| COUNTRY Costa Rica
NAME Talamanca Range-La Amistad Reserves (includes
Barbilla National Park, Chirripo National Park, Hitoy Cerere Biological
Reserve, La Amistad (Talamanca) National Park, Las Tablas Protected Area,
Rio Macho Forest Reserve and Tapanti National Park)
IUCN MANAGEMENT CATEGORY
Barbilla National Park Unassigned
Chirripo National Park II (National Park)
Hitoy Cerere Biological Reserve Ia (Strict Nature
Reserve)
La Amistad (Talamanca) National Park II (National
Park)
Las Tablas Protected Area VI (Managed Resource
Protected Area)
Rio Macho Forest Reserve VI (Managed Resource Protected
Area)
Tapanti National Park IV (Habitat/Species Management
Area)
Biosphere Reserve
Natural World Heritage Site - Criteria i, ii, iii,
iv
BIOGEOGRAPHICAL PROVINCE 8.16.04 (Central American)
GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION The park lies in the foothills
and mountains of Cordillera de Talamanca between the mountain ranges of
Las Vueltas, Cartago and Echandi on the Panamanian/Costa Rican border.
It falls within Limon, Puntarenas, San José and Cartago provinces
in Costa Rica. 8° 44'-10° 02'N, 82° 43'-83° 44'W
DATE
AND HISTORY OF ESTABLISHMENT The Presidents of Costa Rica and Panama
jointly declared intent to establish an international park on 3 March
1979. This was reconfirmed in Costa Rica by Presidential Decree of 4 February
1982, declaring La Amistad (Talamanca) a national park. This park, along
with Las Tablas Protected Area (gazetted 1981), Chirripo National Park
(gazetted 29 July 1975 by congressional law 5773), Hitoy-Cerere Biological
Reserve (gazetted 4 April 1978 by executive decree No. 8351-A), Barbilla
National Park (gazetted 1982 as a Bioloical Reserve, upgraded to National
Park in May 1997), Rio Macho Forest Reserve (gazetted under Forestry Law
No. 4465-A) and Tapanti National Park (1990) were inscibed as one site
on the World Heritage List in 1983.
This cluster
of Costa Rican protected areas, excluding Rio Macho Forest Reserve, but
including eight Indian reserves, were internationally recognised as a
Biosphere Reserve under UNESCO's Man and the Biosphere Programme in 1982.
The Rio Macho Forest Reserve extension was approved by the MAB Bureau
on 27 January 1988.
The Panamanian
La Amistad National Park was inscribed on the World Heritage List in 1990,
forming the transboundary World Heritage Site referred to as Talamanca
Range-La Amistad/La Amistad National Park.
AREA
The total area of the Costa Rican sites increased from 358,420ha to 360,845ha
in 1997, following confirmation of boundaries by the government. This
figure is taken from the official map of the site, although there is a
discrepancy of 2,200 ha between the map and the written confirmation (SINAC,
in litt., 16 May 1997). The transboundary World Heritage Site now
totals 567,845ha. IUCN (1997) however, puts this figure at 567,809ha.
The site comprises the following:
La Amistad
(Talamanca) National Park 193,929ha
La
Amistad National Park (Panama) 207,000ha
Las
Tablas Protected Area 19,062ha
Chirripo
National Park 50,150ha
Hitoy
Cerere Biological Reserve 9,154ha
Barbilla
National Park 12,830ha
Rio
Macho Forest Reserve 69,640ha
Tapanti
National Park 6,080ha
The total
Biosphere Reserve area is 509,835ha, and includes the above sites, except
La Amistad (Panama) and Tapanti National Park, as well as the following
Indians reserves:
Telire 16,260ha
Tayni
16,216ha
Talamanca
66,419ha
Ujarras-Salitre-Cabagra
complex 58,600ha
LAND
TENURE 95% of the land within the core area (La Amistad and Chirripo
National Parks, and Hitoy-Cerere and Barbilla National Park) is state
property, although there are small scattered agricultural developments
along the borders. The remaining 5% is being surveyed and will be purchased
or expropriated in the near future. There are sizeable holdings of private
land within Las Tablas Protected Area, although the remainder is state-owned.
