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MEXICO
A Birding & Nature Tour
in the area of the Yucatan
A Land of Mayans & Motmots
November 4-16, 2009
(tour:
FON/MX-4 '09)
Tour
to be led by Armas Hill,
who has birded in Central America numerous times
during the last 30 years

A Turquoise-browed Motmot,
called the "clock bird", "pajaro reloj",
because it moves its long tailfeaters
back and forth like a pendulum
THE UNESCO
BIOSPHERES, WHAT ARE THEY?
Of the 14 Biosphere Reserves in Mexico,
5 are in the Yucatan.
We visit 4 of them during this tour.
Established in 1968 by UNESCO
(the UN Educational, Scientific, & Cultural Organization),
the Biosphere project combines the protection of natural areas
and the conservation of the land for local people.
Each Biosphere has a CORE AREA
where human activity is kept to a bare minimum,
a BUFFER ZONE for non-destructive activities such as research,
and a TRANSITION ZONE where traditional land-use
and human settlement is permitted.
After a lull in the 1990s, Mexico's Biosphere program
has regained focus since 2000.
During this tour, the 4 Biosphere Reserves to be visited are:
Sian Ka'an, Calakmul, Rio Lagartos, & Isla Contoy.

Another species of Motmot in the Yucatan,
this is the Blue-crowned Motmot.
Links:
Birds of the Yucatan
(with photos)
Birds of Cozumel Island (with photos)
Mammals of Mexico (with photos)
Amphibians & Reptiles of Mexico (with photos)
Butterflies in the Region of the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico (with photos)
Marine Life, including that of the Coral Reef, of the Yucatan & Belize
FONT'S Previous Mexico Tour Highlights (incl Yucatan Peninsula & Cozumel Island)
An Overview of the
Birds of the Yucatan follows, here, after the Itinerary.
Tour Itinerary:
Wed, Nov. 4, '08:
Arrival at
Cancun, on Mexico's Yucatan
Peninsula. Our first overnight will be not far from the airport.
Birding, this day, for those who can arrive in the afternoon, will be nearby at
the Marin Botanical Garden. It's a nice birding place, with native vegetation -
and even so in the afternoon, as along the paths, some small bird baths have
been strategically placed at intervals, drawing in birds for good viewing, such
as: woodpeckers, woodcreepers, becards, wrens, blackbirds, orioles, and tanagers.
Thu, Nov. 5:
In the morning, we'll take a ferry to the offshore 40-mile long island of Cozumel.
The word "Cozumel" is from a Mayan word meaning "Island of the
Swallows".
But it's not swallows that we'll be seeking to observe there.
Rather, it'll be some birds that live on that island but nowhere else in the
world, each with the adjective Cozumel in their name: a Thrasher, a
Vireo, and
an Emerald (a hummingbird).
The Cozumel Vireo is a great little bird - a vireo with cinnamon cheeks and
sides.
The Cozumel Emerald was at one time one of the subspecies of the Fork-tailed
Emerald, a hummingbird that was widespread in Central America before it was
split into 5 species. Of all of them, the male of the Cozumel Emerald has the
longest tail.
The critically endangered Cozumel Thrasher is a long shot, for sure (there have
been only a handful of sightings during the last decade), but we'll try, and in
the process we'll see a number of the bird specialties of the
Caribbean coast, such as the Black Catbird, Western Spindalis, Caribbean
Elaenia,
and Yucatan Vireo. These will be nice birds to see and Cozumel Island will be a
nice place to see them. Our first overnight on Cozumel.
Fri, Nov. 6:
A full-day on Cozumel Island, observing birds, other nature, and seeing the
island itself. In addition to the birds already mentioned as being on Cozumel,
we'll see others of interest. There are, for example, some notable resident
subspecies of birds on Cozumel including those of Great Curassow, Roadside Hawk,
Yucatan Woodpecker, Golden-fronted Woodpecker, Bright-rumped Attila, Yucatan
Flycatcher, Blue-gray Gnatcatcher, Rufous-browed Peppershrike, Yellow Warbler,
Rose-throated Tanager, Yellow-faced Grassquit, and Northern Cardinal.
