PHOTOGRAPH and Live View Focusing Technique

HOW BROWN CAPUCHIN MONKEY learned to exchange coins for food?

ONE OF THE RARIEST birds of the rainforest

LET'S FIND the harpy eagle nest

ANTENNAS detect the presence of the enemy

BEWARE with the wandering spider

THINGS AREN'T always as they seem

SUSTAINABLE TOURISM in the Peruvian Amazon

THE BEST of 2014 in the Peruvian Jungle

BE AMAZED with these awesome images

Photographing A Harpy Eagle + Canon 800mm f/5.6 lens review and Live View Focusing Technique

 Harpy Eagles are the AH-64 Apache gunship helicopters of the jungle:

  • Stalking the Shadows – Harpy eagles fly below the canopy in the dense shadowy forest hunting for sloths and monkeys.
  • High-Speed Flight – A harpy eagle can reach speeds of over 50mph while attacking prey in a dive.
  • Vertical Flight Capabilities – They have short, broad wings and can fly almost straight up, too, so it can attack prey from below as well as above.

Harpy eagle chick in the Peruvian Amazon

  • Advanced Target Acquisition – A Harpy eagle can turn its head upside down to get a better look at its potential meal. They also have excellent vision and can see something less than 1 inch (2 centimeters) in size from almost 220 yards (200 meters) away.
  • Serious Weapons – Harpy Eagles have huge talons. Their rear talons can reach over 5 inches long – the same size as a grizzly bear’s claws!
  • How rare are harpy eagles? I don’t really know but they are pretty damn rare and seeing a chick in the wild is almost impossible.

Canon 800mm f/5.6 IS USM Super Telephoto Lens (Photograph and Live View Focusing Technique)


I have a Canon 800mm f/5.6 and take it everywhere with me. The lens weighs almost 10 lbs so it can be a little difficult hiking with it in the jungle but it’s totally worth it when I get a good shot.

Here is why I love my 800 (Photograph and Live View Focusing Technique):

  • Largest Lens That Canon Makes: That’s cool.
  • Fluorite Lens Elements: This lens is really really sharp. I think that it could be the sharpest lens that I have ever used. The reason for this is two fluorite lens elements, one UD element, and one Super-UD-glass element.  This makes for outstanding correction of chromatic aberrations and extreme contrast and sharpness.
  • Magnesium Alloy Construction – I constantly bang my cameras and lenses into trees while walking in the jungle. This lens takes all the punishment and keeps ongoing. One time I slipped and fell and slammed the lens onto some rocks and it didn’t break. It also has weather-resistant gaskets that really come in handy in the rain.
  • Image Stabilization: The lens is image stabilized, providing up to 4 stops of correction for camera shake. Now, even though I shoot from a tripod the image stabilization help steady the image when shooting at extremely high magnifications like when I shoot with a crop sensor (1280mm) or with a 2x Teleconverter (2560mm)

Photographing The Rings On Saturn: This lens is so awesome you can take a picture of the rings on Saturn with it. Also, on a clear night you can see the banded clouds on Jupiter and some of its moons.Saturn

Photography Technique: 

harpy eagle chick in tambopata 4

A lot of people ask me about the camera settings that I use.  Here is what I do:

    • Aperture Priority: Aperture priority, often abbreviated A or Av (for aperture value) on a camera mode dial, is a setting on some cameras that allows the user to choose a specific aperture value while the camera selects a shutter speed to match, thereby ensuring proper exposure.
    • Aperture – I use the camera in Aperture Priority mode. I set and leave the aperture value. I set the Av to f/5.6 and never move it. I do this because I want to get as much light as possible into the camera. The lighter the camera gets the quicker the shutter speed can be. The quicker the shutter speed is the less chance of a blurry image.

Also…

    • ISO – I set and leave the ISO – I normally set the ISO to 800 when I start shooting. In very basic terms, ISO is the level of sensitivity of your camera to available light. The lower the ISO number, the less sensitive it is to the light, while a higher ISO number increases the sensitivity of your camera. I increase the ISO in order to reduce the shutter speed. Again, the quicker the shutter speed is the less chance of a blurry image.
    • Shutter Speed – When you are shooting in Aperture priority the camera automatically chooses the shutter speed. To make sure that the settings are correct I use something called the reciprocal rule. The basics of this rule state that if you’re hand-holding your camera, your shutter speed should not be slower than the reciprocal of your effective focal length in order to avoid “camera shake,” i.e. the blur that results from any slight movement of the camera during the capture of the image. I shoot off a tripod but I use long focal length lenses that are susceptible to any little shake or vibration so I still think that this is a pretty good rule of thumb.

Live View Focusing

Harpy Eagle Mommy

I also use something called “Live View Focusing” to get perfect focus and sharp images:

  • Live View and Zoom: I set the lens to manual focus and switch the camera into live view mode. I then zoom into the image and manually focus on the eye or beak of the bird.
  • Focus on the catch light: For super sharp focus I focus on the reflection (sometimes called “Catchlight”) in the eye of the bird.
  • Timer Mode: I switch the camera’s shutter release mode into the two-second timer.  This way I won’t be touching the camera when the photo is taken. This reduces camera shake and vibration. You can also use a cable release to take the photo as well. Using this technique can make the images a lot sharper. It’s good to note that this focusing technique can also be used for macro photography. I use it all the time when I’m taking pictures of bugs.

