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Harpy eagle’s return to Costa Rica means rewilding’s time has come (commentary)

by theamericannews
June 9, 2024
in Costa Rica
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Harpy eagle's return to Costa Rica means rewilding's time has come (commentary)
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White-lipped peccary (left) and jaguar (right), two species associated with healthy rainforest ecosystems, captured on camera traps on the Osa Peninsula outside of Corcovado National Park. Images courtesy of Osa Conservation.

Harpy eagles weren’t the only species that quietly disappeared – so too did the giant anteater, a species now extinct throughout Costa Rica. With a total length of two meters and weighing over 100 lbs, the giant anteater dwarfs its much smaller relatives, the ~10 lb tamandua, and the diminutive

Just a few weeks ago however, an adult harpy eagle was photographed in the north of the country. The bird quickly made national headlines and waves across social media. Ticos were ecstatic – loud and proud to see the world’s largest eagle back on home soil. Even Costa Rica’s ex-Minister of Environment and current leader of the Global Environment Facility, Carlos Manuel Rodriguez, was proudly tweeting about the bird’s sighting. And while this doesn’t represent the recolonization of harpy eagles back into Costa Rica – as the bird was likely a wanderer from the >3000 km2 Indio Maiz Biological Reserve just across the border in Nicaragua – it demonstrates the sense of love for nature within Costa Rica.

Camera traps images of two lost species of Costa Rica – the giant anteater (left) and the harpy eagle (right) – photos captured in the Peruvian Amazon.Camera trap images of two lost species of Costa Rica – the giant anteater (left) and the harpy eagle (right) – photos captured in the Peruvian Amazon via camera traps. Images courtesy of Andrew Whitworth.

There is no better example of this passion than the community of Rancho Quemado. Situated in the neck of the Osa Peninsula, the community once hunted white-lipped peccary like there was no tomorrow. Now, led by Yolanda Rodríguez and the community-driven biological monitoring group, members safeguard the white-lipped peccary on their forays outside of the park, keeping them safe from poachers, and holding an annual festival in the peccaries’ honor. Local tourism guide, Dionisio (Nito) Paniagua, feels that the reinstatement of critical megafauna, like the harpy eagle and giant anteater, would benefit Costa Rica’s ecotourism economy. Every year thousands of ornithologists make pilgrimages to Darien National Park in Panama, a mecca for harpy eagles, and the same goes for the giant anteater, where tourists flock to the llanos of Colombia and the savannas of the Beni in Bolivia.

As we hike together in Corcovado, Nito tells me, “I desperately wish I could see those species here in Costa Rica.” Perhaps most importantly of all is that most tropical ecologists agree that the loss of large keystone species like harpy eagle and giant anteater from an ecosystem has a rippling effect that leads to a depleted, damaged system. One recent study published in Science showcases how the loss of such species results in a catastrophic collapse and simplification of complex-food webs. This puts the future of maintaining balanced healthy ecosystems in doubt.

The recently recorded (July 2022) harpy eagle in Boca Tapada, northern Costa Rica. Photo courtesy of Henry Antonio Solis Loria.The recently recorded (July 2022) harpy eagle in Boca Tapada, northern Costa Rica. Photo courtesy of Henry Antonio Solis Loria.

But there is a solution! Wildlife recovery can help rebuild food-webs and support healthier ecosystems. In the mid-1990’s wolves were returned to Yellowstone National Park after an absence of 69 years. They quickly repaired broken aspects of the ecosystem. They hunted elk and changed elk foraging behavior, which allowed over-browsed vegetation to recover. This in turn helped to restore the dwindling population of beavers, which then began to change the hydrology of the waterways thanks to the increasing occurrence of beaver damns. The elk carcasses left by the wolves helped scavengers in warm winters survive when resources would have otherwise been scarce.

And this recovery of damaged systems through reintroducing native lost species can be remarkably quick. In the face of this year’s recent European heat wave, beavers became UK national heroes. Landscapes that would have been otherwise turned to dry muddy puddles were kept lush and green, all thanks to the beavers – a species rewilded just a decade ago – following 400 years of absence.

