Interview with Dr. Thomas E. Lovejoy

MCLUS President Laurie Waller had an opportunity to interview MCLUS board member Dr. Thomas E. Lovejoy on two separate occasions.

In this brief chat Dr. Lovejoy shares his views on the environment and protecting biodiversity for a more livable planet.

Find out more about Dr. Lovejoy on this link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Lovejoy.

And here Dr. Lovejoy shares his hope for the future.

Wildlife monitoring at Las Chutas

The road from San Gerardo to the Caño Negro River

The area known as “Las Chutas” is on a ridge in the CER, northeast of the town of Monteverde, south of Arenal Volcano, west of the Peñas Blancas Valley, and east of San Gerardo biological station.  Forty years ago, the portion of the Caribbean slope of the Tilaran mountain range now part of the CER was largely deforested for pastureland, particularly in the valleys.  The less accessible ridges and hilltops retained more of their tree cover, but clearings speckled the highlands.  Since the CER purchased farms during the past few decades, the forest has regenerated significantly.  Now, to get to a pasture or cleared area from Las Chutas, you have to hike for more than two hours.

Caño Negro River

The camp used during frog monitoring expeditions. It is located 3 hours by foot from the San Gerardo station.

What makes Las Chutas noteworthy, aside from its isolation and dense vegetation, is that it is a site where two species of frog presumed extinct have reappeared.  In the past decades, there has been a worldwide decline in amphibians.  Possible causes include infestations of chytrid fungus, increased UV radiation, and climate change  (http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1046/j.1472-4642.2003.00012.x/full).  During the 1980s, multiple frog populations disappeared from the Monteverde region, including the harlequin frog, green-eyed frog, lichen stream frog, and the famous golden toad.

In 2002, the green-eyed frog (Lithobates vibicarius) reappeared in the CER.  Just this past March, the lichen stream frog (also known as Starrett’s tree frog) was re-discovered in a stream in Las Chutas.

The Green-eyed Frog (Lithobates vibicarius syn. Rana vibicaria) Photo credit: Luis Solano

Two small ponds surrounded by ferns, palms, heliconias, aroids, and moss-covered trees serve as important breeding grounds for the green-eyed frog.  The frogs lay hundreds of eggs in puddles in the forest, and when the tadpoles hatch, they migrate to the ponds.

One of two ponds at Las Chutas, this is an important breeding site for the green-eyed frog.

 

Eladio Cruz, MCL member, and Luis Solano, head of maintenance, search for frogs along a stream

On a monthly (sometimes bi-monthly) basis, Luis Solano makes the trek to Las Chutas to monitor frog populations.  He conducts five, 50-meter-long transects in which he counts every Green-eyed Frog that he sees.  At night, he searches for all types of frogs, notes their presence by sight or sound, and swabs some of them to test for chytrid fungus growing on their skin.  In addition to frog monitoring, Luis is in charge of maintenance in the CER, spending many hours cleaning trails and boundary lines.

Emerald Glass Frog (Centrolenella prosoblepon)

 

Lichen Stream Frog (Isthmohyla tica)

Lichen Stream Frog (Isthmohyla tica), listed as critically endangered on the IUCN red list

Bare-hearted Glass Frog (Hyalinobatrachium colymbiphyllum)

Why it's called a glass frog...

Eladio Cruz balances precariously on a log, having collected various species of dragonflies in the middle of the pond. Photo credit: Francis Joyce

Eladio Cruz is another person who has done a lot of fieldwork in the CER.  His most recent project is collecting specimens for an inventory of the dragonflies and damselflies of the Monteverde region.  The Las Chutas ponds proved to be productive places to collect.  When the sun emerged from behind clouds, upwards of six species of dragonflies and damselflies began to whiz above the pond, some mating, some hunting, and some laying eggs in the water.  They flashed metallic blues, greens, and reds from their bodies, tracing ovals and spirals in the air.  To gain a sense of diversity and beauty of these insects, check out this website:Dragonflies and Damselflies of Costa Rica.

One of the many fungus species in the CER, Hygrocybe sp.

 

Trevoria glumacea, a fragrant, pendant orchid

The Children’s Eternal Rainforest and the Monteverde Conservation League have saved many species from both local extinction and total extinction.  No doubt the green-eyed frog and the lichen stream frog are only a few representative organisms of the biodiversity that the CER has rescued.

A farm bordering the Children's Eternal Rainforest.

A tangle of barbed wire attests to this piece of forest's previous life as pasture.

 

 

 

 

 

By guest blogger Richard Joyce.

Getting to know the CER: Laguna Escondida

Children's Eternal Rainforest

Looking across the forest of Peñas Blancas in the direction of Laguna Escondida. Photo credit: Sarah Maxwell.

Guest post by Richard V. Joyce

Laguna Escondida (or Hidden Lagoon) lies several kilometers north of Eladio’s Refuge in the Peñas Blancas Valley. Rugged terrain and multiple river crossings mean that it can take over three hours to hike there from Eladio’s cabin. Trail-crew members, researchers and biology students are among the few people to make the trip to this remote site.