Expropriation of this land is not foreseen, but legislation prohibits
changes in existing land use, and 90% consists of undisturbed forest.
Within the Indian reserves, the Indian population has exclusive rights
to the land in perpetuity. However, those rights have not been fully attended.
In fact, Indian settlers sold their lands to colonizers. The Organization
for Tropical Studies (OTS) owns the Las Cruces Botanical Garden at Chirripo
National Park.
ALTITUDE
Ranges from 50m to 3,820m at Cerro Chirripo, the highest point in southern
Central America
PHYSICAL
FEATURES The Cordillera de Talamanca is the highest and wildest non-volcanic
mountain range in Central America. It was formed by the orogenic activity
which created the land dividing the Pacific Ocean from the Caribbean.
A long period of marine deposition in the shallow surrounding seas up
until the Middle Miocene was followed by a period of marine volcanism,
which included the intrusion of a huge granitic batholith and the uplifting
of the whole area to some 4,000m above sea level during the Plio-Quaternary
orogenesis. The resulting peneplain has been gradually eroded due to heavy
rainfall, creating a rugged topography with many slopes inclined at over
60° . During the Quaternary, glaciers carved cirque lakes and steep valleys
on the slopes of Chirripo National Park, the only area in Central America
to show signs of glaciation. Most soils are poorly evolved inceptisols
(leached soils).
CLIMATE
Average temperatures range from above 25° C near sea level to -8° C on
the highest peaks. Mean annual precipitation varies from around 2000mm
near the Caribbean coast to more than 6000mm on some high montane areas.
VEGETATION
Tropical rain forests have covered most of the area since at least the
last glaciations, about 25,000 years ago. Of the twelve life zones of
Costa Rica, at least eight occur in the park, including lowland tropical
rain forest, cloud forest, sub-alpine paramo forests, pure oak stands,
lakes of glacial origin and high altitude bogs. The latter four communities
are not found elsewhere in Central America. The area also contains all
five altitudinal zones found in the tropics. Most of the main crest lies
within montane rain forest, characterised by mixed oak forest; a dense,
low and heavily covered forest with bryophytes, ferns, bromeliads, orchids
and other epiphytes. Below 2,500m lower montane rain forest occurs and
the forest is generally more mixed. The Talamanca Mountains contain the
largest tracts of virgin forest in Costa Rica. On high points along the
ridge, at elevations above 2,900-3,100m, frequent stands of paramo, swamps,
cold marshes and Aretostaphylos arbustoides occur. The paramo located
on Mt Kamuk contains the richest and most varied vegetation (after
Chirripo) in the entire Talamanca Range and is the only one in Costa Rica
that shows no signs of human intervention. Species diversity is perhaps
unequalled in any other reserve of equivalent size in the world, due to
the convergence of the floras of North and South America and varied climatic
and edaphic factors. It includes some 9,000 flowering plant, more than
4,000 non-vascular plant, 80% of the country's moss, about 900 lichen
and approximately 1,000 fern species. Levels of endemism are estimated
between 30-40% (Anon, n.d.).