The
Western Spindalis (formerly Stripe-headed Tanager) on Cozumel, already noted, is
also a notable endemic subspecies - one that's quite uncommon. The other
subspecies occur in the Cayman Islands, Cuba, and the Bahamas. No where else
does the species occur in Mexico.
Also there's also the "Cozumel Wren", a distinctive form of the
House Wren.
All of the birds, noted here, are endemic subspecies that are found either only on
Cozumel Island, or on Cozumel and the nearby, smaller Holbox Island. Among
these, the curassow, like the aforementioned thrasher, may well be a long shot.
During our most-recent tour on Cozumel, what we did very well after dark were
nighjars - seeing 3 species, the Yucatan Nightjar, the Yucatan Poorwill, and the
Pauraque.
The Stygian Owl is said to occur on Cozumel island. Finding that would be even
more of a prize!
Black Rail has been heard on Cozumel after dark. We'll be listening.
And there's even a species of mammal endemic to Cozumel, a Raccoon. It's called
either the Cozumel Raccoon (for where it is, of course), or the Pygmy Raccoon
(because it's smaller than the widespread Northern Raccoon -
that is not on Cozumel).
At bodies of water and around the coast of the island, there will be a number of
waterbirds, of various sorts.
For those who wish to see some of the fantastic marine life, under the surface
of the sea at Cozumel, there will be opportunity to do so. A listing of some of
the fish and other inhabitants of the coral reef follows this itinerary.
Our second overnight on Cozumel
Island.
Sat,
Nov. 7:
After the ferry crossing back to the Yucatan mainland, we'll travel just over an
hour, inland, to a place called Coba, a
Mayan site in the forest, that's been, for many, a favorite place for birding.
The ruins, at that location, are spread out in a "tropical forest" in which numerous
birds reside (obvious among them are some that would also be described as
"tropical", such as toucans, parrots, and oropendolas).
Among the
"tropical animals" would be agoutis and coatis. One of the
"tropical butterflies" would be the big, and brightly iridescent Blue
Morpho.
The Mayan city at Coba was occupied from about 100 A.D. until the arrival of the
Spanish. Its zenith was around 800 A.D. when most of the pyramids were built.
The tallest of these is the looming Noboch Mul, resembling some of the temples
at Tikal in Guatemala. It is taller than the highest structure in the renowned
ruins of Chichen Itza, one of the more famous sites in the Yucatan. From the top
of Noboch Mul, the forest can be seen stretching uninterrupted to the
horizon.
Roland Wauer, in his book "A Naturalist in Mexico", said that "of
all the Mayan sites that he was fortunate to visit and explore, his favorite was
Coba". Partly, he said, that was due to the "mystery" of the
place. Its human story is not really well known. But also, simply put, a reason
for his so liking the place was "the birds". During a 2-day stay, he
and his friends noted about 100 bird species.
Among them, they found the Mangrove Vireo to be "surprisingly common",
and they observed what Wauer called, in his book, the "greenest of all the
flycatchers", the Eye-ringed Flatbill.
The hotel where we'll stay at Coba is a nice one with very much a Mayan
character to it. It's located at the edge of a small lake, where of course,
there will be some waterbirds. And among those there, to be heard, and hopefully
seen, would be the Ruddy Crake. Our first of two overnights at Coba.
Sun, Nov. 8:
When we're not birding and experiencing Coba, this day, we'll go, about an hour
away, to the Sian Ka'an
Biosphere Reserve, where we will bird both on foot and from a boat. Sian Ka'an
is a wonderful place. It's a large nature reserve, covering 1.3 million acres.
Created in 1986 and made a World Heritage Site in 1987, Sian Ka'an is one of the
largest protected areas in Mexico. It contains all of the principal ecosystems
found in the Yucatan. About one-third of it is tropical forest. Another third is
composed of both fresh and salt water marshes. The remaining third would be
classified as marine environment, including a portion of the Mesoamerican
Barrier Reef.
