Nature: A Pathway To Salvation For Nicaragua’s Jaguar?
by Stephen Flanagan Jackson
Crouching camouflaged in a gnarled jungle, the jaguar’s muscular rear end coils like a tight spring, graceful tail quivering intensely. In a flash, the spotted tawny jaguar pounces and gains a pit bull-grip on the squealing, unsuspecting peccary. The big cat’s powerful vice of a jaw and stiletto teeth – in synchronized fashion – crush and pierce the feral pig’s skull. The denouement: quick merciful bloody death. (more…)
Posted in In this Issue, Nature, Issue 22: March - May 2008 | No Comments »
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Nature: The Turtles of La Flor
by Justin Haring
Every year between July and January, the sun-soaked southwestern coasts of Nicaragua are invaded by fleets of sea-weary travelers. Crawling languidly from the frothy surf, they perform a ritual that has been repeated since prehistoric times and is now the last hope for the survival of a dying species. If you come to Nicaragua during this period, you have a rare opportunity to witness one of nature’s most awe-inspiring miracles of life: the spawning and hatching of the endangered Olive Ridley sea turtle.
On a stretch of beach about 20 km south of San Juan del Sur, thousands of turtles return from open waters to the same beach where they hatched. Here they deposit the eggs that will produce their armored progeny, handing them over to the cold bosom of evolution already equipped with all they will ever need for survival: a hard shell and a thick skin. And in 50 days, in a shallow hole on the beach of Nicaragua’s La Flor wildlife reserve, a tiny turtle is born. If it is lucky it will make its way out of its hole that very night, into the humid, salty air and into the arms of the only mother it will ever know, the great Pacific Ocean.
Posted in Previous Issues, Issue 13: Dec 2005 - Feb 2006, Nature | No Comments »
Tags: Between, bosom, coasts, Justin Haring, last hope, magazine, nicaragua, olive ridley sea turtle, open waters, pacific ocean, prehistoric times, rare opportunity, salty air, shallow hole, survival, the, thick skin, Waves, weary travelers, wildlife reserve
Nature: Vampire Bats
by Jason Beck
Vampire bats occur only in South and Central America; Nicaragua is no exception. Masaya Volcano National Park’s Cueva de Murcielago is home to a colony of at least 2,000; they are common where ever caves or forests with hollowed out trees provide habitat.
This article is not intended to incite fear, but to shed light on a most unusual animal. The truth about vampire bats is confused in myths and legends that originated in Europe (where there are no vampire bats). In some cases, the vampire myth from Europe was added to the description of the real animal, in other cases the life history of the bats was added to a vampire myth from Europe. May I introduce you to the Vampire Bat?
Posted in Previous Issues, Issue 8: Sep - Nov 2004, Nature | No Comments »
Tags: Between, caves, forests, Jason Beck, magazine, masaya volcano, murcielago, myths and legends, national parks, nature, nicaragua, the, vampire bats, Waves