Tárcoles River Explained

Tárcoles River
Mouth Coordinates:9.7863°N -84.6412°W
Subdivision Type1:Country
Length:111km (69miles)
Mouth Elevation:0m (00feet)
Basin Size:2121km2

The Tárcoles River, also called the Grande de Tárcoles River or the Río Grande de Tarcoles, in Costa Rica originates on the southern slopes of the Cordillera Central volcanic range and flows in a south-westerly direction to the Gulf of Nicoya. The river is 111km (69miles) long and its watershed covers an area of 2121sqkm, which encompasses around 50% of the country's population.

Course

The river's watershed drains approximately 67% of Costa Rica's untreated organic and industrial waste and is considered the most contaminated river basin in the country.[1] [2]

The river's upper reaches form the northern border of the Carara National Park. It is a habitat for American crocodiles, while the marshes located at the river's mouth have many waterfowl and wading birds. Among the many herons and egrets are the boatbill and bare-throated tiger heron, and other birds found here include double-striped thick-knee, mangrove warbler and American pygmy kingfisher. The total list known of birds well exceeds 320 species including the little known Guacalillo Canals. The avian biodiversity is substantial including rare birds such as Agami Heron, Rufous-necked Woodrail, Jabiru, Yellow-billed Cotinga and recently found an Orinoco Goose. It's also home of Howler and White-faced Capuchin Monkeys. Less commonly seen are Silky Anteater, Sloths, Grinson, Jaguarundi, River Otter and Northern Tamandua.[3]

Reptiles, such as the American crocodile, caiman, common basilisk and large iguanas, are also easily seen.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ballestero, Maureen . Tárcoles River Basin, Costa Rica: Background Paper . 2003 . worldbank.org .
  2. Web site: Tárcoles: The most contaminated river in Central America . Sebastian Rodriguez . AIDA . 1 March 2017 . 2019-02-05.
  3. Web site: MBJ HOME . 2022-06-05 . Mangrove Birding Journeys . en-US.