See related: Tiny new tree frog species found in rewilded Costa Rican nature reserve

Members of the Rancho Quemado Biological Monitoring Group are now leaders in the protection of threatened white-lipped peccary (primary prey for jaguar) – and a species the community once hunted during their movements outside of Corcovado National Park.Members of the Rancho Quemado Biological Monitoring Group are now leaders in the protection of threatened white-lipped peccary, a primary prey for jaguar and a species that the community once hunted during their movements outside of Corcovado National Park. Image courtesy of Andrew Whitworth/Osa Conservation.

These examples are why species reintroduction has been identified as a key tool toward meeting global 2030 biodiversity targets. And countries like Argentina are leading the field by reintroducing whole communities of lost species into its national parks – including pampas deer, collared peccary, jaguar and giant anteater! When I spoke with Luli Masera from ‘Rewilding Argentina’, she told me about the overwhelming sense of pride from the public when footage was shared of animals once extirpated but now returned to their homes, rooted back into the web of life. And key to this success was the support from government ministers who helped facilitate this process to see Argentina’s parks rewilded.

Fortunately, Costa Rica too has taken active steps in terms of species rewilding! Throughout the country over 60 beaches are monitored and patrolled almost daily, to protect mother sea turtles and their nests from poachers. Many of these programs have hatcheries, where eggs are safeguarded so that tens of thousands of baby sea turtles, that might otherwise be poached or predated, are released safely into the ocean. This major effort has likely led to the global population increases detected for many sea turtle species. Scarlet macaws have been captive bred, some rehabilitated after injury and released back into the wild. Tourists traveling the country today might never believe that until just a couple of decades ago, scarlet macaws were only easy to spot on the Osa Peninsula. These days they scream and soar along the whole Pacific coast, and even regions of the Caribbean. Baby turtles and scarlet macaws are always fan favorites.

Sea turtles and scarlet macaws, whose populations have shown recovery in Costa Rica due to the concerted, proactive hands-on efforts of rehabilitation and rewilding. Photos courtesy of Eleanor Flatt and Andrew Whitworth.Sea turtles and scarlet macaws, whose populations have shown recovery in Costa Rica due to concerted, proactive and hands-on rehabilitation and rewilding efforts. Photos courtesy of Eleanor Flatt and Andrew Whitworth.

Founder of Costa Rica Wildlife Foundation and Rewild’s Senior Mesoamerican Associate, Esteban Brenes-Mora tells me, “Costa Rica’s environmental leadership can’t stop here. We mustn’t wait for lost species, like giant anteater and harpy eagle, to naturally recover. And we can’t let species struggling to recover [to] quietly go extinct. It’s the time to be bold and proactive in re-establishing all species necessary to maintain resilient ecosystems.” Now more than ever, Costa Rica needs its leaders to facilitate this critical next step – reintroducing native animals into the forests that the country has been so successful at regrowing.

And the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica’s mini- Amazon, is the ideal place to start, with over 80% forest cover, four protected areas, a nature-loving community, an ecotourism-based economy, and a bountiful prey base for both harpy eagle and giant anteater. Why not establish herds of white-lipped peccary into Piedras Blancas National Park, where they have been absent for over 40 years? Translocating pilot herds from Corcovado to Piedras Blancas would provide greater resilience for the peccaries and provide an increased food base to bolster Osa’s jaguars.

Is Costa Rica ready to take a mighty step ahead in rewilding its recently lost and struggling species before they are wiped from its current generation’s memory? It’s time to see Costa Rica’s wildest ecosystems become truly wild.

 

Andrew Whitworth is executive director of Osa Conservation and an affiliate researcher with The Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health & Comparative Medicine at the University of Glasgow, Scotland. Find his latest updates via Twitter: @andyrainforest.

Banner image: Adult harpy eagle courtesy of Tom Ambrose.

Related audio from Mongabay’s podcast: The sounds of tropical katydids can benefit conservation efforts in Costa Rica, listen here:

See related coverage about giant anteater reintroductions:

Giant anteaters lead biodiversity resurgence in Argentina’s Iberá

Animals, Birds, Commentary, Conservation, Corridors, Ecological Restoration, Ecosystem Restoration, Green, Happy-upbeat Environmental, Landscape Restoration, National Parks, Parks, Reintroductions, Restoration, Rewilding, Wildlife, Wildlife Conservation, Wildlife Corridors

Central America, Costa Rica, Latin America

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Source link : https://news.mongabay.com/2022/09/harpy-eagles-return-to-costa-rica-means-rewildings-time-has-come-commentary/

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Publish date : 2022-09-27 03:00:00

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