Laguna Escondida

Eladio Cruz, superb naturalist, conservationist and friend of CER, stands in front of Laguna Escondida. Photo credit: Mollie Deuel.

Beginning in the mid 1980s, an aquatic plant called water lettuce (Pistia stratiotes) began to colonize the lagoon, eventually covering majority of its surface. Because Laguna Escondida is far from away from any waterway that contains Pistia, it is unclear how the plant originally arrived. Perhaps an aquatic bird such as a northern jacana, masked duck or great blue heron brought seeds stuck in its feathers to the pond.

Cecropia Tree

A cecropia tree silhouette at sunrise in the Peñas Blancas Valley.

On a hike to Laguna Escondida this May, a group of biology students saw a broad-billed motmot and heard crested guans. Guans are arboreal birds related to turkeys, whose large size and clumsy flying make them desirable to hunters. Important as seed dispersers, these birds are indicators of a robust ecosystem. As the students hiked, their rubber boots stepped next to the tracks of collared peccaries, another species that the CER protects from hunting.

Water flowing through the CER

The CER preserves much of the watershed of the Peñas Blancas River.


Fer-de-lance Pit Viper

The fer-de-lance pit viper is one of the more notorious inhabitants of the Children’s Eternal Rainforest. This rather large specimen was sunning itself on the trail to Laguna Escondida.

MCLUS Spring 2011 Newsletter – Inspiring Stories of Renewal from the Children’s Eternal Rainforest

Jorie

7 year old Jorie Bachus raised almost $1,300 for the Children's Eternal Rainforest!

Monteverde Conservation League, U.S.

Spring 2011

Dear Friends of the Forest,

New discoveries. New vision. New dynamics. Renewal is spring in action! In this issue you will read of the exciting March 2011 rediscovery of the Lichen Stream Frog in the Children’s Eternal Rainforest, a species previously feared to be extinct. Mark Wainwright, MCL’s board president, and author of Mammals of Costa Rica, tells of this discovery in a letter to each of you.

Renewal is also what happens when an organization sets new goals as the Monteverde Conservation League (MCL) is doing. As stewards of this pristine rainforest, MCL is forging a new vision of the future

MCLUS, too, is reforming itself so we can be a constant support for the Children’s Eternal Rainforest. New MCLUS board members, with strong skills and passion for conservation, are joining a dedicated board. This dynamic creates exciting opportunities for growth!

In this spring newsletter we’re also sharing inspiring stories of support for the Children’s Eternal Rainforest. This includes seven-year-old Jorie’s birthday initiative to buy land for the forest. We are grateful to Tom Newmark, CEO of New Chapter, whose successful story of partnership with Whole Foods Market is described below.

Our guest blogger Mia Roberts has shared a wealth of information about visiting the Children’s Eternal Rainforest in her recent series of articles. And, if you’re ready for a Costa Rica adventure there is still time to join our Pocosol trip this summer. Space is limited and the trip is filling! You’ll find more details on the Pocosol trip page.

Whether it’s reforesting a barren pasture, creating eco-sensitive energy systems, buying critical habitat, or building a new information center – all are signs of progress being made for the Children’s Eternal Rainforest.

Wishing you a happy spring!

For the Forest,

Signed, Laurie Waller

Laurie Waller
President
Monteverde Conservation League U.S.
info@mclus.org

Jorie’s Story

Children saved this rainforest and they keep it growing. Seven year old Jorie is a child who cares deeply about her world. She wants a healthy planet and thriving rainforests.

Jorie in the Children's Eternal Rainforest

“My name is Jorie Bachus. I am 7 years old and in first grade. I love the rainforest because everything about it is important to us. It gives us oxygen and medicine, but what I love most is how many animals and plants live there. My Grandma and Grandpa have told us all about the Children’s Eternal Rainforest and this year my family got to go to Costa Rica and see some of it. It is amazing! This year, for my birthday, I asked my friends and family not to give me gifts but to help me raise money to help the Children’s Eternal Rainforest. I learned a lot about the Rainforest and tried to teach all of my friends. I even got to talk in front of my whole Girl Scout Troop. All of them were excited and helped me reach my goal of $1,000. We did it in two weeks and some people are still sending checks. I think we are almost at $1,300 now. In this next year I hope to raise a lot more.

When we went to Costa Rica I got to meet some of the people who work to save the Rainforest. I even got to meet the President of the Monteverde Conservation League, Mark Wainwright. They were all so nice and I like knowing who they are.

My sister Julia helped me a lot. We both liked going on a night hike in the Children’s Eternal Rainforest. We didn’t see any big animals but saw a lot of really neat bugs. Our guide, Henry, knew a lot. My Grandpa went with us. He loves the Rainforest and so do we.”

Jorie with members of MCL staff and board members

Jorie with members of MCL staff and board members

Schools and students world-wide raise money for the forest!

