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AMAZON RAINFOREST

The principal Amazon artery for visitors is the Napo River, a major tributary of the main Amazon River. Its basin is 870 miles long and one to three miles wide. As a result of fluvial dynamics, the Napo’s 130 islands are covered by young forests, which provide refuge and nesting sites for a multitude of bird species, many of them migratory.

 

Most of the shore is covered with tropical forest, and over thousands of years, riverbeds have formed many attractive lakes. Historically, the indigenous communities have been able to maintain a productive subsistence within the existing ecosystems of vast forest preserve. The most representative are: the Siona-Secoya, Cofan, Huaorani, Shuar and Ashuar.

 

The Amazon ecosystem, particularly its tropical rain forest, is considered one of the richest and most complex communities of plant and animal life in the world. The region is characterized by huge and diverse amounts of flora and fauna with extraordinary variations in their habitats and microhabitats

VISITING THE AMAZON

Crossing the Andes towards the East, one drops down from 4.000m to the headwaters of the mighty Amazon, passing from high "paramo" to tropical jungle in less than 150km.

 

Seeing this green world with hundreds of species of birds, beautiful butterflies, and strange animals in their natural habitat - then going to bed in your camp or lodge with the soft sounds of the forest night - is a unique experience.

 

Awakening in the morning to an orchestra of bird music, traveling in a dugout canoe and visiting isolated Indigenous communities - all add to this adventure.

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