A highly impacted sampling site for Mike Monfredi’s work on Osa fishes back in 2010.
Images
A tree at the top of Cerro Chai
A purple flower among the green
I haven’t a clue what it is, but it looked pretty…
Cascade at Quebrada Culebra
Large land planarian
Under a log around the Las Alturas field station, Cristian found this predatory, land planarian. These flatworms are predators of other invertebrates, including snails and slugs, and kill their prey, more-or-less, by vomiting digestive juices onto them… then sucking up the slurry. That said, they are harmless to humans as free-living organisms, unlike many other species in the animal phylum Platyhelminthes, which are parasitic.
I’m aware of one important invasive land planarian, and had seen some in Palo Verde, but there appears to be very little information concerning land planarians of Costa Rica. Indeed, a Google Scholar search produced a couple of papers, most of which were written before 1970.
Another individual found at Las Cruces on the tourist cabins:
An epiphytic Piper
Piperonia sp.
Lycophytes at Cerro
Some lycophytes (likely Phlegmariurus talamancanus syn. Huperzia talamancana) at Cerro de la Muerte with sporangia producing strobili. Lycophytes are seedless vascular plants, and the strobili produce spores for dispersal and reproduction.
Mabuya unimarginata
Another viviparous lizard, we caught two Central American Mabuyas (a skink; Mabuya unimargninata), one of which lost it’s tail after I placed my hand atop the tail.
Preparing for Cerro Chai
The NAPIRE group is prepped before the 600 m ascent to the top of Cerro Chair at Las Alturas
Rhinoceros beetle grubs and male adults
Along a thin, elevationally-restricted band on the trails of Las Alturas, dead and dying male rhinoceros beetles lie in the leaf litter. These may be the males of the species posted here,