One of the top day tours on Costa Rica's Caribbean Coast, Veragua Rainforest Research & Adventure, is celebrating its fifth anniversary this month.
The highly popular nature and adventure attraction, and important scientific research center, was four years in the making and now five years open. In that time, the tour destination has achieved a long list of successes.
"I am very proud to have a top team that is dedicated, hardworking, loyal through thick and thin, and committed to facing challenges. We have had many successes in our relatively short history and I am sure that we will continue into the future," added Veragua owner Martí Jiménez.
Additionally, ongoing salient research is conducted by Veragua's team of on-site biologists, who partner with the University of Costa Rica (UCR), Costa Rica's
National Institute of Biodiversity (INBio), and the National Museum of Natural History to conserve the area's abundant population of amphibians, reptiles, insects, birds, and mammals. International and national student groups come to study and learn about the Neotropical ecosystem.
Since opening on July 4, 2008, more than 70,000 visitors have experienced Veragua Rainforest. They are a main one-day tour destination for cruise line passengers docking in Limón.
Rather than being like a zoo, each sensational wildlife exhibit is an interactive live biology lab. Learn about the fascinating lifecycle of butterflies in the giant butterfly garden.
See iguanas, lizards and snakes up close in the reptile habitat. Be informed about Costa Rica's more than 300,000 species of insects in the insectarium. Enjoy the dynamic Frog Paradise habitat, whic
h has a daytime area for diurnal amphibians, and a nocturnal frog habitat where day turns into night so you can see and hear nighttime frogs in action.
It is Veragua Rainforest's plentiful wildlife that is attracting international scientific recognition. "We've had scientific experts come from around the world to study our wildlife – bats, crabs, lizards, frogs, butterflies, birds," noted Jiménez. "Specialists from Harvard University have called us the 'anole mecca' for the wealth of anole lizards in our forest."
Veragua biologists have made key discoveries of new species of butterflies, beetles and frogs in the area. Last year's Christmas bird count at Veragua found a record-breaking 417 different bird species sighted in a 24-hour period – the highest number registered in Central America.
Jiménez revealed that they are in the process of formalizing a Veragua Foundation for rainforest research with the Costa Rican government. "This will allow us to expand and strengthen our resources for further research," he explained.
Veragua Rainforest is endorsed by Conservation International and The Nature Conservancy.
By Shannon Farley
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