FAUNA
The fauna is extremely diverse, with intermigrations from both North and
South America. Studies indicate that one out of the 115 species of fish,
20 out of the 250 species of reptile and amphibian, 13 out of the 215
species of mammal and 15 of the 560 species of birds are endemic to the
reserve. Signs of tapir Tapirus terrestris (LR), possibly of a
species as yet unrecorded in Costa Rica, are abundant at Cerros Utyum,
Kamuk and Fabrega near the Panamanian border. All Central American felines
are found including puma Felis concolor, ocelot F. pardalis,
jaguarundi F. yagouaroundi, tiger cat F. tigrina, and the
jaguar Panthera onca (LR) and also Central American tapir Tapirus
bairdii (VU), Central American squirrel monkey Saimiri oerstedii
(EN) and Geoffroy's spider monkey Ateles geoffroyi. A green and
black high-altitude viper Bothrops negrivisidis, that has rarely
been seen or collected, is present. Resplendent quetzal Pharomacrus
mocinno (LR) is present in the park as are many other bird species,
such as bare-necked umbrella bird Cephalopterus glabricollis (VU),
three-wattled bellbird Procnias tricarunculata (VU), harpy eagle
Harpia harpyia (LR), crested eagle Morphnus guianensis (LR),
solitary eagle Harpyhaliaetus solitarius (LR) and orange-breasted
falcon Falco deiroleucus (LR). It has been suggested that
no other park is the world possesses as many species and such a wealth
of fauna. La Amistad includes nine of the elevan birds listed as 'endangered'
by Costa Rica, 13 of their 16 'endangered' mammals, and all their reptiles
and amphibians.
CULTURAL
HERITAGE Archaeological sites are reported along all major water courses,
yet an almost total lack of archaeological investigation within the area
makes objective analysis of the human history difficult. Less than 50km
away, near Baru Volcano in Chiriquo Panama, pre-ceramic sites have recently
been discovered dating back more than 12,000 years. Such sites are extremely
rare in Central America, but this discovery just a short distance away
indicates the possibility of more finds of Central America's earliest
human inhabitants in the area. Studies on the Pacific Slope of Costa Rica
just a few kilometres from La Amistad-Talamanca International Park have
revealed much about the area's pre Colombian inhabitants. Skilfully-created
elaborate zoomorphic and anthropomorphic gold ornaments, jewellery and
huge symmetrical stone spheres up to two metres in diameter are among
the most outstanding evidences of the cultural development of pre-Colombian
man in the area over the last 3,000 years. Analysis of polychrome pottery
found in digs has led to definition of two major cultural phases for the
area: the Agua Buena phase lasted from 300 BC to 500 AD and
the Chiriqui phase from 500 AD until the Spanish Conquest. The recent
discovery of pre-ceramic sites in the region surrounding the site presents
a 10,000-year gap in the archaeological record of the area and is of great
interest to scientists. Further details are given in Torres et al.
(1987).
LOCAL
HUMAN POPULATION At the time of the Spanish conquest, a number of
Indian tribes inhabited the Talamanca Range. Their numbers were decimated
by conflict with Spanish settlers and imported diseases over the following
centuries, and by 1940 only 6,000 Indians were left in Costa Rica along
isolated river valleys in still unsettled terrain. Since then, increased
public and governmental interest in their plight has led to a gradual
increase in their numbers and legal recognition of their land rights.
Approximately 10,000 Indians of the Bribri, Cabecar, Brunca and Guaymi
tribes live within the area's boundaries. These almost represent the total
world population of Bribris and Cabecars, and an important percentage
of the remaining Guaymis and Bruncas population. These groups have experienced
varying degrees of cultural contact for over 400 years, yet have retained
much of their folklore, language, customs, and subsistence agricultural,
hunting and gathering lifestyle.
VISITORS
AND VISITOR FACILITIES No information
SCIENTIFIC
RESEARCH AND FACILITIES Apart from a number of anthropological surveys,
no comprehensive scientific studies have been conducted within the area.
There are some research facilities, in particular at Las Cruces Botanical
Garden. Chirripo National Park, La Amistad-Talamanca International Park,
and Las Tablas Forest Protection Zone are used for field training activities
for university students.
CONSERVATION
VALUE The entire protected area comprises the single largest natural
forest unit in Central America, containing several hundred endemic plant
species and one of the last major refuges for threatened fauna. No other
protected area complex in Central America contains as many viable populations,
species, life zones, or as much altitudinal variation. The Talamanca range
is estimated to harbour almost four percent of the varities of all terrestrial
species on earth.
