Results tagged “Dr. B.” from EcoMap Costa Rica
Photo from Trimble, www.trimble.com
The Trimble unit is the essential item to have not only for obtaining our GPS data on specific points, but for allowing us to collect a wide range of data attributes, visualize our data using GIS, and download our information for analysis on-site and back in Dallas. This particular unit will be able to resolve features within 1-3 meters, which for our purposes should be enough to enable a fairly accurate view of the features of our reforestation site. The unit retails for about $4,500, which includes the software for both the XM and our own computers for post-processing.
Many thanks go to Cody Cantrell, Western Data Systems, for spending several hours with us yesterday helping to set up the unit and work on collecting a few field points for practice in using the XM. Cody has extensive experience working with Trimble, and helped us get through a few glitches due to computer difficulties (from our network, not from the unit) to have us in the field collecting data just a short time after the unit arrived. He also created his own tutorial for the XM, which we'll be able to provide to Samantha, Noah, and Adaire who will be working on the mapping part of the project.
Cody works for Western Data Systems in Southlake, TX, so if you have a need for tools for a similar application, give him a call (972-245-4337).

Photo by Lynn Barber, Fort Worth Audubon Society
Birdwatchers looking for manakins find it difficult to see them in the dense understory layers of a forest. However, the birds can be brought out more into the open by mimicking some of their sounds through clapping and finger-snapping. The birds, curious about a potential rival nearby, will move into an open perch to investigate the sounds and allow for a closer look.
The tropics hold a variety of species that are unique, and none are more interesting and challenging than the antbirds. The antbirds are small passerines within the family Thamnophilidae, and are restricted to tropical Central and South America. A second ant-dependent family, the Formicariidae, are found more commonly on the ground, and resemble thrushes in behavior and morphology.
The antbirds are generally insectivores, and gained an association with ants due to their habit of some of following columns
of army ants to feed opportunistically on the insects that are attempting to
flee the ants' advance. So while they do
not necessarily eat ants (although some are obligate ant-followers), the swarms
of ants enhance feeding opportunities.

Barred Antshrike (Thamnophilus
doliatus) in Jaú, São Paulo state, Brazil.
Photo taken by Dario Sanches, from Sao Paulo, Brasil, September 30,2007
There are a number of species that belong to the Thamnophilidae, and these species are typically divided based on size and foraging behavior. These species include the antshrikes, which are large and have a hooked bill similar to the shrikes found in other parts of the world. Smaller antbirds include the antwrens and antvireos, that will forage for tinier insects and often forage on the wing. All members of the group prefer being in the darker lower levels of the forest under a thick canopy. They are commonly cryptic, with dusky brown, black, gray and white coloration. However, some may have iridescent face and neck coloration, as in the case of the Oscellated Antbird.
At the Leaves and Lizards site many of the antbirds can be found in the mature tree habitat, but could be expected to increase in number as the forest becomes more dense and begins to become attractive to insects and army ant swarms.
Toucans are members of family Rhamphastidae in the order Piciformes, and have several qualities in common with another family of this order, the woodpeckers. All members of this order have zygodactyl feet, with two toes pointing forward, and two toes behind. This toe arrangement provides the greatest possible traction for hanging on to tree trunks. Like woodpeckers, the toucans are hole-nesters, and due to limited numbers of natural holes and crevices will often be forced to share the holes with other toucans.
The diet of a toucan is mainly fruit, although they will sometimes consume eggs, insects and vertebrates (mostly frogs and lizards) to add protein to their diet. At the study site we have found that the resident toucans will sometimes move from tree to tree monitoring the ripeness of fruits in order to get the fruits at their peak. We hope that restoration of the Costa Rican rainforest helps to provide more space for these birds to live, and a better food source for them and their young.

If you have a species you would like to have more info on, please let us know!
Dr. B.