So that’s how it’s done, folks. I hope that this article and video helped a little bit and gave you some ideas to try out and let me know how you like using the Live View Focusing Technique.  I think that it’s pretty cool. I’m going to start making more videos and writing more articles so stay tuned. I put some more pictures that I took on the trip below. – Jeff

Trogon in Tambopata

Trogon

Aracari in TambopataAracari in Tambopata

slug-caterpillar-in-TambopataSlug Moth Caterpillar

Hunting-SpiderHunting Spider

Juvenile-Cara-Cara-2Juvenile Cara Cara

Dusky-Titi-Monkey-in-TambopataTiti Monkey

Giant-River-Otter-in-TambopataGiant River Otter

Stink-Bug-in-the-Peruvian-AmazonStink bug

Black-Vulture-in-TambopataVulture

Yellow-crowned-parrot-in-the-peruvian-AmazonYellow-crowned parrot

Fauna - Amphibians & Reptiles - Rosmarie Lerner (3)

A Caiman lurks beneath the water’s surface in Tambopata. Photo by Rosmarie Lerner.

Spectacled Caiman

 

 

Hoatzin by Jeff Cremer

Hoatzin

 

By Jeff Cremer

Brown Capuchin Monkey Economics

That human intelligence is superior in the living world is almost a truism. Great intelligence—and a unique ability to reason, to experience emotion, to communicate using complex language, and to understand and employ symbolism—are the criteria by which humans are set apart from the rest of the Earth’s creatures. By our own admission, we are the world’s greatest thinkers, and profoundly so.

Brown-Capuchin-monkey-foraging

A brown capuchin monkey forages in a palm tree at the Tambopata Research Center in Madre de Dios, Peru

 

While we do not yet have any direct evidence, astronomers tell us that as many as a million worlds within our own galaxy, the Milky Way, might be inhabited by intelligent life. And with around 400 billion other galaxies sprawled throughout the cosmos, intelligent life is essentially a statistical certainty—a striking and very beautiful proposition indeed. Yet, for the past several hundred years, scientific discoveries have steadily eroded the uniqueness, the exceptionality, and the centrality of the human species and our place in the world. It all started, of course, with the discovery that the sun does not revolve around the Earth—that our humble little planet is but an insignificant blip in a vast universe replete with countless other worlds, with each one precisely, simultaneously, at its center.

Most recently, however, it is the cognitive scientists—those who study the acquisition of knowledge and understanding through thought and experience—that are teaching us that we must rethink the notion of our supremacy and our matchless intellect, right here on Earth. They are doing so not only by teaching sign language to gorillas and chimpanzees—an astonishingly impressive feat on the part of researcher and ape alike, to be sure—but by teaching us how the brains of our more distantly-related cousins, the monkeys, work. As it turns out, those monkey brains work a lot like our own.

The brown capuchin monkey, Cebus apella, is one of several species of capuchins found throughout the Amazon basin, including in Tambopata. The brown capuchin is widely considered among the most intelligent of the New World primates, or the monkeys and tamarins of the American tropics.

Recently, a group of researchers working in a laboratory at Yale University have successfully introduced the concept of currency to their captive brown capuchins. After months of introducing the monkeys to the small, metal disks that would serve as coins, the monkeys learned that they could exchange these coins for highly prized food items such as grapes.

Before long, the monkeys learned how to budget their coins, especially after the researchers introduced another highly-prized food item to the menu: Jell-O. When the price of Jell-O was reduced compared to grapes, monkeys reacted in precisely the way that current laws of economics in humans predict: they bought more Jell-O.

Perhaps the researchers’ most stunning find came after a monkey was observed exchanging money for sex with another monkey. The monkey had learned well the value of money, and most importantly, that it could be used to trade for goods and services—even prostitution!

 

 

Brown Capuchin Monkey

The facial expressions of brown capuchin monkeys belie their human-like intelligence

 

You might ask, Why do monkeys have or need such powerful brains—which appear to have many of the high cognitive functions of our own—if they don’t appear to use them in many of the same ways that we do? Why, if they are able to barter for food and even sex in a laboratory setting using a symbolic currency, do we not see monkey towns and cities dotted throughout the rainforests of tropical America, instead of only human towns and cities?

We can’t yet answer the second question, although it is most likely the result of a combination of factors, including a poorly-developed vocal organ that prevents the use of complex language, limited tool use, a lack of bipedalism, or other factors which we do not yet know. But we can fairly confidently answer the first question, Why do monkeys have such powerful brains?

Although monkeys do not typically do math or read or write, they do live in cooperative groups with complex social structures. Large groups provide protection in numbers, and with large snakes, jungle cats, and birds of prey standing (or slithering or flying) at the ready day and night to make a meal of a monkey, group life has its benefits.

