Tibabuyes Explained

Tibabuyes Wetland
Alt Name:Juan Amarillo Wetland
Map:Colombia Bogotá
Map Width:150
Mark:Green pog.svg
Marker Size:12
Location:Suba, Engativá, Bogotá
Coordinates:4.7305°N -74.1097°W
Area Ha:222.58
Elevation:2539m (8,330feet)
Designated:September 2003
Named For:Muysccubun

"land of the farmers"

Administrator:EAAB - ESP

Tibabuyes (Spanish; Castilian: Humedal de Tibabuyes) or Juan Amarillo Wetland is a wetland, part of the Wetlands of Bogotá, located in the localities Suba and Engativá, Bogotá, Colombia. The wetland, in the Juan Amarillo River basin on the Bogotá savanna is the largest of the wetlands of Bogotá and covers an area of 222ha.[1]

With the planned construction of Avenida Longitudinal de Occidente/Cundinamarca Highway, there will have to be built an overpass, which will affect the wetlands. The indigenous community and the inhabitants of the neighbourhoods surrounding the place are opposed to it.

Etymology

The name Tibabuyes comes from Muysccubun, the language of the indigenous Muisca, who inhabited the Bogotá savanna before the Spanish conquest, and means "land of the farmers".[1]

Flora and fauna

Birds

Tibabuyes hosts 22 bird species.[2]

See also

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Website Humedal Tibabuyes
  2. Andrade & Benitez, s.a., p.8