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Alive with birds and butterflies, frogs and sloths, Rainmaker is home to 60% of Costa Rica's species. From its observation platforms and hanging bridges you can literally get a bird's eye view ...
Costa Rica’s highways are packed with animal lovers searching for a glimpse of a sloth or red-eyed tree frog. Too many of the ...
Some animals, like spiders, snakes, armadillos, and frogs, are more likely to come ... the most unforgettable vacation experiences in Costa Rica. Here, you'll be immersed in nature and will ...
The park is also home to white-faced monkeys, toucans, jaguars, bright lizards, red-eyed frogs and blue morpho butterflies. Though not the easiest national park to visit in Costa Rica, past ...
They use their sticky tongues to hunt crickets, moths and flies. John Mariana, Costa Rica, 2018 A somewhat camouflaged, submerged frog peeks its head out of the waters of a pond in Philadelphia.
For decades, the horned marsupial frog, which once ranged from Costa Rica south to Ecuador, was feared extinct in both countries, surviving only as endangered populations in Panama and parts of ...