Field notes, v4226
Page 135
Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library. Contributed by Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley. | www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
points, Dean 2007 Journal On trail Tres Glorios-Cerro Koruk, Parque Internacional La Amistad, Prov. Puntarenas, Costa Rica (cont.) Dec.16 ...stopped to cut down some nice-looking bromeliads that were ~2m off the ground. In the 4th one I opened, I found 2 dark colored adult Britoglossa. They are a dark brown color with some lighter brown in small patches, a few white marks, centers and mostly unwelved feet like those of B. rustrata. One was missing its tail and was somewhat more robust, while the other had a long tail and was somewhat thinner. The others returned and we opened 10-12 bromeliads total. Cachi found another salamander, and I found an Orangeator triseriatus pacificus in the leaf litter (9.15°730'N,83.06°531'W [WG584; 18m acc.], 2387m elev.). Cachi couldn't identify the salamander and said it may be a new species. We continued hiking up a big hill to "Gracias a Dios", then down and up again over Cerro Beén, down once again through mossy oak forest and lots of bambus, and finally, up to campamento 1. We had to pass some nice bromeliads in order to arrive at camp before dark, and didn't really sample more. After dinner, I searched in the forest along a stream for 1.5-2 hrs, but found nothing despite the fact that it was raining and there were many broad leaved plants and lots of good mossy branches.