NATURE
NATURE WATCH
By Fulvio Eccardi
From windswept meadows on the upper
slopes of volcanoes more than 4,000-meters-high, to lowland plains covered
with a dense mantle of tropical jungle, the Mundo Maya is a mosaic of
environments, climates, flora and fauna. A series of geological faults
runs through the region and frequent earthquakes have changed the face
of the landscape.
During the
summer and fall months, tropical storms, called cyclones, often blow into
the area, and during the winter and spring there is a constant battle
between the hot and dry counter trade winds and polar air masses called
nortes (north winds). Furthermore, a small area may feature several different
natural habitats, for example: thorn scrub, dense jungle, swamps, mangroves,
mountain forest, volcanic crater lakes and coral reefs.
Botanists
have identified around 8,000 species of flowering plants; 600 bird species,
more than in all Europe; and approximately 1,200 kinds of butterflies.
This abundance can be found in an area half the size of Texas.
For almost
100 million years, the Mundo Maya developed in isolation, leading to the
evolution of endemic life forms; different to those found in neighboring
regions. It was also a land bridge between North and South America, and,
to this day, temperate and tropical plants and animals from both subcontinents
are found in the area.
We invite
you to click on the images below to learn more about some of the fauna
of the Mundo Maya:
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Site produced by Organización
Tips. Cancun, Mexico.
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