Powerful brains..

But living in a group presents other challenges. For instance, a strict social hierarchy, in which dominant animals feed first at an abundant resource such as a fruiting tree, say, allows everyone to access food without a brawl each time food is discovered by the group. But how best to remember one’s place in such a hierarchy? Evidently, a large brain allows monkeys to know and recognize other individual monkeys, as well as their own and others’ social statuses.

They also use their powerful brains, just as we do, to analyze the feelings and intentions of others, which is done with the help of a large amount of computing power. As we all know, social life and in-group politics are complex, and powerful brains have given primates the tools they need to survive and reproduce in large social groups.

This explanation makes evolutionary sense for humans, as well. Those individuals with more highly-developed brains—which should, on average, make them more competitive in a group setting—should again, on average, reproduce more. Their offspring, in turn, will have bigger, more powerful brains, and so on, until, after many generations, intelligence on the order of that of humans has evolved from our more humbly intelligent ancestors.

brown capuchin

It is beautiful to consider that we share an evolutionary kinship with these amazing, inquisitive, and crafty creatures. The capuchin’s sharp intellectual abilities provide evidence of that kinship.

 

Discoveries in the cognition of non-human primates—like the brown capuchin monkeys of Tambopata—continue to shatter the notions of total human uniqueness and our superiority over the rest of the Earth’s lifeforms. But, instead of viewing this as a demotion, I argue that such amazing discoveries are causing to celebrate. To celebrate the emerging knowledge that we are part of a complex yet beautiful creation in which all creatures share in the history and a future more interconnected and fascinating than we’ve ever before imagined—even if some of our shared characteristics might seem a bit unsavory.

There remains so much more to learn about human and non-human primate cognition. But one thing is already certain: monkeys are smart, and they use their brains in many of the same ways that we do, often to achieve similar or identical ends. In reality, this should not come as a surprise—on the grand evolutionary tree of life, we are very close relatives. But monkey prostitution? I don’t think anybody expected that!

And as usual, sign up for your free trial of the Amazon cam here and help us identify the Amazon wildlife that is on the photos taken by our 20 square kilometer grid of 78 cameras snapping away in the middle of the Amazon jungle. You can start practicing photo identification with our free illustrated plates of 172 Amazon Rainforest Animals

 

by Geoff Gallice 

Rare Harpy Eagle Nest With Baby = Striking Avian Gold In The Peruvian Amazon

A few weeks ago, wildlife photographers Jeff Cremer of Rainforest Expeditions and Lucas Bustamante and Jaime Culebras of TropicalHerping, had the chance to film and photograph one of the rarest birds of the rainforest, the Harpy Eagle (Harpia harpyja). Not only did they see the eagle, but they were also able to climb into the canopy and observe two of them with its chick for two days. At one point they were so close they had to switch lenses just to get the entire bird in the frame.

 

«It is so rare it’s like seeing a Unicorn,” says Jeff Cremer of Rainforest Expeditions. “When Jaime and Lucas sent me a message on Facebook saying that they found a Harpy Eagle nest I booked the next flight to the jungle.”

 

These eagles are the top predators of the Amazon sky. These massive birds of prey have a wingspan of six to seven feet and, when sitting, have the height of a five-year-old child. Coming equipped with talons the size of Grizzly Bear claws and a huge beak that dismembers monkeys and sloths with ease these creatures clock in as the world’s most powerful bird of prey.

 

Despite its large dimensions (a big female can be more than a meter in length and have a wingspan of more than two meters), actually seeing a Harpy Eagle in the wild is a major birding accomplishment. Unlike other birds of prey, the Harpy Eagle doesn’t soar but prefers to lurk in the canopy of the forest like some monstrous winged feline. It catches prey by surprise and goes after everything from monkeys to kinkajous and even Brocket Deer.

Harpy eagle mother and baby

Their large territory also adds difficulty to the equation since a pair uses anywhere from 3,000 to 7,000 hectares of forest for hunting. When one is seen, it’s usually a brief glimpse of a massive bird flying away through the top branches of the forest.

 

«Birders spend their whole lives just to catch a glimpse of the Harpy Eagle. We were incredibly lucky to be able to sit in a tree for two days right next to a family of them. What makes that especially rare is the fact that a pair of eagles nest just once every two or even three years.» Cremer said. «I’ve seen Jaguars, Tapirs, and Puma and have even been the first person to film new species but seeing this incredible bird feed and interact with its chick was really amazing.»

Harpy eagle baby

charming chick. Photo by Lucas Bustamante.

At around 4:30 am while it was still dark, the team gathered up their photography gear and hiked into the jungle. After a 30 minute hike, the team arrived at the tree and started preparing for the climb up. Using climbing harnesses and ascenders the team climbed twelve stories into a huge rainforest tree. What they saw, perched twelve stories high while strapped to a tree, was a chick nestled in a four-foot thick, five-foot-wide fortress of branches and soft leaves. The chick was patiently waiting for its mother to return and eventually, she did.

