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Building peace in the minds of men and women

La Amistad Biosphere Reserve, Costa Rica

La Amistad Biosphere Reserve and National Park lies in the foothills and mountains of the Cordillera de Talamanca, between the mountain ranges of Panama and Costa Rica. 

Designation date: 1982

Networks

Regional network:  Red de Comités y Reservas de Biosfera de Iberoamérica y el Caribe (IberoMAB) 

Ecosystem-based network: 

  

    Description

    Map

    Surface : 782,687.08 ha 

    • Core area(s): 347,051.0 ha 
    • Buffer zone(s): 309,867.75 ha
    • Transition zone(s): 125,768.29 ha

    Location: 08°41'26.24'' / 10°04'54.56N; 82°42'43.89'' / 83°56'03.82'' W

    Administrative Authorities

    Área de Conservación Amistad Pacifico

    Ronald Chan
    Barrio Villa Ligia, de la UNED 100 metros este y 100 metros sur, San Isidro, Pérez Zeledón
    Costa Rica

    Tel.: +(506) 27 71 31 55

    Email: rbaamistad@gmail.com

    Website ǀ Facebook ǀ Twitter

     

    Ecological Characteristics

    The Cordillera de Talamanca is the highest and wildest non-volcanic mountain range in Central America, formed by the orogenic activity, which created the land dividing the Pacific and Caribbean Oceans. Of the 20 life zones of Costa Rica, at least eight occur in the park, which includes lowland tropical wet rainforest to cloud and paramo forests. Most of the main crest lays within the montane rainforest life zone, characterized by mixed oak forest, the largest tracts of virgin forest in Costa Rica. On high peaks along the ridge over 3,000 meters above sea level, there are frequent stands of paramo, swamps and cold marshes. The paramo on Mt. Kamuk contains the richest and most variated vegetation in the entire Talamanca Range. Signs of tapirs (Tapirus terrestris), possibly of a species as yet unrecorded for Costa Rica are abundant near the Panamanian border. Puma (Felis concolor), ocelot (F. pardalis), jaguar (F. yagouaroundi), Central American squirrel monkey (Saimiri oerstedii) and Geoffroy's spider monkey (Ateles geoffroyi) are found within the biosphere reserve.

     

     

    Socio-Economic Characteristics

    Man's impact on the Indian reservations is considerable, with about 24,950 (2002) people maintaining their traditional lifestyles with free-range grazing, hunting, fishing and use of medicinal plants. Local participation has been supported by NGOs, but it doesn’t exist permanent mechanisms of consultation. In 1987, a strategy for conservation was developed with technical and financial support, but integrative work has declined. However institutions work separately to promote the biosphere reserve concept. This site forms part of La Amistad International Park with Panama.

     

     

     Back to Biosphere Reserves in Costa Rica
     Back to Biosphere Reserves in Latin America and the Caribbean
     Back to World Network of Biosphere Reserves

     

    Last updated: March 2019