Between 2009 and 2010, MCLUS received $13,400 from schools and academies whose students held fundraisers to support land purchase in The Children’s Eternal Rainforest. Ideas for raising money were unique and varied: bake sales, a karate memorial break-a-thon, note paper sales, home chores and home electric/water conservation, contributing birthday money, giving programs and collecting funds from other students who care about the forest, collecting deposit money from bottles and cans, sponsoring a silent and dress up day at school to raise money, read-a-thons, and writing stories about the rainforest. As you can see, when children put their minds and hearts to a good cause much innovation follows. MCLUS wishes to honor and thank those schools, students, teachers and parents who worked hard to raise awareness of the rainforest and give charitably to our organization.

Ada Vista Elementary School 4th Grade
Austin School 5th grade
Birney Elementary
Centerville Public Schools 5th Grade
Conway Elementary School
Dolores School Student Council
Eagle College Prep
Fort Worth Country Day School 1st Grade
Fulton School at St. Albans
Glenridge Elementary School
Hoover Karate Academy
Jennings Lodge School
Little Red School House
Mayo Elementary School 5th Grade
Memorial School Pre-Kindergarten, Kindergarten, Nature Club and 4th Grade
Meyer School 5th Grade
Milton Academy 5th Grade
Molalla Elementary School
Nashoba Brooks School Kindergarten Class
Ninety-One School
Queen Elizabeth’s Hospital Junior School
Rundlett Middle School
Selwyn Elementary
St. Bede School 7th grade
Tara Redwood School Primary Class
The Gillispie School Kindergarten
The Principia School
Turkey Foot Middle School
Wolf Branch School
Woodland Country Day School 5th Grade
Worcester Preparatory School

New Chapter and Whole Foods Market team up again to donate to the CER!

Terry Newmark helps launch the St. Louis regional New Chapter promotion for the CER

Terry Newmark helps launch the St. Louis regional New Chapter promotion for the CER

New Chapter

The New Chapter Key Account Team and Tom Newmark are working with Whole Foods Market to raise money for the Children’s Eternal Rainforest (CER). Tom recently told the board of MCLUS that several stores in the Midwest, Northern California, and the Rocky Mountain regions have a month long fund raising campaign that supports the CER.

New Chapter encourages their vendors, in this case, Whole Foods, to help educate and support biodiversity and research for tropical rainforests in their Whole Body Departments. New Chapter’s products are currently being sold and displayed on store end caps with signage indicating that 5% of every purchase will go directly to the CER!

Whole Foods

This campaign is New Chapter’s vehicle for good and a win/win for everyone, New Chapter and Whole Foods alike. Individual Whole Foods stores that do the best with their educational efforts and also convey the strongest rainforest message to store customers have the opportunity to send their team members to New Chapter’s biodynamic farm, Luna Nueva, outside the CER. While there the store teams plant trees, hike, learn more about the rainforest and explore in the CER.

In 2010, Whole Food raised over $25,000 for the CER. They plan for even bigger returns in 2011. This past April approximately $45,000 was generated in CER donations! So, check out your local Whole Foods Store to see if the New Chapter display and products are being featured.

Click here to view more photos of the wonderful in-store displays

25th Anniversary Celebrations Continue

by Rowan Eisner, Monteverde, Costa Rica

MCL Facepainting

Walking through the rainforest

MCL continues to enjoy marking the results of the 25 years of hard work that created the Children’s Eternal Rainforest. On the 2nd and 9th of April they held a children’s event at the farmers’ market with face-painting, story telling, games and puzzles all focused on nature and animal themes.

On April 16th the Bajo del Tigre section of the reserve had an open day with guided walks, food, nature videos, forest creature face-painting, puzzles and know-your-forest activities in the casita (The Children’s Education Center).

Back in February, staff and associates of MCL gathered at Bajo del Tigre visitor center to hear the story of MCL from Bob Law – a 25 year timeline in pictures. The video of this and Bob’s slide show will soon be on MCL’s web site. They also planted punch berry trees (Myrcia splenders) which they had propagated in MCL’s nursery because there were only two left alive in the reserve. At the February assembly meeting at the main office everyone sang “happy birthday MCL” accompanied by a birthday cake.

Sleeping Sloth

Sleeping sloth at Bajo del Tigre open house

The biggest celebrations are yet to come. On May 1st Ecofest marks the occasion in art, nature and sustainability, highlighting eco-friendly alternatives such as solar cooking, pedal power, hydroponics and composting, with an art show and concerts.

At all such events people can check out the milestones along the way on the 25 year time-line banner with MCL depicted as a tree growing from the roots up, from 14 people meeting in Bob’s living room, into a flourishing canopy as part of a biosphere reserve with IUCN recognition.