 

«We were really surprised when she showed up. She swooped in without a sound while carrying a full-grown Brazilian Porcupine in her claws,» Cremer said. “She just sat there and watched while the baby ate it up.”

 

After they ate the Porcupine, the mother bird began calling until her mate, a huge male, came flying in to deliver half the body of a sloth to the nest.

Harpy eagle with sloth

Fellow wildlife photographers and biologists Lucas Bustamante and Jaime Culebras of Tropical Herping have spent the better part of the last decade photographing wildlife in the Ecuadorian rainforest and were with Cremer to photograph and film the eagle.

 

«In my country, Ecuador, there is an Amazonian tribe called the Huaorani,» Bustamante explained. «They believe that they are descendants of the Jaguar and the Harpy Eagle. They worship these two animals as their gods and view them as being very important to the jungle. After being face to face with this bird it is easy to see why they believe that. Finding myself in the jungle with that mythological creature, was like being in front of a legendary Griffin.»

 

«This rest of the trip was like paradise,» said Jaime Culebras, «We were able to photograph two Jaguars, a Puma with her baby, a family of Otters playing a few meters from our boat, hundreds of macaws eating right in front of our cameras, four species of monkeys on trails and dozens of peccaries visiting the lodge just about every day. Adding the pair of these amazing birds feeding their young in the nest made this trip a dream come true!”

harpy eagle chick in Tambopata

harpy eagle chick in tambopata 4

UPDATE NOTE:  The Wired Amazon Team found a Harpy Eagle Nets in 2017, and they are recording the family behavior in order to learn more about this rare bird.

Follow the Harpy Eagle through the HarpyCam

Journey to a Rare Harpy Eagle Nest

Timing is everything in the Amazon rainforest. So when Jeff and I heard that there was a harpy eagle nest near the Refugio Amazonas Jungle Lodge, we knew that we had a narrow window of opportunity to see these rare birds caring for their young.

 Biologist Aaron Pomerantz and Wildlife Photographer Jeff Cremer visit a rare harpy eagle nest in Tambopata, Peru

Why are harpy eagles so cool? For one, they are the largest eagle in the Americas and are considered the most powerful bird of prey in the entire world. With tarsal claws 5 inches long and a wingspan of up to six and a half feet, these beautiful and formidable predators make quick meals out of monkeys and sloths.

Harpy eagle nests are extremely rare and difficult to find. One researcher I spoke with within Peru described searching for harpy eagle nests as «searching for a needle in a haystack!» There are several reasons for their elusiveness:

  • Harpy eagle nests are sparsely distributed throughout the vast rainforest
  • The adults have slow reproductive rates, producing one chick every two to three years
  • They tend to nest in massive trees, like the Brazil nut, making them difficult to spot from the ground

This last reason made things tricky. If we wanted to film this nest, we were going to need to be high up. So we grabbed our camera equipment, ropes, and harnesses, then climbed up 100 feet into the canopy to observe this rare harpy eagle chick.

Harpy_eagle_Tambopata_Peru

An adult harpy eagle brings back a howler monkey for breakfast. Image by Chris A. johns

harpy eagle chick in Tambopata

 

harpy eagle nest in Tambopata lodge

The harpy eagle nest is constructed in a massive tree in the Amazon rainforest.

The view from the canopy was pretty incredible. We could overlook the seemingly limitless green rainforest and be eye-level with the nest. Jeff’s camera equipment came in handy – although we were around 30 meters away from the nest, the 600mm and 800mm lenses caught some really sharp footage of the chick.

The harpy eagle chick is about 6 months old and looks strong and healthy. The adults have been visiting the nest less frequently and the chick is becoming more active, which indicates it may fledge soon.

harpy. eagle call_and_adult

An eagle chick calls out to the adults for food, mainly eating monkeys and sloths.

All in all, the journey was well worth it. Everyone was safe getting up and down from the canopy and the eagles were not disturbed. We feel very fortunate to have seen such an incredible animal in its natural environment and hope to see the chick return someday as a full-grown adult with a wild mate of its own.

harpy eagle chick_2

The harpy eagle chick will one day be the top aerial predator in this jungle

 

 

You can follow us on Twitter @AaronPomerantz and @JCremerPhoto!

By Aaron Pomerantz

We found (and yelled at) a crazy tentacled caterpillar

On my recent travels through the Peruvian Amazon, I came upon the craziest caterpillar that I have ever seen and subsequently yelled at it for hours.  Why did I yell at it? Well, its strange behavior towards sound was why I noticed it in the first place. I had just climbed to the top of a canopy tower overlooking the rainforest when I called to my group below me – suddenly a flash of movement at eye-level caught my attention.

Hear about my caterpillar adventures below. And to check out more otherworldly jungle creatures — and even help with scientific discovery — join in our Wired Amazon project!

