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388 Pages
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{ "text": "\"supelletes\"\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA-1 and P. (carrying)\n\n\"0.25KM M of Carter W (basically) nF co 3KM W of Carter W (basically) nF co 1-AC on CA [TRANSCRIPTION_TRUNCATED_DUE_TO_LOOP]
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{ "text": "C\nFoods\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n [TRANSCRIPTION_TRUNCATED_DUE_TO_LOOP]
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{ "text": "[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible]\n[illegible [TRANSCRIPTION_TRUNCATED_DUE_TO_LOOP]
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{ "text": "Catalogue\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N\"8A9H,7I\nZMK38D FOLKLYR 77-sail\nCRVA1980 \"\nbase alt can vary - in some tables and figures \"\n\n20 Jul\n16-4835N, 70.000 mS, P.825M, W\"F88F8,P# N [TRANSCRIPTION_TRUNCATED_DUE_TO_LOOP]
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{ "text": "\"Catalogue\"\n\n\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\" [TRANSCRIPTION_TRUNCATED_DUE_TO_LOOP]
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Catalog (blue) W M31, photo stations from camera to station 2. W M31, 5.000 m7+820W W" 28'49.88 N" 03'44'.41 A. tape FOLFP 77-mid along tube streamer position 2 WK-162 FOLFP station-77 streamer streamer position 2 WK-162 FOLFP 77-mid along tube streamer position 2 WK-162 FOLFP 77-mid " " FOLFP 77-mid Helocus " " W M31, 5.000 m7+820W W" 28'49.88 N" 03'44'.41 A. tape (blue) W M31, but Z not in C, camera to station 2. W M31, 5.000 m7+820W W" 28'49.88 N" 03'44'.41 A. tape FOLFP 77-mid along tube streamer position 2 WK-162 FOLFP 77-mid along tube streamer position 2 WK-162 W M31, but Z not in C, camera to station 2. W M31, 5.000 m7+820W W" 28'49.88 N" 03'44'.41 A. tape FOLFP 77-mid along tube streamer position 2 WK-162 FOLFP 77-mid Helocus streamer mid 2 WK-162 W M31, but Z not in C, camera to station 2. W M31, 5.000 m7+820W W" 28'49.88 N" 03'44'.41 A. tape FOLFP 77-mid along tube streamer position 2 WK-162 FOLFP 77-mid Helocus streamer mid 2 WK-162 W M31, but Z not in C, camera to station 2. W M31, 5.000 m7+820W W" 28'49.88 N" 03'44'.41 A. tape FOLFP 77-mid along tube streamer position 2 WK-162 FOLFP 77-mid Helocus streamer mid 2 WK-162 W M31, but Z not in C, camera to station 2. W M31, 5.000 m7+820W W" 28'49.88 N" 03'44'.41 A. tape FOLFP 77-mid along tube streamer position 2 WK-162 FOLFP 77-mid Helocus streamer mid 2 WK-162 W M31, but Z not in C, camera to station 2. W M31, 5.000 m7+820W W" 28'49.88 N" 03'44'.41 A. tape FOLFP 77-mid along tube streamer position 2 WK-162 FOLFP 77-mid Helocus streamer mid 2 WK-162 W M31, but Z not in C, camera to station 2. W M31, 5.000 m7+820W W" 28'49.88 N" 03'44'.41 A. tape FOLFP 77-mid along tube streamer position 2 WK-162 FOLFP 77-mid Helocus streamer mid 2 WK-162
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towards ...students not have physical ability to bear confusion, but Fitzgibb and can not solve MACRO problems in museum scale to perceive how much the concept is so intense that it physically tries to force itself onto a specific environment and without their trial the object of observation is at microscopic level. How do we not get a picture of the bear view with our sight? How do you get a deep local set and know observation? QE:Q! to each professor, student and staff are involved in an active process of learning how social skill to work and are able to find their way to discover basic tools that bear any role now who will call what sort of work based on this tool, or can you call food as information bought or other field? observation. Yes, teachers become the obvious team for better service and top skills and trial observation. This skill can lead to achieve an elite behavioral value and we have compare with it to our relationship over our life before. Very important tip at anytime? Do they know that their behavior is not good and high up or opposite? So bear, please visit the school web page (2016) and... (see element + 528, L-3000 M/F: #8226W) W*494+4. OP, N*784(52-A) I bear a short but observation to note that we can select this view as the center of our class observation, for which can set interest. I believe you have an ability to even transport the bear from one school club to the top of your own home, so the whole gathering can be called to bear school and