The variety of flora & fauna at Sian Ka'an is wonderful. To give an idea of
how "natural" the place is, it can be noted that all 5 species of
Mexican wild cats occur: Jaguar, Puma, Ocelot, Margay, and Jaguarundi.
And other
larger mammals include: Tapir, Deer, and Monkeys.
More than 300 species of birds have been recorded in the reserve. Of course,
during our time there we won't see every one of those species, but we
will see a lot of them.
In this wild area, it's nice to note that 4 endangered species of Sea Turtles nest at night on the beaches.
And
In the lagoons, there are both manatees and crocodiles. (One of these is known for
being "gentle"; the other not always so.)
Not many people live in this region. There are only about a thousand permanent
inhabitants, mainly fishermen and subsistence farmers, who dwell in and near the
village of Punta Allen.
We'll dwell, ourselves, again this night, back in the comfortable hotel, with
Mayan character, at Coba.
Mon, Nov. 9:
After some morning birding, with Motmots and more, at Coba, we'll travel south,
going again through the Sian Ka'an Reserve, and observing, along the way, the birds and
whatever other nature we may see. In the afternoon, we'll be by a beautiful lake
in the southern Yucatan that's called, in Spanish, Laguna
Bacalar.
We'll overnight there, where there are some interesting birds of the night,
including the Northern Potoo, the Vermiculated Screech Owl, and the
Ferruginous
Pygmy Owl.
The next morning, we'll hear, and maybe see, the Thicket Tinamou. When we
visited this place during our most-recent Yucatan tour, we were treated to a
flock of brightly-colored Red-legged Honeycreepers keeping company with
certainly more drab Lesser Greenlets, and a Ruddy Woodcreeper at a nest -
utilizing a hole in an old tree.
The first of two overnights by Lake Bacalar, with its beautiful blue water.
Tue, Nov. 10:
After some morning birding in forest and other habitats by Lake
Bacalar, we'll
travel to another area, just over an hour away, but quite different.
The dry habitat of forest and shrub, characteristic of the isolated Yucatan
ecosystem, will gradually fade as we enter an area that's more
green. The areas open fields and forests will be more lush, and there will be
many birds.
A particular place that we'll visit is the Kohunlich Archeological
Site, located
just north of the Mexican border with Belize. The site is away from the highway,
and away from people. There are very few visitors, but many Mayan ruin buffs
consider the place to be one of their favorites. Besides being little-visited,
it is in a beautiful setting among "jungle trees" and with
particularly, a large number of Cohune Palms. Kohunlich is a great place to see
neotropical birds, and other, diverse wildlife is also plentiful and
easily-seen. The area has a high population density of Tapirs, large animals
that can weigh as much as 600 pounds.
Our second overnight by Lake Bacalar.
Wed, Nov. 11:
This day we'll travel west to what may well may the most exciting region that
we'll visit during the tour, a wild area in the interior of the base of the Yucatan, not far north, as the
Ornate Hawk-Eagle or King Vulture would fly from
the northern Guatemalan wilderness, due north from the famous Mayan site of
Tikal. As a region, with very few people, but much wildlife (birds, and
mammals, and reptiles
& amphibians) this vast area of the Calakmul Biosphere
Reserve, and the
adjacent Mayan Biosphere Reserve in Guatemala, is a tremendous expanse where birds
such as the
Ornate Hawk-Eagle and King
Vulture can yet be found. And, if there's an area for Crested and Harpy Eagles
in northern Central America, this is it. (We have seen Crested Eagle
at Tikal,
in Guatemala, a few years ago, and the Harpy Eagle occurred in southern
Mexico historically, and this area is now wild enough, and protected, that it
could again.)
We'll head west across the state line into Campeche.
As we do, the forest will become thicker. It's the densest
"jungle" of the Yucatan, in the
Calakmul Biosphere Reserve.
The ruins, there, with the same name, are the largest and most remote in the
Yucatan. While the best known of the Mayan sites in the Yucatan (places such
as Chichen Itza and Uxmal), can, nowadays, be crowded with visitors, our experience
at Calakmul will be very much the opposite, due to the remoteness of the place.