 

On a nearby tree branch hung a caterpillar with four strange tentacle-like appendages protruding from its abdomen. I might never have noticed this small brown insect had it not been for its unusual movement: noises would cause it to fire its tentacles in randomized directions, then slowly twirl back into a spring-like “ready” position to await its next alarm. This reaction to noise was so peculiar that once my group joined me around the creature, we proceeded to take turns yelling at it and filming its contorting reactions for over an hour.

After a little research, I found that this caterpillar is in the moth family Geometridae and is in the genus Nematocampa. Also referred to as ‘horned-spanworms’ or ‘filament bearers’, these peculiar caterpillars can be found in North America and the Neotropics. 

horned-spanworms

 

David Wagner, in his field guide ‘Caterpillars of Eastern North America,’ notes: 

“It is difficult to imagine what the [Nematocampa] larva is mimicking, but the overall effect is not unlike a fallen brown flower with exerted stamens. Alarmed caterpillars shunt hemolymph into filaments, enlarging them by as much as twice their resting length.” [1]


What Wagner seems to be proposing is that the larva movement is similar to the way flowers or other plant matter move in the wind: the behavior more effectively blends the caterpillar into its surroundings.

 Other potential purposes this behavior may serve to include:

  1. The tentacles extend when the caterpillar is alarmed so that an attacking predator (such as a bird) has a higher probability of snagging a tentacle, as opposed to the main body, so that the caterpillar may drop away and escape with its life (similar to how some lizards are able to lose their tails). 
  2. The setae, or “hairs,” located at the tip of a long tentacle could be highly sensitive vibration detectors that are able to sense predacious birds or insects that make nearby sounds [2].

Bizarre Caterpillar With Erupting Tentacles

What do you think? Screaming at caterpillars doesn’t fall into most people’s job descriptions. But that’s exactly what I found myself doing a couple of weeks ago in the Peruvian Amazon, all to bring the story of this bizarre organism to you! Leave a comment below and let us know how you feel about this peculiar caterpillar found in Tambopata, Peru.

To discover these fascinating caterpillars, along with dozens of other incredible species, book your dream trip to the Amazon today!

 

By Aaron Pomerantz, Entomologist 

You can follow me on Twitter @AaronPomerantz

Portraits with One of the World’s Deadliest Spiders

As biologists and general biodiversity enthusiasts, coming across something as impressive as a Wandering Spider for the first time was quite an experience. It can be mildly alarming how abundant Wandering Spiders (Phoneutria spp.) are in the lowland Amazon, seemingly perched on every other leaf along the trail.

wandering spider face in Tambopata by Frank Pichardo

Often hyped as one of the deadliest spiders in the world, some of the arachnids in this genus pack a bite full of several protein toxins. What’s more is that they’re frequently noted to be extremely aggressive once provoked, escalating from quite calm to very angry in a matter of moments.

It’s difficult to tell the eight species of Phoneutria apart from another. They vary widely in outward appearance and many of the diagnostic features are internal. For some species in this group, it’s not really known how toxic their venom is. Because of the difficulty in distinguishing species, and the fact that some Phoneutria may be more venomous than others, the common adage If you don’t know what it is, then don’t pick it up would apply in many ways to encountering a Wandering Spider in the forest.

But that’s not always an option for hyper curious biologists – especially ones that are most interested in enigmatic, often feared (sometimes misunderstood) creatures like the Wandering Spider! So, naturally, we got in close to snap some shots of these impressive arachnids this past winter. We photographed this spider for about an hour and it was very patient with us!

Wandering Spider in the Amazon

Introducing our subject to the Meet Your Neighbors Field Studio to take diagnostic photos of these spiders in situ.

Wandering spider in the Amazon 3

Wandering Spiders have a very conspicuous threat display. Once perturbed, they usually lift two pairs of legs towards the offender and sway from side to side, following any movements by the potential predator. This is a defensive posture and shouldn’t be mistaken as unwarranted aggressiveness. If you see this display, you’ve most likely accidentally disturbed the spider’s perch.

Wandering spider in a leaf

Wandering spider meal

The typical prey items of Phoneutria are larger insects found in and around the understory foliage of lowland Amazonian rainforests.

You can follow Chris on Twitter @Chris_A_Johns

By Aaron Pomerantz

Deception in the Jungle: the Ant-mimicking Spider Aphantochilus rogersi

Things aren’t always as they seem in the jungle. As the sun was setting and we were heading back to the Tambopata Research Center, Chris Johns made a very cool spot. At first, it appeared as if two ants were stuck together on a branch…but upon closer inspection, we realized that we were dealing with an ant-mimicking spider feasting on its ant prey.

spider-ant-mimic-Aphantochilus-rogersi

The mimic in this case is a neotropical crab spider Aphantochilus rogersi (right). It is an incredible mimic of Cephalotes ants (its prey on the left).  Chris and I had to count the legs to be convinced it was really a spider. This type of ant-mimicry is known as myrmecomorphy, as these spiders have evolved morphological and behavioral characteristics to resemble ants.

 

Staff-working-in-Tambopata-in-photographing

Myself and the December team photographing some arthropods ‘Meet Your Neighbors‘ style.

