Cahuita National
Park
|
A Parks Service control point is located at the village
of Cahuita and the Park Headquarters are in the sector known as Puerto
Vargas, on the other side of Cahuita Point. The two posts are 30 kms.
southeast of Cahuita on the road between Limón and Brí-Brí. |
|

|
Lush vegetation, white sandy beaches, coconut trees, coral reefs,
mangrove swamps, marshes and a hot, humid climate are some of the
components of Cahuita, a national park of 1,067 hectares located on the
Caribbean shore, southeast of the city of Limón.
|
| A dense, tropical foliage , with a wealth of
palm trees and high humity, provides shelter for pacas, raccoon,
Northern tamanduas, white faced capuchin monkeys, Southern opossums,
three-toed sloths, agouties, common long-nosed armadillos and Mexican
tree porcupines. The marshes are home to green iguanas, basilisks,
yellow-crowned night herons, magnificent frigatebirds, green ibis,
little blue herons, gulls and other species. The coast is inhabited by
red land and fiddler crabs, the latter a very striking species that uses
its oversized claw to dig holes in the mud. |

|
|

|
The world of coral reefs is made up of over 35 species
of coral, including elkhorn coral and smooth brain coral. This
underwater habitat abounds with sea urchins, lobsters, turtles, moray
eels, sharks and innumerable brightly colored fish of various sizes and
shapes.
The species identified on the Cahuita reef include 128
of algae, 44 of crustaceans, 140 of mollusks, 3 of halophytic
phanerophytes, and 123 of fish. The reef consists of 240 hectares of
around Chuita Point, a site endangered by the build-up of silt and other
sedimentary deposits. The park extends along the coast for 14 kms. with
beach after beach shaded by lush vegetation and coconut trees, typical
of Costa Rican Caribbean. Theses beaches are ideal places to relax and
observe nature close at hand.
|
| Cahuita suffered a mayor damage as
the result of an earthquake that took place on 22nd April 1991. Enormous
fissures opened, many trees were toppled, the park facilities were
destroyed, and the area, together with a large part of the Caribbean
coast, was elevated, leaving part of the reef exposed, which
subsequently killed the corals.
(Text and pictures on this page were
taken from a public domain source and modified by Michael Dodson and
Denny Genovese)
|
|
|
|
Top of Page
Looking for a specific page on our
site? Click Here
(C) 2006 Puriscal-Online.com
|