Species Eva or Herman saw while staying at Sierra Llorona Panama Lodge the last week of February, 2005.

Asterisk indicates Eva got a photograph. "h" indicates heard only.

  1. Great Tinamou*
  2. Little Tinamou h
  3. Brown Pelican
  4. Neotropic Cormorant
  5. Magnificent Frigatebird*
  6. Bare-throated Tiger-Heron (questionable) *
  7. Great Blue Heron*
  8. Great Egret*
  9. Snowy Egret*
  10. Little Blue Heron*
  11. Tricolored Heron
  12. Reddish Egret
  13. Cattle Egret*
  14. Green-backed Heron (aka Striated Heron. Very like, or maybe even the same species as, the Green Heron.)*
  15. Yellow-crowned Night-Heron (Herman did not duck into the Mangroves with Eva and Michael so he missed it.)
  16. Boat-billed Heron *
  17. Black Vulture* (aka "Panamanian condor")
  18. Turkey Vulture*
  19. King Vulture
  20. Osprey*
  21. Gray-headed Kite*
  22. Hook-billed Kite
  23. American Swallow-tailed Kite*
  24. Snail Kite*
  25. Double-toothed Kite*
  26. Plumbeous Kite
  27. White Hawk
  28. Common Black Hawk (I had no sooner expressed surprise that there was one on each of two successive telephone poles—I thought they had territories-- when one flew at the other and there was a flutter of feathers. For a second I thought he was attacking the intruder but then the penny dropped. Gonzalo said, "Now you know why they were so close.")
  29. Roadside Hawk
  30. Swainson’s Hawk
  31. Zone-tailed Hawk
  32. Black Hawk-Eagle (Herman only)
  33. Yellow-headed Caracara
  34. Laughing Falcon h
  35. Bat Falcon
  36. Gray-headed Chachalaca*
  37. Crested Guan*
  38. White-throated Crake*
  39. Gray-necked Wood-Rail (I love this bird. We saw several in the same place, but I was equally happy to hear them. In Belize I saw this bird but did not hear it. It was one of the few bird calls that really stood out from my Belize tape. Herman characterized it as "tick tock".)
  40. Purple Galinule
  41. Common Moorhen
  42. Southern Lapwing *
  43. Watled Jacana*
  44. Solitary Sandpiper
  45. Rock Pigeon
  46. Pale Vented Pigeon*
  47. Short-billed Pigeon
  48. Ruddy Ground Dove*
  49. White-tipped Dove
  50. Orange-chinned Parakeet*
  51. Brown-hooded Parrot
  52. Blue-headed Parrot*
  53. Red-lored Amazon*
  54. Mealy Amazon*
  55. Mangrove Cuckoo* (Herman missed it)
  56. Squirrel Cuckoo
  57. Greater Ani
  58. Smooth-billed Ani*
  59. Tropical Screech Owl h
  60. Crested Owl h
  61. Spectacled Owl*
  62. Mottled Owl h
  63. Black-and-White Owl h
  64. Pauraque (Every morning that we drove away from the lodge before dawn we flushed at least one.)
  65. White-collared Swift
  66. Long-tailed Hermit*
  67. Little Hermit
  68. White-necked Jacobin*
  69. Black-throated Mango
  70. Violet-crowned Woodnymph*
  71. Sapphire-throated Hummingbird
  72. Blue-chested Hummingbird*
  73. Rufous-tailed Hummingbird*
  74. White-taled Trogon*
  75. Violaceous Trogon h
  76. Black-throated Trogon*
  77. Slatey-tailed Trogon*
  78. Blue-crowned Motmot*
  79. Rufous Motmot
  80. Broad-billed Motmot*
  81. Ringed Kingfisher*
  82. Green Kingfisher*
  83. Pied Puffbird*
  84. White-whiskered Puffbird
  85. Great Jacamar
  86. Spot-crowned Barbet
  87. Collared Aracari*
  88. Keel-billed Toucan*
  89. Chestnut-mandibled Toucan
  90. Black-cheeked Woodpecker*
  91. Red-crowned Woodpecker h
  92. Lineated Woodpecker*
  93. Crimson-crested Woodpecker
  94. Plain Xenops
  95. Plain-brown Woodcreeper* (aka Cocoa Woodpecker)