But why did this ant-mimicry trait evolve in the spider? Well let’s break it down:

  • Ants are often equipped with chemical defenses and have lots of sisters to defend one another. This makes them risky prey items for a predator.
  • Spiders, on the other hand, are usually solo and make a juicy meal for a predator, like a bird.
  • So, if spiders become selected over evolutionary time to appear more like ants, it could trick visual predators into avoiding them. This is known as Batesian mimicry: when a harmless species has evolved to imitate the warning signals of a harmful species.

Crab-spider-ant-mimick

 

However, as pointed out in the comment thread in Alex Wild’s post on these spiders, Cephalotes ants have pretty good vision. So if the spider was less convincing in its mimicry, the Cephalotes ants might be able to avoid the predator before it gets too close. It could be that this spider evolved to look like Cephalotes ants for both reasons: to trick the ants and to trick visual predators.

crab-spider-

So the next time you find yourself walking around nature, just remember: things aren’t always as they seem.

Citation: Castanho LM, Oliveira PS (1997) Biology and behavior of the neotropical ant-mimicking spider Aphantochilus rogersi (Araneae: Aphantochilidae): nesting, maternal care, and ontogeny of ant-hunting techniques. Journal of Zoology 242: 643-650.

 

By Aaron Pomerantz

You can follow Aaron on Twitter @AaronPomerantz

What ecotourism means for indigenous tribes in the Amazon

Over the past 30 years, tourism in Peru has seen an explosive increase, growing an average of 25% every 5 years.

As one of the largest and most profitable industries in Peru, tourism at its core is evolving to create new facets that are gaining importance and momentum. Perhaps one of the most intriguing and innovative of these new developments is ecotourism. In the heat of the climate change debates and worldwide push for countries and industries to “go green”, ecotourism in Peru, especially in the Amazon region, has gained popularity among the environmentally conscious travel community. Visitors and industry pioneers are eager to understand how people can travel more responsibly and protect the beautiful destinations affected by modern tourism.

Just as the term implies, ecotourism is a niche of the tourism industry that invokes environmentally sound principles and business practices among players in the tourism industry. It aims to protect the land, wildlife, natural and man-made attractions, as well as the cultural traditions and livelihood of indigenous and local populations.

Posada Amazonas

Posada Amazonas Lodge by Rainforest Expeditions 

 

One of the areas of Peru most affected by tourism is the Amazon Rainforest. This vast region spans about 60% of the country, contains thousands of endemic and endangered plants and animals, and is home to about 5% (about 1.5 million) of the country’s population. Due to the popularity of this region among international travelers and its appeal to natural resource export companies, the 5% population (widely of indigenous tribes and heritage) living in the Peruvian Amazon is sadly overlooked, misrepresented, and even marginalized. It is not uncommon that large companies to force entire indigenous communities off their lands or trick them with complicated legal contracts in order to gain access to cheap lumber, petroleum, and mined precious metals such as gold and silver. 

The Tambopata and Amazon Rivers

While the Peruvian government and environmental activists have made progressive efforts to protect regions of the Peruvian Amazon, unsustainable urban development around the Tambopata and Amazon Rivers has sparked growing controversy. Such projects as the Transoceanic Highway that passes through Puerto Maldonado and unprecedented increases in visitors to the region only threaten further the lands and the livelihood of indigenous people living in the Peruvian Amazon. While the current situation paints a bleak picture for the people of the Amazon Jungle, there exists a gleaming hope in the fundamental tenets of ecotourism

Macaws on a clay lick

Macaw Clay lick – Photo by Paul Bertner

 

How does ecotourism benefit indigenous populations in the Peruvian Amazon, you ask? Well, let’s consider Rainforest Expeditions’ Posada Amazonas project in the Department of Madre de Dios around the Tambopata River. This initiative was envisioned in 1998 in an effort to protect the people of the Ese Eja community as well as their lands and surrounding wildlife from the negative impacts of urban development. The result has been the establishment of a top-quality ecolodge that is owned by the community and co-managed by Rainforest Expeditions.

Ese Eja community also receives 60% of the profits earned by the ecolodge. The Posada Amazonas project is a leading example of how ecotourism can be profitable and conducive to the preservation of natural habitats and indigenous populations. Other entities have followed suit in order to work more closely with indigenous populations in the Department of Loreto. A growing number of tour operators within the Amazon Basin emphasize and promote responsible travel practices, provide energy-efficient and low environmental impact facilities and services, and even help to sell locally-made products hand-crafted by the indigenous communities.

Canopy tower

Canopy Tower at Posada Amazonas – photo by Paul Bertner

So what can we take away from the ecotourism movement in the Peruvian Amazon? We learn that not only is ecotourism profitable, but it is also a completely plausible idea that tourism can benefit both travel companies and assist in the protection of indigenous communities, their lands, and the wildlife which surrounds them.

