
Madre de Dios with its infinite forests, sinuous
rivers that rush towards the ocean, and life abounding in all its
corners. Puerto Maldonado, the capital city, is an obligatory stop along
the way to gain entrance to the national parks and reserves located in
the area, and it has been, at certain moments, an important exporting
site for rubber, wood, gold, and petroleum. At present, two of the main
economic activities there are eco-tourism and chestnut harvesting.
The region is almost entirely low-lying Amazonian rainforest. The climate is warm and damp, with average temperatures around 26 °C (79 °F) [max.: 34 °C (93 °F), min.: 21 °C (70 °F)]. The rainy season is from December to March, when torrential rainfall causes rivers to swell and often burst their banks. Annualprecipitation can be as much as 3 metres (9.8 ft).
At only ten kilometers from Puerto Maldonado, or a one and half hour hike, you find Lake Sandoval, bordered by aguajales (swampy areas full of palm trees), orchids, kapok trees, caoba trees, and Mauritanian palm trees that grow up to thirty meters tall. The lake is also the home for a large variety of species such as toucans, macaws, parrots, egrets, tapirs, turtles, and the refuge for river otters and black caimans, two species on the brink of extinction. In the areas around Lake Valencia, 60 kilometers from Puerto Maldonado by the Madre de Dios River, there are several indigenous communities where the people make their living from fishing for tiger shovelnose catfish, gilded catfish, and paiche; this area is the habitat for plenty of flora and fauna, too.
The Manu National Park (1,716,295 hectares), located in the departments of Cusco and Madre de Dios, protects more than 800 bird species, 200 species of mammals, gigantic trees, as well as being home to indigenous communities. This is the park that set the world record for the number of bird species seen in one day at one spot with 324 species. The Tambopata-Candamo National Park (274,690 hectares) is known to possess the greatest diversity of mammal, tree, insect, and bird species in the world as well as the world record for the amount of butterfly species.
Additionally, the only humid tropical savannah in
Peru is found at the Bahuaja-Sonene National Park (1,091,416 hectares).
The highlighted species here are the manned wolf and the marsh deer,
both close to extinction, as well as the giant anteater, giant river
otter, the bushdog, the black caiman, and the harpy eagle.
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Nunc commodo euismod massa quis vestibulum, proin mi nibh, dignissim.
Nunc commodo euismod massa quis vestibulum, proin mi nibh, dignissim.
Nunc commodo euismod massa quis vestibulum, proin mi nibh, dignissim.