Friday, August 31, 2012

Our August newsletter is online

Meet a bat we didn't know existed in Nicaragua, follow a tagged sea turtle, and help us name the next turtle we tag.

Conservation in Action
On the night of June 27 on Brasilon beach in southwestern Nicaragua, a green sea turtle hauled herself ashore, dragged herself up the beach to the treeline, dug her nest, laid her eggs, and went on a walkabout.

As she began winding down, Paso Pacifico's turtle rangers covered the green turtle's eyes (turtles are very sensitive to light) and held her in place long enough to attach a SPOT5 satellite transmitter to her shell. Named Saralisa after Paso Pacifico's founders and directors Sarah Otterstrom and Liza Gonzalez, you can follow this green sea turtle — who has traveled all the way to Oaxaca, Mexico — on her tracking page at seaturtle.org.

Read more about Saralisa, her contributions to science, and more in our August newsletter.

Act Now!
Donate today and help us name the next turtle we tag.

Friday, August 24, 2012

'Batwoman' bags new bat in Nicaragua

In yesterday's Arizona Daily Sun:
NAU School of Forestry wildlife ecology professor Carol Chambers, and Nicaraguan bat expert Arnulfo Ramon Medina Fitoria netted, measured, weighed and documented the only Phylloderma stenops bat ever captured and recorded in the Central American country. This particular bat weighs about as much as 20 Hershey's kisses and usually is captured in mist nets above streams in evergreen forests.
Learn more about our research on bats by visiting our website or reading other bat posts on our blog.

Learn more about partner organization Bat Conservation International.

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Presenting Alexa

We are pleased to introduce Alexa, the Hawksbill turtle to our colleagues and fellow friends of the sea. Alexa is named for Alex Gaos, co-founder of ICAPO, the Eastern Pacific Hawksbill Initiative.

Alex and Ingrid Yañez have linked many people in Central America in their efforts to discover, understand, and protect the Hawksbill populations of the Eastern Pacific.

Alexa arrived on the beach at the La Flor Wildlife Refuge in southern Nicaragua on the night of August 8th. After she nested, Paso Pacifico rangers outfitted Alexa with a satellite transmitter to track her movements and share information about her migratory patterns and habitat with the ICAPO network. 

Led by Salvador Sanchez and our director of conservation science, Dr. Kim Williams-Guillen, our rangers are professionals who take pride and care in their work monitoring Nicaragua's marine wildlife and their habitat.

In addition to Alex Gaos of ICAPO, we'd also like to thank Randall Arauz of PRETOMA, Cynthia Lagueux of the Wildlife Conservation Society, and Jeff Seminoff of NOAA and WWF, all of whom have shared their expertise. Without their technical assistance, our sea turtle tracking project would not be possible.

 You can follow Alexa here: http://www.seaturtle.org/tracking/?tag_id=118066 

Thank you to everyone involved in efforts to promote the protection of the mysterious and beautiful Hawksbill.

 - Team Paso Pacifico

Presentando Alexa


Querido Amigos y Compañeros del mar,

Quiero presentarles a la tortuga Carey, ALEXA. Ella es bendecida con su nombre en honor a nuestro dinámico y motivador líder Alex Gaos.

Gracias a Alex e Ingrid todos somos vinculados como amigos y socios en la urgente causa de descubrir y proteger a la tortuga Carey del Pacífico Oriental.


Alexa arribó a una playa del sur pacífico de Nicaragua (ubicado en el RVS La Flor, Rivas, Nicaragua) durante una noche pacífica del día 8 de agosto. Después de anidar, los guardaparques de Paso Pacífico le colocaron un transmisor satelital para seguir sus movimientos y para compartir la nueva información generada con esta red. También, en el espíritu colaborativo de ICAPO, los guardaparques aprovecharon para compartir y enseñar a un ‘huevero’ local la importancia de la tortuga Carey.

Quiero felicitar y agradecer a nuestros Guardaparques, liderados por Salvador Sanchez, por su profesionalismo y seriedad en el cuido y monitoreo de las tortugas, así también reconocer a Dr. Kim Williams-Guillen quien ahora coordina nuestros programas científicos, incluyendo los transmisores y su mapeo. También quiero agradecer a Alex Gaos (ICAPO), Randall Arauz (PRETOMA), Cynthia Lagueux (WCS) y Jeff Seminoff (NOAA, WWF) quienes han compartido sus conocimientos técnicos sobre colocar transmisores libremente y que sin esa asistencia técnico, no seria posible este logro. También debo reconocer la generosidad de la Embajada Real de Dinamarca y el apoyo institucional de MARENA.

Alexa ya se fue para Costa Rica y estamos agradecidos por los esfuerzos de PRETOMA y otros por protegerla mientras anda forrajeando por ahí.

Puedan seguir la aquí

Yo sé que hablo por todos en desearle a Alexa un viaje sano y seguro. También hablo por todos en agradecer a Alex e Ingrid por sus esfuerzos infatigables por promover la protección de esta misteriosa y bella tortuga.