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Toito; Dear 2007 Journal Sierra de Chucús, south of Retinal, Depto. Baja Verapaz, Guatemala July 28 Carlos had plans with his family today, so Ted and I decided to do a day trip to an area of the Sierra de Chucús, south of Retinal, that I thought looked interesting based on the map. We took CA-5 out of Guatemala City around 9:30 and drove through San Juan Sacatepequez north to Montufar, where the road became gravel - our map showed it as paved to Retinal. We spent hours driving on this slow road through scrub and dry forest. After 10 AM, we began to climb more, and we started seeing small bromeliads at 1600m. We stopped in an oak and pine forest shortly before the crest and found many large bromeliads. We searched from 13:30-14:15 and got 1 adult male and 1 subadult B. dutrae in 2 of the apexes. 20 bromeliads we opened. These animals look like B. helmruchi but have no orange or pink color on the underside of the tail, as is seen in B. helmruchi from Purulhá and the Sierra de las Minas. These may be the B. helmruchi or B. cuchumetana-like species collected at Santa Rosa Pass in the 70s. There were more bromeliads, but we continued up to the crest (almost 2000m elev.) and down the N side, where we found a dirt road leading W from the main road. We cut bromeliads in a patch of forest (pine + oak) 1.3km from the main road and found 2 more individuals of the same species from 15:00-15:45. We then searched in some great-looking roadbanks from here to the main road from 16:00-16:30, hoping to find a B. meliana, but we had no luck. I
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Povits, Sean 2007 Journal July 30 Area around Santa Cruz del Quiche, Dept. El Quiche, Guatemala. Fed, Carlos, Gustavo and I prepared specimens yesterday in the morning and then drove to Santa Cruz del Quiche in the afternoon/evening. This morning, we met briefly with people from Defensoria K'iche', a NGO who Carlos met with earlier to arrange permission to work on the road to Santa Rosa Chujuyut. We had been expelled from this area in 2005 and banned from returning. We went to the town of Guiz Che Cuarta, where the last auxiliary mayor wasn't there. We talked to someone else in charge, who said that the community hadn't been informed yet because the auxiliary mayor hadn't told anyone, and that we had to wait until 24th when they have a town meeting. We talked to the aquacel as well, and he knew about us but told us the same story. They refused to accompany us and told us that we couldn't go, so we left, not wanting to lose the little progress we had made or for. This was infuriating to me - we were assured everything was OK for us to work here. They just operate by a different system than us, I guess; could be good at times (very democratic) but frustrating when a decision needs to be made. We drove to San Pedro Jocopilas and took the road to San Bartholome Jocotenango, looking for another place to search. We went off on a dirt road southeast from the main road and searched in 2 spots, but found only 1 Rhodnius (15 min search in bank and bromeliads- CRVA1192) and 1 Scleron (CRVA1193) and 1 Lophoromphus (14:15-14:45 searching). The habitat here was fairly dry pine forest, with some good stumps and a few good bromeliads. We took a side road south from the main road and went over the mountains to San Pedro. On the way,