CONSERVATION
MANAGEMENT The core area is made up of Chirripo National Park, La
Amistad-Talamanca National Park, Hitoy Cerere Biological Reserve and Barbilla
National Park, which are all managed by the Costa Rican National Park
Service (Servicio de Parques Nacionales, Ministerio de Recursos Naturales,
Energia y Minas (MIRENEM). The buffer area consists of the Indian reserves
of Talamanca, Tayni-Estrella, Telire, Chirripo, Cabagra, Salitre and Ujarras
(together covering 217,441ha) as well as Las Tablas Forest Protection
Zone (managed by the Costa Rican Forest Protection) and Las Cruces Botanical
Garden (115ha). The area is made up of a complex of reserves with various
types of legal protection, and has only recently been legally protected
as a whole, by means of executive laws passed by the legislative assembly.
Changes of land use are prohibited within the privately owned areas of
the Las Tablas area but within the Indian reserves the Indian populations
have exclusive rights to the land. Barbilla National Park has yet to be
legally established. More recently, Reserva Forestal de Rio Macho was
officially incorporated into the reserve. A management plan for the major
part of the site is being prepared. The plan will include very detailed
recommendations for the management and development of La Amistad-Talamanca
National Park and Las Tablas Forest Protection Zone. For the other reserves,
more conceptual recommendations on land use and resource protection will
be outlined. The preparation of this plan is being coordinated by specialists
from the Wildlands and Watershed Programme of CATIE. The first stages
of the planning process, resource inventories and basic information collection,
were completed in 1982. Simultaneously, a planning team from Costa Rica's
National Autonomous University is preparing a detailed management and
development plan for Chirripo National Park. Short-term management of
protected wildlands within the World Heritage site are based on objectives,
priorities and activities outlined in annual operational plans for these
management units. Guard patrols and overflights assure the integrity of
resources within the natural reserves. From 1985 to 1987 an interdisciplinary
team (Torres et al., 1987) from CATIE and the National
Park Service implemented a planning project in order to produce a regional
conservation and development strategy.
There are
two levels of zoning: one at the general level of the biosphere reserve
as a whole which is managed as one unit, and another within each specific
reserve according to their different statutes. The other reserves of the
overall biosphere reserve will be generally managed with natural zones,
cultural zones, recovering zones and forest management zones. Funds were
being raised during 1985 and 1986 in order to purchase privately held
land, although this did not proceed as planned. An environmental education
programme has been underway since September 1984 in the indigenous reserve
and colonist communities adjoining the Atlantic slope.
MANAGEMENT
CONSTRAINTS There are several Indian reservations near or contiguous
to the area and man's impact in them is considerable with about 10,000
people maintaining their traditional lifestyles of free-range grazing,
hunting, fishing and use of medicinal plants. Oil exploration in Talamanca
Reserve is a problem, as is forest loss and soil degradation in the Ujarras,
Salitre and Cabagra area. Land squatters on the Pacific side of Costa
Rica are known to exist. If settlers can provide documentary evidence
of more than 10 years occupancy, their removal requires compensation under
agrarian law. Parts of the buffer zone have been affected by shifting
cultivation and forest use, resulting in forest destruction, habitat elimination
and watershed degradation. Additional threats are posed by development
projects proposed for areas in or near the reserve. These include construction
of a cross-Talamanca highway and copper mining. During 1983/84 it was
reported that poaching, looting of archaeological sites and encroachment
by colonists, particularly along the Pacific slopes of Chirripo, the Cordillera
de Talamanca and Las Tablas Forest Protection Zone were posing a threat
to the site. Insufficient funding had lead to inadequate staff training,
equipment, infrastructure, border delineation and baseline surveys.