We also learn that we can all do our part as responsible travelers to reduce our impact on destinations we visit, including the local people who live there. It is as easy as remembering to recycle during your trip and minimize waste with reusable travel gear, or researching to find an eco-friendly hotel or lodge accommodation that also gives back to the local community. Here are some ways you can be a friend to mother nature during your next vacation.

Ceiba tree

 

As travelers and businesses alike, it is important not only to respect the environment of the destination to which we are visiting but also to respect the local people who live there in order to protect the beauty and allure for years to come.

This article is presented by Peru For Less the Peru Tours Experts. Contact us today to book your Amazon Tours adventure.

Wrapping up 2014 with Rainforest Expeditions

Every year, people from all over the world venture to the Southeastern corner of Peru. And it’s not hard to understand why; the Tambopata National Reserve lies in the Amazon Basin and boasts some of the most spectacular rainforest and wildlife this world has to offer. Jaguars, Macaws, Monkeys, CapybaraGiant river otters, and Harpy eagles are some of the notable megafaunas that can be observed in their natural habitat here. But not all of the impressive wildlife in the Amazon is large in size. In fact, the little creatures can be just as fascinating, if not more so.

Most of the planet’s biodiversity comes in the form of insects, worms, and other miniature living organisms, and new species are being discovered each day. Some of our top stories this past year included coverage of unknown species of insects and spiders that were found in close proximity to the Rainforest Expeditions jungle lodges in Tambopata recently!

Here are some of our top stories from 2014:

This Spider Makes Fake Spiders. But Why? 1.21.14. By Nadia Drake. 

 Decoy spider’ sitting at the top of its pseudo-spider structure.

 

 ‘Decoy spider’ sitting at the top of its pseudo-spider structure. Photo courtesy of Lary Reeve

What I learned Hunting Decoy-Weaving Spiders in the Amazon. 6.16.14. By Douglas Main.

Reeves-Pomerantz-eyeing-sad-decoy

Lary (right) and Aaron (left) investigating the ‘Decoy spiders’

 

Expedition to Candamo: Venturing into ‘The Last Rainforest Without Men’. 11.2.14. By Aaron Pomerantz.

 

Candamo-Aldo

Aldo and his team push the boat through strong rapids to make it to Candamo

Predatory ‘Glow Worm’ Discovered in Peruvian Rainforest. 11.19.14. By Lisa Winter.

Harpy_eagle_Tambopata_Peru

Harpy eagle snatches a howler monkey for breakfast.

 

A beautiful Harpy eagle snatches a howler monkey for breakfast. Photo by Chris Johns

 

 

A bioluminescent insect larva protrudes its head from the earth and lures in prey to its powerful mandibles.

Small Glow Worm

Closing out with a fruitful December expedition

This past December, I was joined by two incredible groups in the Amazon. Chris Johns, a friend and colleague of mine, is a graduate student at the University of Florida and assembled a team that rumbled through the jungle with me and guided Frank Pichardo for two weeks. We came across a myriad of amazing animals, including a Harpy eagle that had just snatched a howler monkey for breakfast, caiman, tailless-whip scorpions, monkey frogs, snakes (big snakes!), and much more.

A caiman smiles big for the camera. Photo by Chris Johns.

 

Yellow-bellied-Puffing-Snake

A large Yellow-bellied Puffing Snake was none too happy to see us

Chris, I think you’ve got a bug on your face…A tailless whip scorpion to be exact.

Then I was joined by Christie Wilcox, a rising science communication star who celebrated her successful Ph.D. defense by immersing herself in the Peruvian Amazon. In addition to taking in everything fascinating that the jungle has to offer, Christie was working to gather content for her book on venom (coming soon). This meant getting up close to potentially dangerous animals, including snakes, scorpions, wandering spiders, and bullet ants (ouch!). All in all, we had a safe trip and documented plenty of venomous fauna to satiate Christie’s toxic appetite.

 

 

wandering-spider

A wandering spider displays a warning threat by raising her front pairs of legs. Don’t mess!

bullet ant

The stinger of a bullet ant, is supposedly one of the most painful insect stings one can experience. I’ll take your word for it…

 

 

Large bark scorpions

Large bark scorpions in the Amazon can be found on night hikes. 

Christie, you most CERTAINLY have a bug on your face

So what comes next with Rainforest Expeditions? Ongoing research projects for our peculiar spider and glow worm species push us to stay on top of the scientific literature and techniques so we can gather more data and publish our results. There are still many emerging questions that have yet to be answered. Is the ‘Decoy spider’ a new species? What purpose or purposes does the decoy structure serve? If it is indeed to avoid anti-predation, what predators pushed for the selection of this unique behavior in the spider? Are the ‘glow worms’ a new species and is this a new record of their occurrence in Southeastern Peru?

 

We’re also working to organize more trips over the course of the next year with scientists, photographers, and filmmakers, who are eager to come down to this area which is ripe with unknown animals and discoveries. What comes next isn’t entirely known, and that’s part of the adventure.