In regard to birds in particular, and nature in general, there will be much for
us to see.
The Calakmul Biosphere Reserve encompasses 1.7 million acres of
"jungle", or tropical forest. We'll be staying, for 2 nights, just
inside the park entrance, at a hotel with cabins decorated with
"nature-inspired touches".
If we were to travel along the road from the entrance gate to the ruins (60
kilometers) without
stopping, it would take just over an hour to get there. But we won't (go without stopping
that is). There will be much to see.
Among the large creatures residing in the
area, there are Ocellated Turkeys, Deer, Peccaries, Guans, and Currasows.
Obvious in the trees would be Toucans and Trogons; in the sky, or perched,
there should be an ample assortment of Raptors. After dark, when the Jaguars
would roam, various Owls and Nightjars will be out & about.
During our most-recent tour traveling along the 60-kilometer road, mostly in the
reserve, always in the forest, and without a single building along the way, we
experienced a number of notable sightings, including:
A Slaty-breasted Tinamou walking in front of us, across the road (we heard many
tinamous overall in the area).
a male Great Curassow also walking across the road,
numerous Ocellated Turkeys on the road,
and, by the road, birds included: Ruddy Quail-Dove, Blue Ground Dove,
Pheasant Cuckoo, Chestnut-colored Woodpecker, Northern
Royal Flycatcher, Long-billed Gnatwren, and Gray-throated Chat. At a pond near the road, we spend some
wonderful time with an ever-so-tame American Pygmy Kingfisher.
The Calakmul ruins themselves (or at least some of them) were first uncovered in the
1930s. But it has been during the last decade or so that some excavation has
been going on. Every year, recently, new discoveries have yielded more
revelations about the city's former significance. Calakmul
was designated a
World Heritage Site in 2002. It is probably the biggest archeological zone in
Mesoamerica (about 70 square kilometers). The site, although huge, is, of
course, only partially restored. It will be a perfect area to us to explore and
to bird, and that we will do.
Our first overnight at Calakmul. Also, at dusk and after dark this day, we'll do
our first ride along the "60-kilometer road", looking for animals and
listening for, and hopefully seeing, some nightbirds.
Thu, Nov. 12:
This will be a full-day of the exploration and birding in the remote
Yucatan region of Calakmul. We'll do at least two trips along the 60-kilometer road
"in the wilderness". It will be a day so special, to spend all of it,
and into the night again, where nature is now much "as it was", and we
can truly experience a pristine Neotropical natural environment. As we traveled
the road, during our June '08 tour, at mid-day there was a constant procession
of butterflies (mostly sulphurs, but also Blue Morphos
and others). After dark,
there were always bats, some large and some small. In the morning, the sounds of
birds (the tinamous and many others) surrounded us. An assortment of
mammals are
in the forest, from various small opossums and a squirrel to large
cats.
Actually, 5 species of cats commonly live in the area: Jaguar, Puma, Ocelot,
Margay, and Jaguarundi. Along the spectrum of creatures between the
opossums and the cats, others in the region include: the rarely-seen Silky
Anteater, the nocturnal Paca, Coatis, two species of Peccaries,
two species of Deer, and two species of Monkeys. We saw both monkeys during our last tour: the
Yucatan Howler Monkey and the Central American Spider Monkey.
Traveling the road, as we will, before & at dawn, in the morning and
afternoon, and again after dark, should be productive. Our second overnight at
Calakmul.
Fri, Nov. 13:
There will be yet another morning in the area of the Calakmul Reserve, and then we'll
journey north in the Yucatan, seeing what we do along the way. Our overnight
will be in Valladolid, as to be in position for our northern Yucatan birding the
next morning.
Sat, Nov. 14:
In the morning, we go along a small road north to the Caribbean
coast, with
birds along the way such as Black-throated (or Yucatan)
Bobwhite,
Botteri's Sparrow, and Lesser Yellow-headed Vulture. Our destination will
be Rio Lagartos, a small town by the water, where there is yet another
Special Biosphere Reserve. We'll spend the
afternoon birding there, along the north coast of the Yucatan Peninsula. Along
that coast, there's a long barrier island, with an inlet, lagoons, and marshes.