 

A Thank You Letter from Mark Wainwright, President of the MCL Board of Directors

Monteverde, April 2011

Lichen Stream Frog

The Lichen Stream Frog rediscovered in the CER on March 30, 2011

Dear Friends of the Children’s Eternal Rainforest,

A few weeks ago (on the night of the March 30th), during an MCL-sponsored field trip to monitor amphibian populations, we were able to confirm the presence of the Lichen Stream Frog (Isthmohyla tica) on a remote ridge in the heart of the CER. The Lichen Stream Frog was thought to have vanished from the Monteverde area in the late 1980′s along with the Golden Toad and many other amphibians. Subsequently it disappeared from other parts of its tiny geographic range (a roughly 1500 ft elevational sliver extending from northwestern Costa Rica to western Panama), and many feared it might be extinct. This is the third time we have encountered the species on this one stream, but to my knowledge it is not known to occur today anywhere else in the world.

The Lichen Stream Frog is but one among tens of thousands of species of plants and animals protected within the CER. Yes – tens of thousands. The CER is home to about 3,000 species of vascular plants, including more than 500 orchid species; several hundred non-vascular plant species like mosses and liverworts; about 450 species of birds; we can only guess at the numbers for most insect groups but it seems reasonable to speculate that the CER harbors some 900 species of butterflies, perhaps 9,000 moth species, and perhaps 18,000 beetle species, just to mention a few. Undoubtedly, many of these organisms are as yet unknown to science.

The CER doesn’t only protect one of the most biologically rich ecosystems in the world. It is also the backbone of the protected area that is the primary attraction for ecotourism, the cornerstone of the local economy. And just as importantly, the CER protects an enormous watershed that provides clean and constant water for communities, agriculture, and hydroelectric projects – at present, the CER is fundamental to the production of about a third of Costa Rica’s electricity.

I throw these numbers at you because I want to drive home how immeasurably important it has been to protect these forests. All of these things would have been lost if it wasn’t for the help of caring people like you. Today we can continue our dream of safeguarding the existing CER and expanding it into critical areas thanks to the ongoing support of people like Tom Newmark, whose unwavering help has held fast despite the global economic crisis and extensive changes both at MCL and at MCLUS, or Jorie Howe, who requested that her friends and family celebrate her seventh birthday party with gifts to the CER. For example, a few months ago we finalized the purchase of a 250 acre piece of land of enormous importance. By protecting this piece of land, we simultaneously connected a previously disjunct piece of the CER to the rest of the protected area, closed an entry point for trespassing poachers and livestock, and protected a swath of what is arguably the most endangered type of forest in the region – the Premontane Wet Forest.

So on behalf of the beautiful Lichen Stream Frog, and all that it represents, I would like to express a heartfelt THANK YOU! for your essential help. Please take pride in the fact that your support makes all the difference, and know that it serves as further motivation for all of us here at MCL in Costa Rica to do everything in our power to make this magical achievement truly eternal.

Sincerely,

Mark Wainwright
President of the MCL Board of Directors

Renewable Energy Improvements in The Children’s Eternal Rainforest Field Stations

Rachel Crandell showing visitors the spring house at San Gerardo in 2008.

Rachel Crandell showing visitors the spring house at San Gerardo in 2008.

By Rowan Eisner – Monteverde, Costa Rica

QUESTION: How do you dry sheets in the rainforest?
ANSWER: See below!

Energy at the field stations

The field stations are the hub of activities in the Children’s Eternal Rainforest. Study groups, research projects, monitoring programs and, of course the income-generating tourism that keeps everything going all revolve around the field stations. So how do remote, off-grid locations meet comfort expectations when a group of thirty visitors may leave and another group arrive the same day?

Volcancitos, rivers and sun

Fifteen years ago San Gerardo (the current site of the San Gerardo field station on the Pacific side) was part of a “Tico*” farming community. The reserve acquired a hydropower generator to provide power for the community. Gradually, the small landholders left and now the 25kw generator is far too big: 10W would be enough. It is 1000 yards from the stations where the water pressure was too high, blowing the fittings and a tree fell on it. The plan is to swap it for a smaller generator, which uses less water and is closer to the station for easier maintenance.

The Pocosol field station on the Atlantic side also has a hydropower generator, but it is home-made from cups of cut pipe and a car differential. It is used to power lights and kitchen appliances like the blender. Pocosol also has volcancitos, or bubbling hot mud pots, half a mile away that could produce hot water if MCL can figure out the transport.

The challenge with hydropower is that the busiest time at the field stations is also the driest time. To solve this problem San Gerardo has inherited used solar panels from a Costa Rican indigenous community that has been connected to the grid and no longer uses the solar panels. When delivered these panels could be used for lighting and MCL is keeping an eye on the price of energy-efficient LED light bulbs. San Gerardo also has a diesel generator which produces more power than is needed for the washing machine and lights it currently powers, so that too will be sold for a smaller, more energy-efficient replacement.