  96. Wedge-billed Woodcreeper* (Herman missed this one, because he did not walk to the swimming hole with Eva and Michael)
  97. Buff-throated Woodcreeper*
  98. Great Antshrike
  99. Barred Antshrike
  100. Slaty Antshrike
  101. Streak-crowned antvireo h (? I question it because we were south of its range)
  102. Spot-crowned Antvireo
  103. Checker-throated Antwren
  104. Dot-winged Antwren
  105. Dusky Antbird
  106. White-bellied antbird
  107. Chestnut-backed antbird
  108. Bi-colored Antbird h
  109. Spectacled Antpitta h
  110. Yellow-bellied Elaenia
  111. Lesser Elaenia
  112. Ochre-bellied Flycatcher
  113. Common Tody-flycatcher (nesting)
  114. Ruddy-tailed Flycatcher (Herman saw it. Eva missed it.)
  115. Long-tailed Tyrant*
  116. Dusky-capped flycatcher
  117. Panama Flycatcher*
  118. Great-crested flycatcher h
  119. Great Kiskadee
  120. Boat-billed Flycatcher
  121. Rusty-margined Flycatcher
  122. Social Flycatcher
  123. Gray-capped Flycatcher*
  124. Streaked Flycatcher*
  125. Tropical Kingbird*
  126. Fork-tailed Flycatcher (Herman, at Madden Dam. Eva had wandered off.)
  127. Masked Tityra*
  128. Blue Cotinga*
  129. Purple-throated Fruitcrow*
  130. Golden-collared Manakin*
  131. Blue-Crowned Manakin*
  132. Reed-capped Manakin*
  133. Gray-breasted Martin*
  134. Blue-and-White Swallow*
  135. Black-chested Jay
  136. Black-bellied Wren
  137. Bay Wren
  138. House Wren
  139. Southern Nightinggale-Wren
  140. Tropical Gnatcatcher
  141. Clay-colored Thrush*
  142. Tropical Mockingbird
  143. Red-eyed Vireo h
  144. Tennessee Warbler
  145. Prothonotary Warbler
  146. Northern Waterthrush
  147. Bananaquit*
  148. Plain-colored Tanager
  149. Golden-hooded Tanager*
  150. Blue Dacnis
  151. Green Honeycreeper
  152. Red-legged Honeycreeper*
  153. Yellow-crowned Euphonia
  154. Blue-gray Tanager*
  155. Palm Tanager*
  156. Gray-headed Tanager
  157. White-shouldered Tanager*
  158. Red-throated Ant-Tanager*
  159. Summer Tanager*
  160. Crimson-backed Tanager*
  161. Flame-rumped Tanager
  162. Rosy Thrush-Tanager
  163. Buff-throated Saltator
  164. Rose-breasted Grosbeak*
  165. Blue-black Grosbeak
  166. Black-striped Sparrow*
  167. Variable seedeater
  168. Yellow-bellied Seedeater*
  169. Lesser Seed-Finch*
  170. Red-breasted Blackbird
  171. Great-tailed Grackle
  172. Shiny Cowbird
  173. Yellow-backed Oriole*
  174. Baltimore Oriole*
  175. Yellow-rumped Cacique*
  176. Crested Oropendula*
  177. Chestnut-headed Oropendula*
  178. House Sparrow

We jointly "got" 178 species of birds, of which 3 were questionable,and 10 were just heard. Of the 168 seen by Eva and/or Herman, Eva saw 165. She photographed 80, or 48% of the avian species she saw.

Other animals

1.turtles*

2.White capuchin monkeys*

3.gecko*

4.various lizards*

5.various frogs*

6. Capybara*

7. Three-toed sloth*

8. Northern Tamandua*

9. butterflies*

10. fly*

11. orange tick-like bug*

12. leaf-footed bug*

13. grasshopper*

14. Preying mantis*

15. pair of well-camouflaged bugs*

16. Coatimundi

17. Agouti

Plants

1. orchid*

2. various flowers*

3. tanslucent seed pods*

4. labelled trees*

5. Ficus*

6. unidentified fabulous trees*

7. Giant mushroom*

8. hot lips*

9. Passion flower*


Birding Panama February 2005
Panamanian animals other than birds
Panamanian flowers and other miscellany from our trip

Herman's Home Page
Eva's Home Page


Feedback may be sent to eva@theworld.com
This page has been accessed access odometer display times since August 8, 2005

Last revised: November 6,2005