July (continued)
Up to this point, all of our travels in 2022 had been to countries that we had explored previously. We were really looking forward to Peru, a new country for us that was sure to be full of potential lifers. We planned to spend over two months in this massive, diverse country.
We rented a car from the Lima airport and drove a loop through the center of the country for the first month, focusing on the various ridges and valleys of the Andes, places that often provide habitat for endemic species. We also hung out on the desolate coastline south of Lima, where the cold, offshore Humboldt current is the life force that attracts birds to this region.
We also spent most of a week along Satipo Road, christened the "poor man's Manu Road". The birding and naturalizing opportunities here were ridiculous, and our car was able to navigate the pot-holed, gravel road with relative ease. Though Satipo Road lacks the infrastructure and tourist lodges found on Manu Road, the species are somewhat similar and we connected with some tough ones like Jalca and Junin Tapaculos, Eye-ringed Thistletail and Oxapampa Antpitta. We swung into the Andamarca Valley for a morning and found several yet-to-be-described species and the Black-spectacled Brushfinch, endemic to this valley.
We spent the last couple of days of July at Lago Junín, where we slept at over 4000m in elevation and had to scrape the ice off the car windows each the morning. The puna grasslands were full of birds, but the highlight was a visit to Ondores where a local birder took us out to see the secretive Junín (Black) Rail and Junín Grebe, both endemic to the lake.
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Belcher's Gull |
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American Oystercatcher |
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Vermilion Flycatcher |
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Many-colored Rush Tyrant |
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Laura and I in Pucusana |
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Inca Tern |
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Blue-footed Booby |
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Peruvian Thick-knee |
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Black-chested Buzzard-Eagle |
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Pied-crested Tit-Tyrant |
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A nicely maintained road in the Santa Eulalia Valley |
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Rufous-breasted Warbling Finch |
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Andean Condor |
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White-tailed Shrike-Tyrant |
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Andean Geese and Puna Ibises |
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Painted Big-eared Mouse |
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Olivaceous Thornbill and Gentianella carneorubra |
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Diademed Sandpiper-Plover |
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White-bellied Cinclodes |
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Chilean Flamingo |
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Mountain Caracara |
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Golden-collared Tanagers |
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Rufous-booted Racket-tail |
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Common Chlorospingus |
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White-collared Jay |
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Mantaro Wren |
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Unstreaked Tit-Tyrant |
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Yellow-scarfed Tanager |
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Perisama philinus |
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Olive-backed Woodcreeper |
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Mothing at Hacienda Armorique |
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Rufous-capped Nunlet |
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Melanis smithiae |
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Lanceolated Nunlet |
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Dazzling Glasswing (Godyris duillia) |
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Wattled Guan |
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Chestnut-crested Cotinga |
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Masked Fruiteater |
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Subtropical Doradito |
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Andean Lapwing |
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Ornate Tinamou |
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Vicuña |
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Junín Canastero |
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Junín (Black) Rail |
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Junín Grebe |
August
Our route with the rental car continued in central Peru's Andes. Following in the footsteps of the late, influential ornithologist Ted Parker, we caught up with the Golden-backed Mountain-Tanager, Bay Cotinga, and several other birds that are endemic to remote cloud forests at Bosque Unchog.
PN Huascarán was the furthest north that we ventured in Peru. The impossibly blue waters of alpine lakes set against pristine glaciers provided a scenic backdrop as we observed scarce birds like White-cheeked Cotinga, Green-headed Hillstar, Plain-tailed Warbling Finch and Tawny Tit-Tyrant. On our way back to Lima we stopped into the Marca area, an infrequently-visited dry valley where we found several rare endemic species: Piura Chat-Tyrant, Bay-crowned Brushfinch and Russet-bellied Spinetail.