Laundry: Until recently, washing sheets and towels meant two, 1 hour return trips to the nearest clothes drier on the all-terrain vehicle: expensive and time-consuming. But all that has changed with the new drying room at the San Gerardo station. Built from off-cuts of fallen trees with a poly-carbonate greenhouse roof, the 20×30′ drying room can reach a temperature of 120 degrees F inside and can get towels dry as quickly as one hour. Pocosol will get its own drying room soon, replacing an attic cupboard or hour- long road trips to a clothes drier. But, true to its name, solar drying will take longer with little sun. A trip to the duty-free zone in Golfito to buy a spare set of quick-dry sheets also helped. Now the station manager can stay at the field station and help with the change over between visiting groups rather than spend the day (and all that gas!) going to dry the laundry. This will be a great help this summer with the change over between groups, when five groups – each with 28 people – will be staying at the station.

2006 Dwight Crandell with stone masons Danne and Mike Rhaesa building the San Gerardo spring house

2006 Dwight Crandell with stone masons Danne and Mike Rhaesa building the San Gerardo spring house

Spring house construction completed complete with a coati proof door

Spring house construction completed complete with a coati proof door

Food: Salad for dinner? Fresh fruit for breakfast? Or how about fish for lunch? There is no refrigeration at the field stations, so anything fresh must be brought in frequently. Fish, for instance, needs to be picked up just before meal preparation. San Gerardo has a custom-built spring house which keeps food cool, and Pocosol uses ice boxes. Still, there is the time and cost of shopping trips and so MCL is looking into economical alternatives, including a kerosene refrigerator for the San Gerardo station.

Hot showers please! This is the number one request by guests. Currently, it is possible to make hot water by lighting a fire under the tank, but often there is no one to do it or no dry wood. Now that the solar drying room is in place at San Gerardo it should be possible to run solar hot water pipes through the room to make warm water for showers. The drawback is, with cold showers people only take 2 minutes to shower. With hot water, it would be hard to keep showers to 10 minutes.

Top energy priorities for the field stations:
Management: refrigeration
Visitors: hot showers

* “Tico” is a name that Costa Ricans call themselves.

Gratitude for Support from MCL in Costa Rica and MCLUS

Laurie Waller, MCLUS president, introduces Dr. Rainer Bussmann, Director of the William L. Brown Center and William L. Brown Curator of Economic Botany at the Missouri Botanic Garden

Laurie Waller, MCLUS president, introduces Dr. Rainer Bussmann, Director of the William L. Brown Center and William L. Brown Curator of Economic Botany at the Missouri Botanic Garden

April 28th was a reunion of kindred spirits, and an opportunity for MCL and MCLUS board members and staff to say “thank you” to friends and supporters of the CER.

April 28th was a  beautiful evening with a  view of downtown St. Louis from the Maryland Walk rooftop.

April 28th was a beautiful evening with a view of downtown St. Louis from the Maryland Walk rooftop.

St. Louis area supporters enjoyed a beautiful spring evening with camaraderie and refreshments on the roof-top at Maryland Walk in Clayton.

Carol Weisman, MCLUS’ governance consultant, friend of the forest, and her husband Dr. Frank Robbins, hosted the thank you reception and presentation by Dr. Rainer Bussman from the Missouri Botanical Garden. Dr. Bussman’s talk on “Protecting Tropical Forests and Keeping the Source of Traditional Knowledge Alive” gave new insights on rainforest conservation and the CER. Tom Newmark, CEO of New Chapter, shared inspiring remarks about his connection to this special forest and of successful reforestation. Laurie Waller, president of MCLUS, read a heartfelt thank you letter from Mark Wainwright, president of MCL’s board of directors and author of Mammals of Costa Rica.

Click here for more photos from this event

Have you missed guest blogger Mia Roberts’ fantastic series of posts about getting to know the Children’s Eternal Rainforest?

For the past couple of months, guest blogger Mia Roberts has written a wonderful series of posts about the CER that really take you inside. If you haven’t checked them out yet, please explore. Each post has vibrant pictures and descriptions of what you’ll find if you decide to take a trip to the CER.  Let us know if you like these posts!  Please send feedback to info@mclus.org or leave a comment on any posts you enjoy. Also feel free to share MCLUS blog posts with your friends and co-workers if you like!

April 27th, 2011 – Getting to Know the CER: the San Gerardo Field Station
April 19th, 2011 – The Pocosol Field Station
April 5th, 2011 – Peñas Blancas to Pocosol: The Ultimate CER Adventure
March 27th, 2011 – The Story of a Three Wattled Bellbird
March 17th, 2011 – An Interview with Marc Hoffman
March 12th, 2011 – Getting to Know the CER: Visit Finca Steller
March 7th, 2011 – Wildlife Sighting in the CER: Meet the Orange-bellied Trogon
February 28th, 2011 – Getting to Know the CER: A close-up of Bajo del Tigre
February 19th, 2011 – Exploring the Cloud Forest: Saving an ecosystem through innovative education
February 4th, 2011 – An Introduction to the Children’s Eternal Rainforest: Where is it, and how can you visit?
January 29th, 2011 – A New Way to Photograph Wildlife in the CER
January 27th, 2011 – An Introduction to MCLUS’s Newest Blogger

Want to support the Children’s Eternal Rainforest? Please consider making a tax-deductible donation today. Every contribution counts! Click here to donate.

