Costa Rica Rules the Roost for Birdwatching in Central America


Some of the world’s best bird-watching is in Costa Rica, especially in the Caribbean region at Veragua Rainforest.

This time of year is a special time for birdwatchers. Equipped with binoculars, bird guides and checklists, avid birders throughout the Americas brave snow, wind, rain, and even tropical sun, to take part in the annual Christmas Bird Count.

Costa Rica holds the record in Central America for the highest number of birds counted in a 24-hour period, during the Christmas Bird Count on December 5, 2012. A record number of 417 bird species, and 12,665 individual birds, were identified in Costa Rica’s Central Caribbean region, including Veragua Rainforest Eco-Adventure which organized the count.

“The area is very rich in bird species. It’s incredible to see nearly half the species of birds in all of Costa Rica in our area in 24 hours,” said Daniel Torres, Site Manager at Veragua Rainforest Eco-Adventure.

With 918 bird species recorded, Costa Rica is among the top five favorite countries in the world for bird-watching. Given Costa Rica’s size – just smaller than the U.S. state of West Virginia – it sports the greatest density of bird species of any continental American country.

Travelers flock to the Central American nation to see exotic and beautiful birds, and bird watching tours in Costa Rica have really taken off. The Costa Rican Tourism Board launched a “National Birding Route” earlier this year of 12 strategic observation spots that boast a large diversity of bird species.

“On a nice sunny day you can easily see at least 80 bird species in a day at Veragua,” noted Torres, who is an avid birdwatcher. The most common kinds of birds to see at Veragua Rainforest include hawks, vultures, tanagers, hummingbirds, toucans, woodcreepers, warblers, wrens, motmots, oropendulas, parrots and parakeets.


About 600 bird species are resident in Costa Rica, while most of the other regular visitors are winter migrating birds from North America. Many songbird species in the United States and Canada spend the winter in Central America. From August to December, the Costa Rica Caribbean region becomes the second largest migratory passage of birds of prey on the planet, when millions of eagles, hawks, falcons, buzzards, owls, etc. fly south along the Atlantic and Caribbean coasts from North America, escaping cold weather.


Seeing birds while birdwatching in Costa Rica depends on many factors – weather and time of day, explained Torres. The best time of day to go bird-watching is either at dawn or dusk. “Between 5:00 and 5:30 a.m. the birds begin to sing and are active until mid-morning; and then again from about 3:00 in the afternoon until after sunset,” Torres said.

Contact Veragua Rainforest Eco-Adventure to arrange a specialized Costa Rica bird-watching tour. Visit Veragua Rainforest Eco-Adventure Park for one of the best rainforest tours in Costa Rica.

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