Laura and I returned the car to Lima and made our way southwards by bus, stopping over in Paracas along the coast, and eventually arriving in the city of Arequipa. Now firmly in southern Peru, we completed a route with a rental car that brought us down the coast to search for Slender-billed Finch and Raimondi's Yellow-Finch, then across the mountains and vast puna grasslands to Lake Titicaca to search for its eponymous grebe and many other birds specialized in these high altitude habitats. A rare Gray-bellied Shrike-Tyrant and a dapper Lesser Horned Owl were big highlights south of Lake Titicaca. Finally, we birded some volcanic slopes near Arequipa and turned up Tamarugo Conebill, White-throated Earthcreeper and several other specialized birds.
We bused to Cusco and picked up another car there, giving us a chance to search for additional endemics in Andean valleys. The east slope of the Andes provided a chance to explore refreshingly green forests and Polylepis forest. At the Abra Málaga pass we found a Critically Endangered Royal Cinclodes, one of my top highlights in Peru! We finished off the month by venturing west to an isolated area home to the Vilcabamba Thistletail, Vilcabamba Tapaculo and Johnson's Tody-Flycatcher, then looping back around and southwest of Cusco where we found species endemic to the Apurimac Valley. The month ended with a rare sighting of the little-known Taczanowski's Tinamou during an epic hike in Sanctuario Nacional de Ampay. It was a busy month!
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Tschudi's Tapaculo |
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Oreiallagma quadricolor |
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Barred Fruiteater |
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Bosque Unchog |
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Golden-backed Mountain-Tanager |
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Line-fronted Canastero |
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Pardusco |
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Yellow-scarfed Tanager |
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Páramo Pipit |
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Our trusty rental car, Pardusco |
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Laura and I in Parque Nacional Huascarán |
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Giant Coot |
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Green-headed Hillstar |
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Ancash Tapaculo |
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Stripe-headed Antpitta |
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Blue-mantled Thornbill |
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Tawny Tit-Spinetail |
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Black-crested Tit-Tyrant |
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Band-winged Nightjar |
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Rufous-backed Inca-Finch |
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Parque Nacional Huascarán |
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Plain-tailed Warbling-Finch |
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Giant Conebill |
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Peruvian Pygmy-Owl |
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Desert Coralsnake (Micrurus tschudii) |
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Russet-bellied Spinetail |
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Gray Gull |
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Least Seedsnipe |
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Laura with our scooter in Paracas |
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Humboldt Penguins |
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South American Sea Lion |
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Semipalmated (left) and Western Sandpipers |
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Belcher's Gull |
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Peruvian Tern |
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Microlophus sp. |
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Peruvian Thick-knees |
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Slender-billed Finch |
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Streaked Tit-Spinetail |
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Cactus Canastero |
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Golden-spotted Ground-Dove |
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James's Flamingos |
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Plumbeous Rail |
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Mountain Guinea Pig |
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Yellow-billed Teal |
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Mountain Caracara |
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Mountain Viscacha |
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Liolaemus sp. |
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Gray-bellied Shrike-Tyrant |
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Andean Avocet (right) |
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Llamas and alpacas |
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Variable Hawk |
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Rufous-collared Sparrow |
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Junonia vestina |
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Bog-walking in search of seedsnipes |
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Rufous-bellied Seedsnipes |
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Tarucas |
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White-throated Earthcreeper |
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Straight-billed Earthcreeper |
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James's Flamingos |
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Puna Canastero |
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Metardaris cosinga |
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White-tufted Sunbeam |
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Royal Cinclodes |
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Nevado Verónica |
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Blue-and-yellow Tanager |
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Lymanopoda prusia |
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Vilcabamba Thistletail |
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Cinnamon Flycatchers |
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Rusty-and-yellow Tanager |
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White-rumped Hawk |
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Bearded Mountaineer |
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White-eared Puffbirds |
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Apurímac Brushfinch |
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Apurímac Spinetail |
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Chestnut-breasted Mountain-Finch |
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Red-crested Cotinga |
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Laura and I with our guide dog at Sanctuario Nacional de Ampay |
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Yungas Pygmy-Owl |
September
Though we had visited "poor man's Manu Road" earlier in Peru, now it was time for the real deal. A week along this road, one of the most biodiverse in the world, was only enough to scratch the surface. From a birding point of view we cleaned up and missed very few species. It was wonderful to dust off the mothing gear once again, while herps were also heavily featured now that we were finally out of the high Andes.