Renewable Energy Improvements in The Children’s Eternal Rainforest Field Stations

Rachel Crandell showing visitors the spring house at San Gerardo in 2008.

Rachel Crandell showing visitors the spring house at San Gerardo in 2008.

By Rowan Eisner – Monteverde, Costa Rica

QUESTION: How do you dry sheets in the rainforest?
ANSWER: See below!

Energy at the field stations

The field stations are the hub of activities in the Children’s Eternal Rainforest. Study groups, research projects, monitoring programs and, of course the income-generating tourism that keeps everything going all revolve around the field stations. So how do remote, off-grid locations meet comfort expectations when a group of thirty visitors may leave and another group arrive the same day?

Volcancitos, rivers and sun

Fifteen years ago San Gerardo (the current site of the San Gerardo field station on the Pacific side) was part of a “Tico*” farming community. The reserve acquired a hydropower generator to provide power for the community. Gradually, the small landholders left and now the 25kw generator is far too big: 10W would be enough. It is 1000 yards from the stations where the water pressure was too high, blowing the fittings and a tree fell on it. The plan is to swap it for a smaller generator, which uses less water and is closer to the station for easier maintenance.

The Pocosol field station on the Atlantic side also has a hydropower generator, but it is home-made from cups of cut pipe and a car differential. It is used to power lights and kitchen appliances like the blender. Pocosol also has volcancitos, or bubbling hot mud pots, half a mile away that could produce hot water if MCL can figure out the transport.

The challenge with hydropower is that the busiest time at the field stations is also the driest time. To solve this problem San Gerardo has inherited used solar panels from a Costa Rican indigenous community that has been connected to the grid and no longer uses the solar panels. When delivered these panels could be used for lighting and MCL is keeping an eye on the price of energy-efficient LED light bulbs. San Gerardo also has a diesel generator which produces more power than is needed for the washing machine and lights it currently powers, so that too will be sold for a smaller, more energy-efficient replacement.

Laundry: Until recently, washing sheets and towels meant two, 1 hour return trips to the nearest clothes drier on the all-terrain vehicle: expensive and time-consuming. But all that has changed with the new drying room at the San Gerardo station. Built from off-cuts of fallen trees with a poly-carbonate greenhouse roof, the 20×30′ drying room can reach a temperature of 120 degrees F inside and can get towels dry as quickly as one hour. Pocosol will get its own drying room soon, replacing an attic cupboard or hour- long road trips to a clothes drier. But, true to its name, solar drying will take longer with little sun. A trip to the duty-free zone in Golfito to buy a spare set of quick-dry sheets also helped. Now the station manager can stay at the field station and help with the change over between visiting groups rather than spend the day (and all that gas!) going to dry the laundry. This will be a great help this summer with the change over between groups, when five groups – each with 28 people – will be staying at the station.

2006 Dwight Crandell with stone masons Danne and Mike Rhaesa building the San Gerardo spring house

2006 Dwight Crandell with stone masons Danne and Mike Rhaesa building the San Gerardo spring house

Spring house construction completed complete with a coati proof door

Spring house construction completed complete with a coati proof door

Food: Salad for dinner? Fresh fruit for breakfast? Or how about fish for lunch? There is no refrigeration at the field stations, so anything fresh must be brought in frequently. Fish, for instance, needs to be picked up just before meal preparation. San Gerardo has a custom-built spring house which keeps food cool, and Pocosol uses ice boxes. Still, there is the time and cost of shopping trips and so MCL is looking into economical alternatives, including a kerosene refrigerator for the San Gerardo station.

Hot showers please! This is the number one request by guests. Currently, it is possible to make hot water by lighting a fire under the tank, but often there is no one to do it or no dry wood. Now that the solar drying room is in place at San Gerardo it should be possible to run solar hot water pipes through the room to make warm water for showers. The drawback is, with cold showers people only take 2 minutes to shower. With hot water, it would be hard to keep showers to 10 minutes.

Top energy priorities for the field stations:
Management: refrigeration
Visitors: hot showers

* “Tico” is a name that Costa Ricans call themselves.

A Thank You Letter from Mark Wainwright, President of the MCL Board of Directors

Monteverde, April 2011

Lichen Stream Frog

The Lichen Stream Frog rediscovered in the CER on March 30, 2011

Dear friends of the Children’s Eternal Rainforest,

A few weeks ago (on the night of the March 30th), during an MCL-sponsored field trip to monitor amphibian populations, we were able to confirm the presence of the Lichen Stream Frog (Isthmohyla tica) on a remote ridge in the heart of the CER. The Lichen Stream Frog was thought to have vanished from the Monteverde area in the late 1980′s along with the Golden Toad and many other amphibians. Subsequently it disappeared from other parts of its tiny geographic range (a roughly 1500 ft elevational sliver extending from northwestern Costa Rica to western Panama), and many feared it might be extinct. This is the third time we have encountered the species on this one stream, but to my knowledge it is not known to occur today anywhere else in the world.