Again, it's another very birdy spot.
The most famous of the birds there is the
American Flamingo. There can be a large number of them - tens of thousands. Of course, the
flamingoes won't be the only birds of interest in the area. As the habitat is
different than many places where we would have been earlier in the tour, there
will certainly be numerous "new birds of the tour" for us.
Particular targets would be
the hummingbird known as the Mexican Sheartail
and the Yucatan Wren
(both endemics to Mexico restricted
to this coast).
Other landbirds that we'd to see would include the Lesser Roadrunner,
Zenaida Dove, and an isolated population of the White-lored Gnatcatcher.
During our visit to this area, there will be a boat-ride to get
to places that we otherwise would not be able to reach.
When we did this boat-trip in 2008, we saw an large assortment of birds,
including many long-legged waders (among them the "Great White Heron",
Roseate Spoonbills, and Boat-billed Herons), shorebirds,
(including Snowy Plover), pelicans (last time we saw both
Brown & American White), Anhingas,
cormorants, gulls, and terns of a few species (Gull-billed, Sandwich,
Royal, and Least).
When we visit in March, there will be more gulls. At that time of year, in
recent years, both Kelp and Lesser Black-backed Gulls have been seen there
together.
During the last 4 years, Jabirus successfully nested in the area. In 2008, they
raised two young.
Overnight near Rio Lagartos.
Sun, Nov. 15:
This day, after some early morning in the area of Rio
Lagartos, we'll travel
east to the Cancun area, where in the afternoon, we'll visit the
Isla Contoy
Bird Sanctuary. As its name indicates, its on an island - off the northeast
corner of the Yucatan Peninsula. Not just a bird sanctuary, but Isla Contoy is
yet another Special Biosphere Reserve. Many birds are there, including
boobies,
frigatebirds, terns, and various other seabirds.
It's a 2-hour boat-ride to the island, on which there's an observation tower,
from which we'll see many of the birds. On the ground, we should see a lizard
endemic to this one little island, the Barred Whiptail.
Whatever we see, it will be a wonderful way by which to end what should be a
wonderful tour.
Overnight near the airport, south of Cancun.
Mon, Nov. 16:
From the Yucatan of Mexico, departure
for home.
Price: $2,795,
per person, based upon double-occupancy. Single
supplement (when applicable): $225
Includes:
All overnight accommodations.
All meals: Nov 5 thru the am of Nov 16.
Drinks (other than alcoholic).
Transportation on land & water within Mexico.
A FONT birding guide familiar with the birds and localities.
Does not
include:
International air fare to/from Mexico.
Airport departure tax.
Alcoholic drinks.
Any items of a personal nature. Gratuities.
Focus On Nature Tours can arrange air travel, and would seek the best possible fares.
Deposit of US $500
required to register for this tour.
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A Brief Overview of the
Birds of the Yucatan Region of Mexico
(including
Cozumel Island)
Cumulatively, about 540 species of
birds, belonging to about 75 families, have been found in the
Yucatan region of Mexico, within the 3 states of Campeche, Quintana Roo,
and Yucatan.
Of these, nearly 60 are considered vagrants and occasional visitors. So, simply
put, there are about 480 bird species that regularly occur in the area of
Mexico's Yucatan.
The total of about 540 is approximately half of all the bird species that have
been found in Mexico, and nearly 60% of the number of bird species that have been noted
in the United States and Canada.
The diverse local bird fauna of the Yucatan
is measurably enriched by the peninsula serving as a major thoroughfare for
migratory birds as they head south in the fall and north in the spring. Many of those
birds spread themselves out during the winter from southern Mexico to South
America.
In all, nearly 220 bird species from the north have
been noted in the
Yucatan.
About 35 of them have been vagrants or only occasional visitors.
But nearly 130 of them overwinter in the Yucatan on a regular basis every year.
(A few of these birds, such as the Blue-gray
Gnatcatcher, also have a year-round population that is resident in the Yucatan.)
