World Travel, Marc and Peggy Faucher
Panama, 2011
In April we flew south to Panama to visit the historic Panama Canal area and sample its wildlife in the surrounding rainforest. The Canal needs a lot of rain to maintain water levels required to run the canal locks on both ends. Every time the lock doors open to the sea, a huge amount of water is released. The surrounding area is kept wild as a watershed to maintain water levels. Birds and animals are benefit from this need.
Home
1
Oil tanker going through Gatun Locks
Panama Canal, Panama
2
Brown-throated Three-toed Sloth
3
Keel-billed Toucan
4
Canons at the San Lorenzo Fort
San Lorenzo National Park, Panama
5
Forest mushroom
San Lorenzo National Park, Panama
6
Kinkajou
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Blue Dacnis
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Scarlet Tanager
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White-necked Jacobin
The Canopy Tower
Semaphore Hill. Soberania National Park, Panama
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The Canopy Tower
They left the old sign up
Semaphore Hill. Soberania National Park, Panama
11
Monarch butterfly
12
White-faced Capuchin
13
Green Iguana
14
Tarantula
Barro Colorado Island
Panama
15
Greater White-lined Bat
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Green and Black Poison-Dart Frog
17
Western Night Monkeys
18
Chestnut-mandibled Toucan
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Black-throated Trogan
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Pheasant Cuckoo
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Ocellated Antbird
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Brown-throated Three-toed Sloth
23
Panama Canal
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Black-bellied Whistling Ducks
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Little Blue Heron
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Golden-collared Manakin
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Geoffrey's Tamarin
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Mantled Howler Monkey
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White-faced Capuchin
30
Hoffman's Two-toed Sloth
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Pheasant Cuckoo
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White-tailed Nightjar
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Allen's Olingo
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Rufous Motmot
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White-tipped Sicklebill
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Western Pygmy Squirrel
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Silky Anteater
Altos del Maria
El Valle de Anton, Panama
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Panamanian Whiptail Altos del Maria El Valle de Anton, Panama