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Lrito, Dean 2007 Journal "Zacil Hidge", near high point on Panamericana Apto.-Jeticapan, Guatemala (cont) July 31 ... and searched under stones and in the roadbank for ~15 min. Augusto got an adult male P. rex and a juvenile B. morio in the roadbank, and I got a Scoloporus. We drove back to a point 2.7 Km from the main highway and searched (mostly in the roadbank) from 13:30-14:30. Augusto got 2 big adult female B. morio; and we got 1 more Scoloporus. There is a lot of good bunchgrass in this area and some forest, so the habitat seemed very good. Finally, we drove further down the road and searched in bunchgrass and in a fairly impacted cypress forest near a town for ~30 min, but got nothing except a cut-in-half Theropsis that Carlos found on the trail. It was raining on us by this point. We had searched all the good spots we could find, so we drove on to Huehuetenango and spent the evening fixing specimens. Total for day: 4 P. moreleti 5 B. morio 4 Scoloporus 1 Theropsis 1 P. rex Aug. 1 Montanas de Culeo, Dept. Huehuetenango, Guatemala We tried to leave Huehue early this morning but failed (as usual) and drove to La Mesilla on the Mexican border. Fed wanted to scout out wet road banks and return to them at night to look for B. stuarti. We backed into a car in the hotel parking lot and spent most of an hour dealing with that ($800.00 mistake) and then drove 5 to El Reposo on CA-1. We turned off on a dirt road towards El Paraiso and drove for 14.6 km to a high point between El
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Novito, Dean 2007 Journal Aug. 2 La Mexilla, Guatemala to San Cristobal, Mexico We crossed the border to Mexico today, which took forever because of the car permit. On the way to San Cristobal we drove to Laguna Chamula microwave station ~15 km SSE of Cacaterango del Valle. Fred and Bob Deit had collected 2 B. hartwegi here in the 70s. The forest at the top is now totally trashed, but was clearly beautiful before. There are still some pine and oak trees with good bromeliads, but many trees have been cut down and turned into charcoal. Soon there will be nothing left here. We searched in bromeliads and logs from 17:40-19:40 but found no corps. Gustavo found a rat in a log. We gave up and drove on to San Cristobal. 35:16.49/77N, 92.31866W G584,7m acc.), 2355m elev. Aug. 4-5 San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas, Mexico The night of Aug. 4, Fred, Jon, Paul Elias (!), Steve Deivan, Ricardo and I skipped the Plethodontid Conference field trip to Tzintchuitz to go look for B. hartwegi at the type locality. We got confused and went ~1 km too far on the old road to Justita Gutierrez. We searched a roadside along a dirt road ~6.5km W of San Cristobal for ~20min but it was very dry and I got only an M. moreleti. Tonight, we walked trails and a road at Zoologico San Jose, 5.5km W of San Gris (Fred, Paul, Gustavo, Carlos and D). Paul found a big Pleisthylys and a subadult B. hartwegi; and Carlos got an adult male B. hartwegi. We searched from approx. 19:45-20:45, and the weather was rainy and cool.
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Ravito, Dean 2007 Journal Chilun area, Chispas, Mexico Aug. 9 Nora, Ted and Gustavo decided to go back to Moyatiguan today, to look for Gyptodactylus. Antonio, Carlos and I wanted to go to Cerro Teocalma, a 2500m peak where Antonio and his students had collected B. rastroia in 1994. We woke up very early because: 1) Chilun has more chickens than anywhere else on the planet, which start making noise at 4AM, and 2) the people here don't observe daylight savings time, so it is 1 hour earlier than everywhere else. We took off around 8AM and get a Drymarchon corais on the road to La Nentona. As we get closer to the end of the road, the people became less welcoming. This is one of the biggest Zapatista strongholds, and they are very distrustful of outsiders. When we got to Emiliano Zapata, the town at the end of the road where we wanted to start hiking, we got a frosty welcome. The women told us to ask the men, and 1 of 2 men still in town told us we had to wait for the whole town to talk about it that night, which we had no time for. The other man there pretended he didn't hear us. We left and drove to a second site near Mojoton, where it was the same story. We drove back to meet the others, who also had a frustrating day. Their guide had only been able to take them to one small area of forest, where they cut down ~12 bromeliads and got 1 B. rufescens. (SMR313). Local kids collected 2 B. mexicana and an Odolophis. We met them and searched a little more around the village, where Carlos got 2 B. rufescens. Kids brought in a Ninia, 2 Sphenomorphus and a B. mexicana-like salamander.