Laura's father, Mark joined us for a week. We tried to fit in as much as we could and we visited high alpine lakes, the varied habitats of the Abra Málaga pass and several Incan ruins. We concluded his visit with four nights at the Secret Forest Research Station in the Amazon basin. Thanks to Chris Ketola's hospitality, we enjoyed productive night-hikes, a morning on a canopy tower and excellent birding and hiking along rainforest trails. Of course, the mothing here was outrageous as well.
Laura and I concluded our Peru visit by venturing down the Río Madre de Díos to another Amazonian research station: Los Amigos. This provided the best birding and mammal watching of the trip; we found nine species of monkeys including Emperor Tamarins and Gray's Bald-faced Sakis, two big targets of mine, and a surprise Southern Tamandua munching on termites one night. During our final day at Los Amigos I completed a highly successful birding big day, where I tallied 265 species in 24 hours. We loved our stay here and we would love to return one day, not least because we dipped on the Black-faced Cotinga.
Peru was incredible. Laura and I will definitely be back; the northern half of the country awaits!
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Scribble-tailed Canastero |
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Pityeja histrionaria |
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Coronidia meticulosa |
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Bathyphlebia agliodes |
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Golden-browed Chat-Tyrant |
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Scarlet-bellied Mountain-Tanager |
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Grass-green Tanager |
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Andean Guan |
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Goeldi's Antbird |
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Euphobetron cypris |
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Red-capped Cardinals |
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Black-throated Mango |
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Ochre-faced Tody-Flycatcher |
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Bolivian Tyrannulet |
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Golden-tailed Sapphire |
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Gould's Jewelfront |
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Rufous-crested Coquette |
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White-browed Hermit |
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Amazonian Antpitta |
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Spectacled Owl |
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Rufous-sided Crake |
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Pale-eyed Blackbird |
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Black-backed Tody-Flycatcher |
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Black-and-white Hawk-Eagle |
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Solitary Eagle |
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Annellated Coralsnake (Micrurus annellatus) |
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Necyria bellona |
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Euspondylus excelsum |
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Puna Tapaculo |
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Abra Málaga |
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Puna Thistletail |
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Yellow-tufted Woodpeckers |
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Black-capped Parakeet |
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Dendropsophus sarayacuensis |
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Yellow-browed Tody-Flycatcher |
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Amazon Tree Boa (Corallus hortulata) |
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Blue-and-yellow Macaws |
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Oxyrhopus melanogenys |
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Common Blunt-headed Treesnake (Imantodes cenchoa) |
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Odmalea sp. |
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Banding a White-flanked Antwren |
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Tropical Thornytail Iguana (Uracentron flaviceps) |
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Amazon Green Anole (Anolis punctatus) |
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Southern Tamandua |
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Emperor Tamarin |
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Black-faced Black Spider Monkey |
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Sooty Antbird |
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Golden-collared Toucanet |
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Toppin's Titi |
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Callicore cynosura |
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White-winged Shrike-Tanager |
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Tropical Flat Snake (Siphlophis compressus) |
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Tiger Rat Snake (Spilotes pullatus) |
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Gray's Bald-faced Saki |
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Scarlet-shouldered Parrotlet |
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Green Jacaraca (Bothrops bilineatus) |
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Three-striped Poison Frog (Ameerega trivittata) |
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Calpodes longirostris |
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Amazonian Horned Frog (Ceratophrys cornuta |
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Collared Puffbird |
1 comment:
Wow incredible, thank you for sharing, Peru is now added on the bucket list
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