The Lichen Stream Frog is but one among tens of thousands of species of plants and animals protected within the CER. Yes – tens of thousands. The CER is home to about 3,000 species of vascular plants, including more than 500 orchid species; several hundred non-vascular plant species like mosses and liverworts; about 450 species of birds; we can only guess at the numbers for most insect groups but it seems reasonable to speculate that the CER harbors some 900 species of butterflies, perhaps 9,000 moth species, and perhaps 18,000 beetle species, just to mention a few. Undoubtedly, many of these organisms are as yet unknown to science.

The CER doesn’t only protect one of the most biologically rich ecosystems in the world. It is also the backbone of the protected area that is the primary attraction for ecotourism, the cornerstone of the local economy. And just as importantly, the CER protects an enormous watershed that provides clean and constant water for communities, agriculture, and hydroelectric projects – at present, the CER is fundamental to the production of about a third of Costa Rica’s electricity.

I throw these numbers at you because I want to drive home how immeasurably important it has been to protect these forests. All of these things would have been lost if it wasn’t for the help of caring people like you. Today we can continue our dream of safeguarding the existing CER and expanding it into critical areas thanks to the ongoing support of people like Tom Newmark, whose unwavering help has held fast despite the global economic crisis and extensive changes both at MCL and at MCLUS, or Jorie Howe, who requested that her friends and family celebrate her seventh birthday party with gifts to the CER. For example, a few months ago we finalized the purchase of a 250 acre piece of land of enormous importance. By protecting this piece of land, we simultaneously connected a previously disjunct piece of the CER to the rest of the protected area, closed an entry point for trespassing poachers and livestock, and protected a swath of what is arguably the most endangered type of forest in the region – the Premontane Wet Forest.

So on behalf of the beautiful Lichen Stream Frog, and all that it represents, I would like to express a heartfelt THANK YOU! for your essential help. Please take pride in the fact that your support makes all the difference, and know that it serves as further motivation for all of us here at MCL in Costa Rica to do everything in our power to make this magical achievement truly eternal.

Sincerely,

Mark Wainwright
President of the MCL Board of Directors

November 2009 MCLUS Newsletter

Many Thanks to the Howe Family for their Creative Fundraising!

Much appreciation is felt for the generosity of Bob and Margie Howe, who asked colleagues and friends to contribute to their favorite charities instead of having a retirement party. MCLUS was one of the organizations they chose, and we received a generous donation! Bob and Margie hope that their success will inspire others to raise funds for the forest in a similar way. They also encourage others to spread the word about the BEN, since many of their colleagues and friends had never heard of it. Bob has visited Monteverde 18 times, is currently teaching English there, and has been a long time friend of Carlos Munoz, former Executive Director of MCL. Bob and Margie hope to help bring electricity and other upgrades to the field stations.

Bob and Margie Howe at MCL office
Bob and Margie Howe (left) were honored with a lunch at the MCL office on November 18.

The Nature Quilt Project Completes Cross-Cultural Education Grant

The Nature Quilt Project submitted their final report this month to the Melinda Gray Ardia Environmental Foundation, who provided funds for students in Illinois and in La Tigra, Costa Rica to share in a water study. Students in Illinois visited a local outdoor environmental education center to practice the scientific method in investigating water quality. Meanwhile, students in La Tigra Costa Rica did the same, visiting a local stream in La Tigra and a stream at the Finca Steller Nature Center in the Children’s Eternal Rainforest. Both groups enjoyed the field trips immensely and learned a lot! It is hoped that more students in Costa Rica will have the opportunity to visit and spend time at the Finca Steller Nature Center, located on the Caribbean side of the BEN near the Pocosol field station. Rachel Crandell, former MCLUS President, invested much of her own labor and funds, to provide this educational facility for local children.

Students doing stream study
Fifth grade students from Industry, Illinois used nets to catch tadpoles, fish, and macroinvertebrates in a stream study in April (above). Students from La Tigra also captured and identified macroinvertebrates at a stream nearby their school (below), followed by a visit to a stream at the Finca Steller Nature Center (bottom).

La Tigra students

Finca Steller Nature Center

Thank You All For Your Contributions to the Children’s Eternal Rainforest!

Rainforest vine

This beautiful poem captures what your contributions have accomplished, no matter how small or big.

The poem is published in the book Tertulia en el Bosque, a compilation of works by 5 international and 24 Costa Rican poets. The book was edited by Luissiana Naranjo and the poem featured below was written by her. It was translated by Allison Deines.

The Children’s Eternal Rainforest

I am relieved to know that
silence is found in every leaf on the trees
like that breath of air that we dream of,
always luminous.

To know that today
so many hands
are apprentice seeds,
and later,
they will be trunks to defy the moon
with their branches like mischievous children,
impetutous against the saw.