Un saludo caluroso,

El Equipo de Paso Pacífico
Nicaragua

Thursday, August 16, 2012

Recognizing Paso Pacifico's Rangers

Salvador Sanchez has been selected to travel to Argentina on a full scholarship for the eighth annual Latin American regional ranger training course. We're pleased that Salvador has been selected as the fourth Paso Pacifico ranger to represent Nicaragua in this prestigious program.

We're proud of Salvador and all of our rangers, and we're grateful to Rick Smith and the Turner Foundation for their help building our successful ranger programs.

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

California's Official Marine Reptile

The California state Senate voted this week to make the endangered Pacific leatherback sea turtle the official marine reptile of California. Assuming Governor Jerry Brown signs the legislation into law, October 15th will officially be Leatherback Conservation Day in the state of California. Mark your calendars!

Paso Pacifico's head turtle ranger, Salvador Sanchez,
inspects a leatherback turtle on one of the beaches
where we work to protect sea turtle nests.

Every year leatherbacks migrate from the warmer waters off the coast of Central America where they nest to colder waters off California's coast where they feed on jellyfish. Considering our US headquarters are located in Ventura and the turtle nesting beaches we protect are in Nicaragua, the symbolism of the leatherbacks' annual migration is especially meaningful to us. We'll be looking to partner with other conservation organizations to observe the first ever Leatherback Conservation Day in California.

Please contact us if you're interested in recognizing Leatherback Conservation Day: wendy (at) pasopacifico.org

Thursday, August 9, 2012

The Tortoise

Our friends at the Turtle Conservancy have launched The Tortoise, their new magazine dedicated to the appreciation and conservation of tortoises and turtles and their habitats worldwide.

“Turtles and tortoises have been on our earth for more than 200 million years, before the great dinosaurs roamed the planet, and today they face unprecedented challenges for their survival. No vertebrate Order has a greater percentage of species facing extinction. This publication is about the wonder of turtles and tortoises and about the conservation challenges they face,” says Eric Goode, one of the magazine editors and President of the Turtle Conservancy.

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Bat Calls


A team from Bats Conservation International, Paso Pacifico,
 and MARENA studies bats at Volcano Masaya National Park.
Bats are essential to ecosystem health and their populations are dwindling around the world, so it is important to understand individual bat species, bat populations, and, of course, the reasons for their decline. In Nicaragua, we study bat populations and their insect diets because we're considered not just with ecological health, but also with the economic success of Nicaraguan farmers who rely on bats to perform ecosystem services ranging from pollination to pet control.

In the Paso del Istmo biological corridor where we work, there are at least 44 species of bat, which we identify using night photography and by collecting bat guano. By analyzing the DNA in bat excrement, we gather information about what bat species are present and what species of insect they've been consuming.

In Europe, scientists analyze bat calls to understand the various species and their migration patterns. As evolutionary biologist, Kate Jones, of the Zoological Society of London writes at the Independent, "bats leak information about themselves into their environment by emitting high frequency sound – echolocation calls – to navigate and find food.  We can record this sound in standardised ways and identify the species from its call to track changes in bat populations over time."

Jones runs iBats -- the Indicator Bats Program, which helps citizen scientists contribute to biodiversity monitoring for the global conservation community. International monitoring efforts allowed scientists to track bats' migration across borders, but difficulty differentiating among various bat calls meant dispersed data sets were hard to compare. Jones and her team are changing that, developing "an identification system that can be used by anybody."

Their new iBatsID technology, presented today in the British Ecological Society's Journal of Applied Technology, "is able to correctly identify most European bat species 80 per cent or more of the time," making data sets more reliable and easier to compare. Better understanding leads to more effective conservation efforts, so iBatsID is good news for bat scientists, bats, and the people who rely on the ecosystem services bats provide.

To get a better idea of what bat calls sound like, listen this piece from this week's Sunday Weekend Edition on NPR:
For the past five years, bats have been disappearing at an alarming rate, falling prey to a mysterious disease called white-nose syndrome. But they're making an eerie comeback in a new audio exhibit at a national park in Vermont. The exhibit features manipulated recordings of bat calls that are funneled through glass vessels hanging from a studio ceiling. 
Bats emit high-frequency sounds that create echoes to help them navigate and detect predators. Most of these sounds are inaudible to the human ear, but they can be recorded using special machines and software that lower the frequencies into the range humans can hear.
In Nicaragua, we've been monitoring bat calls ourselves. Working with our partners at Bat Conservation International, we've been placing AnaBat systems to record and monitor bat activity across the Paso del Istmo. Rangers at Masaya National Park (like the one pictured above) will share what we learn from our monitoring with visitors and encourage them to help us protect bats and their habitat.

With coverage like the pieces above, we're optimistic about the future of bats. Understanding the economic and ecological importance of our flying mammalian friends, and recruiting citizen scientists, are important steps in bat conservation.

You can contribute to our bat conservation efforts by making a donation today.

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Tracking Saralisa

Saralisa, the green sea turtle we tagged in June, is off the coast of El Salvador. She has traveled a long way and is now in the waters where two of the turtles recently tagged by ICAPO have run into trouble. One was blown up by dynamite fishing, the other caught in a fishing net (illustrating the importance of sustainable fisheries).

We'll be watching Saralisa very closely over the next few days. You can track her progress with us at seaturtle.org.