research application information.