Because no tree wants to die
with its shadow naked,
cut down in its womb
like that last hearth
that gave warmth to some man.

And that this land is fertile witness
of his audacity,
to be a tree amongst so much lead and cement,
to lose its wild identity
because roots sometimes slip
and clouds tiredly move away from their ideals.

This forest is eternal
not only because it warmly preserves the bird or the plant,
the insect or the frog,
but also because it preserves the POET,
yes, it preserves that poetically green,
that life that is summed up in its essence,
that game of time that never is born, never grows, and never dies,
that innocent sprout for which everything is possible,
that pioneer wind that topples all,
that sensuous rain that multiplies all,
and the silence…that becomes more poetic in its silence.

I am relieved to know,
that this forest is eternal
just
because you and I
tossed a coin
to win its existence from our imagination.

Reminder

Keep in mind the summer 2010 trip to the BEN. For more details visit http://mclus.org/eco-tourism/

For the forest,
Friends and Board of MCLUS

Monteverde Conservation League US is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.
All donations are tax deductible. Donate Now

Donors Flock To $50,000 Facebook Contest To Save Endangered Frogs In Children’s Eternal Rainforest

Endangered Frogs Feared Extinct Found in Children’s Eternal Rainforest Need Prize Money to Protect Habitat


I rivularis

Photo Caption:
Endangered frog species population thought extinct rediscovered in Children’s Eternal Rainforest, located in Monteverde, Costa Rica, benefits from online social networking contest.
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ST. LOUIS, Missouri (January 10, 2008) — Online social networking site Facebook.com is hosting a contest in partnership with The Case Foundation — the Causes Giving Challenge — that will award $50,000 to the non-profit organization that attracts the most individual donors over a 50-day period ending February 1, 2008. Out of over 50,000 individual registered Causes, one has been recently getting a lot of attention — the Children’s Eternal Rainforest. Only days after joining the contest, this group has rapidly risen to become the only environmental organization represented in the top 50 contest leaders.

While every group in the contest has a story to tell, the supporters of the Children’s Eternal Rainforest are particularly passionate about the prospect of winning the $50,000 grand prize. A species of tropical frog feared extinct (Lithobates vibicarius) was recently rediscovered within the Children’s Eternal Rainforest in Monteverde, Costa Rica. By participating in this contest, supporters hope to ensure the continued survival of this very rare species and continue the fight against global warming.

Award-winning environmental children’s book author and illustrator Kristin Joy Pratt-Serafini entered the Cause into the contest, anticipating the release of her latest book, The Forever Forest: Kids Save a Tropical Treasure (Dawn Publications, 2008). This true story describes how, in 1987, one class of 2nd graders in Sweden started a movement that would eventually become the largest nature private reserve in Central America.

Kristin wrote and illustrated her first book, A Walk in the Rainforest (Dawn Publications, 1992), when she was a freshman in high school. “Concern for the Children’s Eternal Rainforest inspired me to make my first book. The rainforest was a big deal in the nineties. It should still be a big deal today,” Kristin says. “It seemed natural to join this contest, and try to inspire a new generation of environmental leaders. If the Children’s Eternal Rainforest has taught me anything, it is to never underestimate the power of motivated youth. Facebook just ‘Friended’ the forest.”

The rules of the contest are simple — Facebook members click a “Join” or “Donate” button to become supporters of the Cause and contribute to its chances for winning the grand prize. The group that gets the most individual donations wins $50,000. People who haven’t yet registered for the popular site can easily create a free account to participate in the contest and help their chosen cause.

Rachel Crandell is the founder and president of the Monteverde Conservation League, U.S.: the non-profit responsible for collecting contributions to the Children’s Eternal Rainforest. “I’m very grateful for all the new donations that have been pouring in,” says Rachel. “Last year we collected just over $100,000, using traditional fundraising methods, to help preserve more rainforest and protect biodiversity. Winning the $50,000 in this online contest would be a huge help to ensure that the endangered animals endemic to the Children’s Eternal Rainforest will be protected forever.”

This contest is revealing a whole new generation of young and eager philanthropic givers who are willing to donate their time, money and attention to deserving causes such as the Children’s Eternal Rainforest. It demonstrates the power of social networking sites to make a real difference with their millions of motivated members.

The Causes Giving Challenge leader board can be found here:
http://apps.facebook.com/causes/giving

The Children’s Eternal Rainforest Cause page can be viewed here:
http://apps.facebook.com/causes/view_cause/53587

About the Children’s Eternal Rainforest
Swedish school children started a worldwide effort in 1987 by sending money to Monteverde, Costa Rica to purchase rain forest and protect its priceless natural treasures forever. Today children from 44 nations have helped The Children’s Eternal Rainforest become the largest private reserve in Central America, 54,000 acres.

To learn more about the Children’s Eternal Rainforest, please visit http://www.mclus.org.

Contact: Rachel Crandell
Tel: (314) 878-8427
Email: info@mclus.org