During our (largely unsuccessful) two-week search for places to explore the jungles independently, we have encountered 14 mammal species, all new to us. See the attached PDF for more details!
During our (largely unsuccessful) two-week search for places to explore the jungles independently, we have encountered 14 mammal species, all new to us. See the attached PDF for more details!
Hello, I am just back from Vietnam after a very wet but surprisingly successful trip – over 30 species...
During a birding visit to Peru in August 2015, I observed several monkey species in Manu National Park. Among...
Here’s a new report from Torbjorn Lundqvist Ecuador 2015, 3 weeks & 29 species including Woolly, Equatorial Saki and...
Royle Safaris has a specialist mammal watching tour of the Ecuadorean Andes planned for November 2019 (1st – 11th...
Back in those halcyon days, before the collective name for a group of caution was “an abundance’ and when...
If you have spent time looking at bats in Nicaragua – or elsewhere in Central America and southern Mexico...
An impressive set of Central American species here. Costa Rica and Panama, 2019: Romain Bocquier, 45 days & 61...
No sightings, just a report on a new book. I have not seen it; text below is cut and...
Genetically Welsh, spiritually Australian, currently in New York City. I've also lived and worked in London, Canberra, Paris and Lusaka, and visited over 100 countries. There's more here.
For the sake of exactness a correction: the woolly monkeys turned out to not actually be new for us, as the Gray Woolly Monkey (L. cana) that we have seen previously in Peru has also been victim to the Primate Specialist Group and thus shall be soon lumped into the same species.