 

A perfect day in Tambopata, Peru

A perfect day in Tambopata, Peru

Last but certainly not least, I’d like to thank the people who helped me get here and who have been invaluable colleagues in the field this past year. Lary Reeves is a graduate student at the University of Florida who invited me to join him in the Amazon in May of 2014. What was meant to be a routine research expedition turned into a position working with the Tambopata Research Center (Rainforest Expeditions) as a Science Communicator, and I am thankful to Lary, as well as Jeff Cremer, for giving me the opportunity to come to this place.

All group at Tambopata

 

Top left: Lary Reeves, Douglas Main, Augusto Bazan, and Nadia Drake composed an indispensable team in May where we made some more exciting discoveries about the ‘Decoy spiders’. Top right: In October I organized a team to venture into the remote Candamo region, and it couldn’t have been done without the help of Jeff Cremer, Mike Bentley, Geoff Gallice, Roy, Misael, Rodolfo, Gallo, Pedro, and Aldo. Bottom left: This December trip, I’d like to thank my amazing group with Chris Johns, Kai Moreb, Lauren Georges, Narayan Ghiotti, Frank Pichardo, and Nicole Lizares.

 

Bottom right: Christie Wilcox was a pleasure to have in the field poking at dangerous animals, and I hope we get to do it again soon. One last shout-out to Phil Torres and Jeff Cremer, who have been incredible sources of knowledge, friendship, and collaboration on projects in this part of the world. Wrapping up 2014 with Rainforest Expeditions has been an amazing experience thus far; I can only imagine what the top stories of 2015 will look like…Cheers to the New Year!

 

by Aaron Pomerantz

35 Awesome Photos of Rainforest Animals and Wildlife

Lucas Bustamante recently visited our lodges in Tambopata, Peru for a few weeks and took these incredible photos of Amazon rainforest wildlife.

 

He is a passionate biologist and wildlife photographer from Ecuador. For seven years now, he has been dedicated to documenting Ecuador’s biodiversity, particularly reptiles and amphibians. Lucas has led innumerable field trips and workshops. He also has written several articles and books about tropical ecology and herpetology.

 

His photographic work has been featured in National Geographic, Anima Mundi, Discovery Channel, and many other magazines.

 

Enjoy!

 

Reptiles & Amphibians

Two-Striped Forest-Pitviper (Bothriopsis bilineata)

Two-Striped Forest-Pitviper (Bothriopsis bilineata) photo by Lucas Bustamante

giant monkey frog in the Amazon

Giant monkey frog in the Amazon (Phyllomedusa camba)

 

 

Black Caiman

Black Caiman (Melanosuchus niger)

Scarlet Macaws

Scarlet macaw flying

Scarlet macaw flying, photo by Lucas Bustamante

 

Scarlet Macaw

Photo by Lucas Bustamante. Copyright RFE.

Primates

Red Howler Monkeys (Alouatta seniculus) Playing

"Red Howler Monkey (Alouatta seniculus)

 

Saddleback tamarin (Saguinus fuscicollis)

Saddleback tamarin

Black-capped squirrel monkey (Saimiri boliviensis)

Black-capped squirrel monkey

Toppin’s titi monkey (Callicebus toppini)

Toppin’s titi monkey

Black spider monkey (Ateles chamek)

Black spider monkey

Giant River Otters

 

A giant river otter (Pteronura brasiliensis) calling.

A giant river otter (Pteronura brasiliensis) calling.

 

A family of giant river otters (Pteronura brasiliensis)

A family of giant river otters (Pteronura brasiliensis).

 

Giant river otters (Pteronura brasiliensis) resting

Giant river otters (Pteronura brasiliensis) resting.

 

Giant river otters swimming (Pteronura brasiliensis).

Giant river otters swimming (Pteronura brasiliensis).

Other Mammals

Jaguar (Panthera onca) Swimming In The Tambopata River

Jaguar (Panthera onca) Swimming In The Tambopata River

 

A rare photo of a tapir (Tapirus terrestris)

 

White-lipped peccary (Tayassu pecari)

White-lipped peccary (Tayassu pecari)

 

Capybara (Hydrochaeris hydrochaeris) swimming in the Tamboapta River

Capybara-Hydrochaeris-hydrochaeris-swimming-in-the-Tamboapta-River-

More Amazon Rainforest Wildlife & Landscapes

A-group-of-cattle-egrets-Bubulcus-ibis

A group of cattle egrets (Bubulcus ibis)

Sunrise-Over-The-Jungle-

Sunrise Over The Jungle

The-Sky-Reflected-In-The-Water-Of-An-Oxbow-Lake-

The-Sky-Reflected-In-The-Water-Of-An-Oxbow-Lake-

Boats Parked At The Tambopata Research Center

 

Boats Parked At The Tambopata Research Center

Puddling Butterflies

Puddling Butterflies

 

Tambopata River At Sunset

 

Tambopata River At Sunset

Tambopata River At Sunset

by Jeff Cremer /Photos Lucas Bustamante

 

Follow Lucas Bustamante in Twitter!

 

Discover this amazing wildlife visiting our lodges in Tambopata, Peru, with Rainforest Expeditions

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