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RAP
is made possible by the Smart Family Foundation
and USAID
WHO: An
International Team of Scientists
A team of nine expert scientists from Belgium, Canada, Guyana,
Suriname, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Venezuela
will come together to implement the first all-taxa
survey of the Eastern Kanuku Mountains. The experts
will select and mentor six or seven biology students from
Guyana during a training course held there right before
the expedition. The students chosen will join our RAP expedition
and form Guyana's own local RAP team. Our reporter Jensen
will write dispatches back to us about the RAP activities
from the Kanuku mountains.
Read
Latest DISPATCHES from the
field
RAP
Results are out! Read
about the recorded discoveries from our expedition in Guyana.
WHAT: Rapid
Assessment Program (RAP) Expedition
in Guyana
Scientists will comb the forest around the Rupununi and
Rewa Rivers of southern Guyana to document the biodiversity
of aquatic and terrestrial vegetation, birds, mammals, amphibians,
reptiles, fish, as well as aquatic and terrestrial
invertebrates.
WHERE: Eastern Kanuku Mountains, Guyana, South
America
The previous RAP carried out in Guyana in 1993 emphasized
the biological
importance of the Western Kanuku Mountains that
provide habitats
for rare
and endangered species such as the giant river
otter, black caiman, harpy eagle, jaguar, giant river turtle,
and the giant armadillo. The Eastern Kanuku Mountains, little
explored up to now by scientists, may be even more biologically
significant. Our exact route through the Kanukus is yet
to be determined and should be an exciting surprise!
WHEN: October 2001
We will arrive in the Kanuku Mountains just after the rainy
season so the waters will be high enough to navigate the
rivers but hopefully we will miss the dangerous flashfloods.
We are also hoping that intermittent storms will keep it
wet enough to still see many frogs and salamanders. We are
packing lots of plastic bags and silica gel (a drying
agent) to keep our fine electronic instruments functioning
in the tropical humidity.
WHY: Survey the Kanuku Mountains
We
will collect severely lacking preliminary biological data
about the Rupununi and Rewa-Kwitaro rivers before conducting
a more in-depth assessment
later. We also want to provide biological and ecological
information for the establishment of a proposed
protected
area system in the Kanuku Mountains. A RAP team
of biologists in Guyana will continue to assess biodiversity
to enable positive conservation decisions and actions over
the long-term.
HOW: Life On
Expedition
We head out as a team, by boat or by foot, for the day's
scientific sampling. This may mean that we record bird and
frog calls, work fishnets, trap mammals, or clip flowers
from the very top of a tree. Each scientist follows the
RAP methods that are specifically designed to reduce the
impact on the environment, and maximize the short time we
have to sample a large area.
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