STAFF
For the various reserves, national parks etc. that make up the biosphere
reserve, there are 37 full-time employees and two part-time, mostly engaged
in protection and surveillance. There are also research workers at various
times undertaking specific studies (MIRENEM, pers. comm., 1995).
BUDGET
In 1993, the Bank for Interamerican Development (BID) brought a total
of US$ 2,000,000 in technical assistance to develop different projects;
the Dutch government gave US$ 971,200 for capacity building (1993-1997);
UNESCO brought US$ 150,000 to develop environmental education projects.
Other funders were Amisconde (Mc Donalds) with US$ 3,000,000 for the period
1992-1994, ASDI who donated US$ 2,500,000 to develop research, environmental
education and natural resource management projects during the period 1992-1994,
MacArthur Foundation who gave US$ 100,000 for 1992-1994, and a Dutch organisation
(Kaneblo) that brought US$ 1,400,000 to fund several capacity building,
production, etc. projects (MIRENEM, pers. comm., 1995).
LOCAL ADDRESSES
Area de
Conservacion La Amistad-Region Pacifico, Costado sur del Almacen Mas por
menos, San Isidro del General, Perez Zeledon. Apartado 10094, San Jose,
Costa Rica.
REFERENCES
Anon (not
dated). Strategy for the Institutional Development of the La Amistad Biosphere
Reserve. Ministry of National Planning and Economic Policy and of Natural
Resources, Energy and Mines/Organisation of American States/Conservation
International. 17 pp.
Boza, M.A.
and Mendoza, R. (1981). Los Parques Nacionales de Costa Rica,INCAFO,
Madrid.
Boza, M.A.
(1986). Parques Nacionales Costa Rica. Fundacion de Parques Nacionales,
Costa Rica.
CATIE (1979).
Términos de referencia para la elaboracion del Plan de Manejo
del Parque Internacional de La Amistad Costa Rica-Panama, Turrialba, Costa
Rica.
Centro Cientifico
Tropical (1981). Recomendaciones de limites para el Parque de la Amistad.
San José, Costa Rica.
CNPPA Summary
Status Report (1984). Threatened Protected Areas of the World (draft).
Gonzalez,
F.R. (1996) Talamanca-La Amistad. The Unesco Courier April 01,
1996:40.
IUCN (1997)
State of conservation of natural World Heritage Properties. Report
prepared for the World Heritage Bureau, 21st session, 23-28th
June 1997, Paris.
Kappelle,
M. and Juarez, M.E. (1994). The Los Santos Forest Reserve: A buffer zone
vital for the Costa Rican La Amistad Biosphere Reserve. Environmental
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Kappelle,
M., Van Velzen, H.P. and Wijtzes, W.H. (1994). Plant communities of montane
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22(4): 449-484.
Kappelle,
M. (1995) Ecology of Mature and Recovering Talamancan Montane Quercus
Forests, Costa Rica. PhD thesis,
Mendez,
L. (1988). Development of Amistad National Park. WWF List of approved
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R., Barborak, J.R. and MacFarland, C. (1984). Planning and managing a
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of the La Amistad/Talamanca Range/Bocas de Toro Wildlands of Costa Rica
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R.A. (1981). La poblacion indigena en Costa Rica y el medio ambiente,
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Stiles,
F.G. (1981). The avifauna of the sabanas (or cienagas) Durika.
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Torres,
H., de Mendoza, L.H. and Masterson, D. (1987). La Amistad Biosphere Reserve:
towards sustainable developemnt. CATIE, Turriable, Costa Rica. 10 pp.
Weber, H.
(1959). Los Paramos de Costa Rica y su concatenacion fito geografica
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Weston,
A.S. (1981). Paramos, cienegas and subparamos forest in the eastern
part of the
Cordillera
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(1976). Avi fauna of the Cerro-de-la-muerte Region Costa Rica. American
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DATE
1982, revised August 1986, May 1989, September 1990, updated July 1995,
July 1997
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