Another group of northern migrants, numbering about 55
species, are predominantly
transients, traveling through the peninsula. They rest and refuel before continuing on
their journey.
However, again there are a few exceptions, as small populations of some of these
spend the winter, while 2 species maintain small Yucatan breeding populations during the
summer.
The high number of vagrants to the region is largely due to the combination of tropical
storms and weather systems known as "northers" that occur during the peak of the
fall migration in September and October. These weather conditions can, simply
put, blow some birds off their normal course.
There are also some unique, but regular, summer avian visitors to the
Yucatan region
from the Caribbean area, including Sooty and Bridled Terns, Brown
Noddy, and White-crowned Pigeon. They nest on offshore islands and
atolls.
Other summer visitors to the Yucatan include several Flycatchers (such as the Piratic
and the Sulphur-bellied), and a Vireo (the
Yellow-green), that fly north from South America
to nest during
the northern hemisphere's spring and summer months.
In addition to all that's been noted, the Yucatan region has a nice number of endemic bird species (14,
to be mentioned in
the text that follows) and endemic subspecies (almost 100 of them!).
This endemism is due to the area's relatively late emergence from the sea and
then isolation from the interior of the country.
Nearly endemic to the Yucatan are two bird species that are, for the most part, confined to the Yucatan
Peninsula, but with small disjunct populations elsewhere.
These tow birds are
the Yucatan Bobwhite and an interesting hummingbird known as the Mexican
Sheartail. (More about these 2 species follows here in this narrative.)
When referring to the distribution of the Yucatan region's unique fauna, it is
sometimes necessary to include part of the Peten region in northern
Guatemala, and parts of nearby Belize, as some characteristic Yucatan wildlife
occurs there as well.
Just 12 miles offshore from the northeast coast of the Yucatan, is Cozumel Island.
That island is very interesting for its fauna & flora, with even more
endemism. 3 endemic species of birds are found only on that small island:
the Cozumel Emerald (formerly part of the Fork-tailed Emerald,
with the male having the longest forked tail of the 5 former subspecies, now
species, in Central America),
the Cozumel Vireo (with its cinnamon cheeks and sides),
and the rarely-seen, and critically endangered Cozumel Thrasher.
Cozumel Island is also home to a particular Caribbean
species of bird, the Western Spindalis, which occurs nowhere else in Mexico.
The uncommon subspecies of that bird on Cozumel is endemic to the island.
As on a number of Caribbean islands, the Smooth-billed Ani has occurred for a long time on Cozumel.
From there, however, it has recently spread to Yucatan mainland, where it is now along
the coast, south of Puerto Morelos (We saw the species, during our June '08
FONT tour, just south of Tulum.)
Elsewhere in Mexico, Anis are the Groove-billed.
A number of interesting endemic subspecies of birds occur on Cozumel,
including a distinctive form of the large Great Curassow, and a small
version of the Roadside Hawk.
The curassow
is critically endangered; the hawk is threatened.
Other interesting endemic subspecies on the island include:
the "Cozumel Wren" (a notably different form of the House
Wren),
the "Golden Warbler" (conspecific with the Yellow
Warbler, but with the male sporting a rufous cap),
and unique races of the Rufous-browed Peppershrike, and the Blue-gray
Gnatcatcher.
The last of these subspecies, the gnatcatcher, duskier that others of its ilk, was described in
1926 by Ludlow Griscom, a well-known birder/ornithologist from
Massachusetts.
The rare local Cozumel race of the Great Curassow (referred to in the
previous paragraph) is also named after Mr. Griscom, "Crax
r. griscomi". It, by the way, is the only subspecies of that curassow,
other than the nominate in Central America.
There are even more endemic subspecies on little Cozumel Island, including those of these:
Rose-throated Tanager (uncommon),
Golden-fronted and Yucatan Woodpeckers,
Bright-rumped Attila,
Yucatan Flycatcher,
Northern Cardinal,
and the Black Catbird.
That of the Black Catbird was only recently described as such, just a few
years ago.
The Cozumel subspecies of the Yellow-faced
Grassquit and the Bananaquit are only on that island and on the nearby,
smaller Holbox Island.
