Couverture rigide.
Lynx and BirdLife International Field Guides Collection
For birders, Colombia really is number one! Not only have more species
been recorded there than in any other country, but almost one-fifth of the
world’s birds occur in Colombia, packed into an area slightly greater than
1,100,000 km2.
Stretching east to west from the Orinoco River to the Pacific Ocean, and
north to south from the Caribbean to Amazonian headwaters, the country’s
topography is remarkably diverse. Here, the Andes are separated into three
ranges by two important valleys, the Cauca and the Magdalena, and there are two
very important massifs, Santa Marta and Perijá, in the north of the country—in
particular, the Santa Marta range is one of the great endemic hotspots in the
world. In recent years, a series of standard birding routes has evolved, many
of them focused on the country’s privately and publicly owned protected areas,
permitting keen birders to see nearly all of Colombia’s many special birds,
from extravagantly plumaged parrots and hummingbirds to skulking antpittas.
Nevertheless, in South America the capacity to escape the beaten track
and make novel findings is perhaps nowhere better than Colombia, as exemplified
by the recent discovery of an apparently new species of antpitta close to the
city of Cali.
Etiquettes : Birds of Colombia, Birds of Colombia, Amérique centrale et du Sud