Showing posts with label Papallacta Pass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Papallacta Pass. Show all posts

Friday, May 23, 2014

Flowers of Ecuador's Páramo

We can't leave Ecuador without including a few photos of the spectacular flowers at Papallacta Pass near Quito! I don't know what most of them are, but hope that you'll enjoy them anyway.

The area is within Cayambe-Coca National Park, at about 12,000 feet in elevation.

Strange and beautiful
(Photos by Narca)

A lovely composite

One of the many cushion plants that are common to high elevations the world around

Judging by the leaf, this is one of the 4500 species of melastome.

Perhaps a day-flying moth? I can't find a heliconid anything like it!

At last, something familiar –– a paintbrush

A pea with very compact flowers

Distinctive –– does anyone know this one?

Another puzzle

Hummers like this Bromerea species, shown here with Equisetum.

A passion flower, Passiflora mixta, with only a rudimentary fringe around the pistil and stamens. This plant is mainly – or only – pollinated by Sword-billed Hummingbirds (photos above and below)


Sword-billed Hummingbird photographed on a 2010 trip to Ecuador.

This aster, another composite, is a conspicuous shrub.

A species of Solanum, in the tomato family

Farewell to Ecuador, for the time being –– and next stop: Baja California's cape region!

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Papallacta Pass in Ecuador's Andes

Our final day in Ecuador is exhilarating, in the high reaches of the Andes at Papallacta Pass, not far from Quito. The weather couldn't be better –– and it's often a challenge here!

Looking down on the páramo from the heights near Papallacta Pass
(Photos by Narca)

Improvements to the highway from Quito that goes over the pass have made access to the countryside much more difficult. We pull off near the crest and study the situation –– we have been here several times before, and know there is access! –– and find the obscure dirt road that drops from the north side of the highway, and meanders to the guard post for the reserve here. After passing the guard's inspection, we mosey up the road that climbs to the towers atop the mountain.

Among the most sought-after birds in the high Andes is the Rufous-bellied Seedsnipe, a cryptic bird the size of a ptarmigan. I have only seen this seedsnipe once before, in Peru's high country, and then from a great distance. We are very lucky today. One flies in, calling and circling the towers, before landing on the ground not far away.

Rufous-bellied Seedsnipe, a distant relative of our sandpipers and plovers, and not related to the grouse and ptarmigan it resembles!

Other high-elevation specialists also appear, including the striking Carunculated Caracaras.

 Carunculated Caracaras, with a pair below


After an hour or so at the towers, we return through the guard post, and follow the road in the other direction, moving downhill into shrubbier habitat.

A last glimpse of the páramo at Papallacta Pass

Here Andean Condors and Black-chested Buzzard-Eagles are soaring overhead.

Black-chested Buzzard-Eagles show a distinctive, short-tailed silhouette.

Andean Condors are always a treat!

The rustling branches of a flowering composite eventually part, to reveal a charming tit-spinetail.

Andean Tit-Spinetail

 Polylepis trees provide refuge for other species.

A Bar-winged Cinclodes on a Polylepis branch

Plumbeous Sierra-Finch is characteristic of the high Andes...

...as is the widespread Rufous-collared Sparrow.

Perky Shining Sunbeams are quite the fun hummingbird!

Among the shrubs is a familiar mammal.

Brazilian Rabbit

Lower down, in the forest, we find the last Roadside Hawk of the trip, ensconced in bromeliads.

Roadside Hawk

Sunday, May 18, 2014

Great Conservation News from Ecuador!

Ecuador's Jocotoco Foundation and the US-based Rainforest Trust have purchased a final, key property to "create a permanent refuge for the largest population of Andean Condors in the Northern Andes." Woolly Tapirs and Spectacled Bears also roam those hills.

 Andean Condor in Cayambe-Coca National Park
(Photos by Narca)

The newly-acquired Hacienda Antisanilla lies at the foot of the towering Volcán Antisana, and was one of the former private inholdings within the Antisana Ecological Reserve. These inholdings were being converted from forest to pasture and farmland; fires which started there burned into the reserve; illegal poaching based from the inholdings was rampant and difficult to control; and the most important watershed for the city of Quito was being undermined. Now effective preservation of both the reserve and Quito's watershed can be achieved.

Antisana Ecological Reserve is important not only in its own right, but also as a corridor between two national parks –– Gran Sumaco and Cayambe-Coca (more on Cayambe-Coca in a future post!).

Sign for Cayambe-Coca National Park at Papallacta Pass

Acquisition of this final property completes the effort to bring effective protection to 1.8 million acres of Andean and Amazonian ecosystems.

How needed was this reserve? All it takes is a two-day drive down the Andes from Quito south to the Peruvian border, to see just how much forest in Ecuador has already been lost. Along many stretches, for mile after mile, the country is denuded, and the tiny forest remnants are pitiful indeed. The few scattered reserves in the region are critically important.

If you'd like to read more about this project and other inspiring Rainforest Trust efforts in Bolivia, Peru, Brazil and Colombia, check out their latest newsletter.