That subspecies of the Bananaquit has also, in recent years, been found along the
Quintana Roo coast (that is, the eastern coast of the Yucatan
Peninsula), and on northern offshore cayes (or islands) in Belize,
where it was unknown prior to the 1980s.
In all, the total number of bird species known to have occurred on Cozumel
Island is well over 200.
A complete listing is elsewhere in this web-site: COZUMEL
BIRDS
In addition to the 3 endemic bird species just noted as being on Cozumel
Island (the Emerald, Vireo, & Thrasher),
the other 11 endemic birds of the Yucatan
region are:
Ocellated Turkey
Yucatan Amazon (or Parrot)
Yucatan Poorwill
Yucatan Nightjar
Yucatan (or Red-vented) Woodpecker
Yucatan Flycatcher (in the Myiarchus genus)
Yucatan Jay (with its bright, yellow legs)
Yucatan Wren (described as a species only as recently as 1934)
Black Catbird
Rose-throated Tanager
Orange Oriole.
To this list, the Ridgway's Rough-winged Swallow could be added, as it
is a "quasi-endemic" of the Yucatan region, being a resident that breeds
in that area, as well as in nearby Belize, northern Guatemala, and slightly further
west in Mexico.
Mention has been made here, a couple paragraphs ago, to the Yucatan (or Black-throated)
Bobwhite and
to a hummingbird, endemic to Mexico, called the Mexican Sheartail.
Its name not withstanding, the Bobwhite is not truly endemic to the Yucatan,
as a few disjunct
populations have been found, including one in
Honduras.
The Mexican Sheartail is another such species, with another separated,
and in fact very isolated, population. In addition to being along the north
coast of the Yucatan peninsula, close to the sea, it is also known to be in just
a very small area, hundreds of kilometers to the west, in central Veracruz.
The northern Yucatan population of the Mexican Sheartail is found exclusively in
a very narrow range that's only about 1 kilometer wide - mainly between mangroves and
tropical deciduous forest. It has also been found to breed in gardens. That
population of the species is considered "threatened".
The smaller Veracruz population of the Mexican Sheartail is in undisturbed,
dry deciduous forest and overgrazed habitats at about 25 kilometers inland. That
population is critically endangered.
In the northern Yucatan, the Mexican Sheartail has been observed feeding at
flowers of Ipomoea, Justicia, and Helicteres guazumaefolia, and its diet is
supplemented by small anthropods. The bird is often close to the ground.
Just offshore from the narrow range of the Mexican Sheartail in the northern
Yucatan, there are flamingos, as many as thousands of them. They nest in the late
spring and summer in and near the Rio Lagartos Special Biosphere
Reserve. Many
of them spend the winter a couple hundred or so kilometers to the west, as the
flamingo would fly, at the Rio Celestun Special Bioshpere
Reserve.
These birds have long attracted notice. Flamingos, in all likelihood this
population, were recorded as being prominent members of the Aztec Emperor
Montezuma's menagerie.
Although there are still thousands of them, conservationists take a special
interest in the flamingos because their specialized habits make them vulnerable
to drastic population declines. Their numbers have fluctuated in recent years.
The method by which they feed, that is dredging the bottom sediment of shallow
lagoons and estuaries, makes the birds susceptible to toxics in the mud, such as
the lead from leadshot used in shotguns.
The flamingos feed only in areas with very specific water conditions, which can
change abruptly. That happened in 1988 when Hurricane Gilbert damaged some of
the flamingos' prime feeding areas, causing them to seek other sites. Many died.
Also, their nests on mudflats, are easy targets for egg and chick predators,
such as raccoons and foxes.
Yet, the Mexican flamingo population is considered fairly healthy, having risen
from a low of between 8,000 and 12,000 individuals in the 1970s (when the Rio
Lagartos & Rio Celestun Reserves were created), to about 26,000 birds in the
mid-1980s. Hurricane Gilbert (as noted, in 1988) was a setback to this
population growth, but the flamingos have since recovered.
