Size: 5,013 hectares of land
4,436 hectares of sea
Camping: Not permitted
Distance from San José: 241 kilometers
The refuge is located on the Caribbean in one of Costa
Rica's most scenic regions. The coast is shaped by a chain of
headlands set between white sandy beaches with smooth slopes into
gently lapping water. The beaches are fringed by innumerable coconut
palm trees and surrounded by coral reefs that extends 200 meter
of shore.
The Gandoca-Manzanillo Wildlife Refuge
contains a few of Costa Rica's last living coral reefs and the
last orey swamp in the country. It also contains the only intact
mangrove swamp on the Atlantic coast, an important turtle nesting
beach.
A notable bird sighting have been made, and it is taught to be
the re-appearance of the harpy eagles. This huge raptor was probably
extinct in Costa Rica due to the deforestation and hunting pressure,
but these sightings in recent years give us the hope that someday
that species will be once again living in those areas, it could
return by itself or be reintroduced.
The coral reefs in front of Uva, Manzanillo and Mona Points measure
5 square kilometers all together and there you could find most
of the corals and octocorals species.
Fairly common plant that grows throughout the reef area is turtle
grass. It forms an underwater grassland that is not very deep
and that is host to several kinds of seaweed, and food for some
fish, mollusk and sea snails.
Most of the refuge, which is flat
or gently rolling with small hills no higher that 100 meters,
is covered with forest, and the rest with grasslands and some
farms.
A very abundant species in the understorey
and in clearings is the heliconia, a plant that grows 2 meters
tall and has very conspicuous and beautiful inflorescences with
brightly colored bractlets that are usually red and yellow.
To the southeast of the refuge lies the Gandoca estuary which
is made up almost exclusively of red mangrove.
Trees found here: holillo palm, sajo,
cativo, coconut palm, sea grape, red mangrove,
Animals found here: crocodile (endangered
species), tapir (endangered species), caiman, paca, West Indian
manatee (endangered specie)
Species that live at the coral reef:
queen angelfish, French angelfish, rock beauty, blue parrot fish,
Chaetodon ocellatus, lobster, sponges, red urchin, long-spined
black urchin, sun anemone, Venus sea fans, sea cucumbers, white
shrimp, and Pacific green turtles, oysters, Atlantic tarpon.
Birds found here: crested-mandibled
toucan, ornate hawk-eagle, red-loren amazon, red-capped manakin,
sulphur-winged parakeet, broad-billed motmot, collared aracari,
and lineated woodpecker.