During the FONT tour in June 2008, we saw a number of flamingos. With adults,
there were young birds.
At the edge of one flock of flamingos, a "Great White Heron"
was
walking in the shallow water. That bird is actually a white morph of the Great
Blue Heron, Ardea herodias occidentalis.
In that area of estuaries, mangroves, mudflats, and sandbars, we saw many
waterbirds. Long-legged waders, in addition to American Flamingos and
Great Blue
Herons (both dark birds & the single one), included:
Roseate Spoonbill, White Ibis, Little Blue and Tricolored Herons, Reddish Egrets
(white birds), other white Egrets: the Snowy and the Great; also
Green Heron,
Yellow-crowned Night heron, Boat-billed Heron, Bare-throated Tiger Heron,
Magnificent Frigatebirds, Brown Pelicans, a flock (even in June) of
American
White Pelicans, Neotropic Cormorants, Anhinga, Laughing Gulls, and 4 species of
Terns: Gull-billed, Sandwich, Royal, and Least. Also (even In June),
we saw 10
species of shorebirds, including the Snowy Plover.
We learned that just a couple weeks prior to our being there, the Jabirus, that
nested in the area, departed. They had raised 2 young, during their 4th year of
year of nesting there. Yes, birds beget birds. Many bird species in that region
are common. Jabirus, there, and anywhere in Mexico, are rare.
On sandbars where we saw terns, we learned that at another time of the year,
there are gulls. And, among them, we were told, both Lesser Black-backed Gulls
and Kelp Gulls have been seen together during recent years. That's
interesting, of course, as Kelp Gulls are normally in the Southern Hemisphere,
and the Lesser Black-backed Gull has, over time, been primarily a European
breeding bird, wintering south to
Africa.
It's also notable that the affinity that the coastal vegetation of the Yucatan Peninsula has with the
Caribbean region provides habitat for a number of birds found nowhere
else in Mexico, These include: Zenaida Dove, White-crowned Pigeon, Caribbean
Elaenia, Yucatan Vireo, and Western Spindalis.
To that list, now, a bird that has recently arrived, can be added, the Shiny
Cowbird.
Another bird of the Yucatan with an unusual distribution is the White-lored Gnatcatcher,
found only along the north coast in the state of Yucatan. Otherwise, it inhabits
parts of the west coast of Mexico, with most of its range further south in
Central America.
Generally, most of these birds occur in areas of the Yucatan
region that are protected. There are approximately 40
natural protected areas in the region, covering
almost 9 million acres. These places include both terrestrial and
marine habitats, and include both public and private reserves.
Additionally, 24 sites on the Yucatan Peninsula have been designated as "Important
Bird Areas" (IBAs).
Also worth a mention, of course, are the 5 Biosphere
Reserves in the Yucatan that have been established by the UN
Educational, Scientific, & Cultural organization for both the protection of
the natural areas and the conservation of land for local
people.
All but 17 of the bird species that are included in the "Yucatan list"
are to be found within natural protected areas in the region. And that's a lot
of birds!
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MORE ABOUT THE NATURE IN THE YUCATAN:
Regarding the JAGUAR: It’s the biggest predator in the New World, and needs a lot of space to roam. In the Yucatan, there's a good number of Jaguars, and others CATS too: JAGUARUNDI, MARGAY, OCELOT, and PUMA.
Regarding some of the LIFE in the SEA: The MESOAMERICAN CORAL REEF is 250 kilometers long, in the Yucatan of Mexico and to the south in Belize. It is the most extensive reef in the New World.
Some of the FISH of the REEF include: Atlantic Spadefish, Banded Butterfly Fish, Bar Jack, Blue-striped Grunt, Blue Tang, Dog Snapper, Foureye Butterfly Fish, French Grunt, Green Moray, Honey Damselfish, Nurse Shark, Queen Triggerfish, Schoolmaster, Sergeant Major, Smallmouth Grunt, Southern Stingray, Spanish Grunt, Spotfin Butterfly Fish, Spotted Drum, Trunkfish, White Grunt, Yellow Jack, Yellowtail Damselfish, Yellowtail Snapper.
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