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tom of I am in the process of preparing my case to be presented before the court. In order to do this I will need to have all of the documents and evidence that is required for the trial. I will also need to prepare a list of witnesses who will testify at the trial. I will then need to prepare a brief on the law which applies to the case. This will include any relevant statutes, regulations, and case law. I will also need to prepare a motion in limine to exclude any evidence that is not admissible under the rules of evidence. I will then need to prepare a list of exhibits that I will be introducing at the trial. These exhibits will include any documents, photographs, or other physical evidence that is relevant to the case. I will also need to prepare a list of objections that I will be making during the trial. These objections will include any objections to the admission of evidence, the conduct of opposing counsel, or any other issues that arise during the trial. I will then need to prepare a list of closing arguments that I will be making at the end of the trial. These closing arguments will summarize the evidence and legal arguments that have been presented during the trial. I will also need to prepare a list of post-trial motions that I will be filing after the trial has concluded. These motions may include motions for a new trial, motions for reconsideration, or other motions that are appropriate under the circumstances. I will then need to prepare a final brief on the law which applies to the case. This will include any relevant statutes, regulations, and case law that have been introduced during the trial. I will also need to prepare a list of exhibits that I will be introducing at the post-trial hearing. These exhibits will include any documents, photographs, or other physical evidence that is relevant to the case. I will then need to prepare a final closing argument that I will be making at the end of the post-trial hearing. This closing argument will summarize the evidence and legal arguments that have been presented during the post-trial hearing. I will also need to prepare a list of post-post-trial motions that I will be filing after the post-trial hearing has concluded. These motions may include motions for a new trial, motions for reconsideration, or other motions that are appropriate under the circumstances.
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Ronto, Dean 2007 Journal Saddle above El Rincon, Dept. San Marcos, Guatemala Aug. 13 Carlos took a bus back to Guatemala City this morning to spend a few days with his family. Jed and I walked from El Rincon up to the saddle area, where we found ~5 B. morio under cover objects along the path in the forest. We walked SW down the path to the cypress plantation where we found Dendrotriton last year. We opened ~10 bromeliads in the cypress and small hardwood trees but got only 1 small B. linckii. I climbed up a big hardwood tree on the edge of the cypress (same tree where we got Dendrotriton last year) and pulled down ~10 bromeliads. We found 12 D. brongniartianus in these; 1 bromeliad had 4 salamanders. On all, we spent ~1 hour searching here. We then spent 30min searching on the edge of the cypress plantation under cover objects. We walked down a path and quickly got into nice primary cloud forest, where we searched under great logs for Dendrotriton for 1 hour but found nothing. We walked up to the saddle and searched from 15:20-16:30 under all available (few) cover objects and in bromeliads, but got only a single Sceloporus. Was hoping to find B. restrictus. I got a B. morio a little down the path back to El Rincon. We had light rain in the afternoon and evening. After dinner, we drove to the south transect and searched with lights on the roadcut from 19:20-20:10. I got a big B. linckii, a small B. franklinii and a possible hybrid between the 2 species; looks like B. franklinii but is the size of B. linckii. Spent night at Hotel Pery.
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Panto, Sean 2007 Journal San Marcos area, Depto. San Marcos, Guatemala Aug. 14 We drove down to the "nino people's" house at 08:30AM to meet Herran Sanchez, Sra. Sandaval's son (I think). He collected for Jim Lynch in the 70s. I asked him to take us to the exact spot where he found so many salamanders in the past. We drove to just above Restaurante Dierados, ~1km downhill from Buena Vista, and walked upslope away from the road. We started searching in a logged area with a lot of stumps at 08:50, and soon got into nice cloud forest. We searched in stumps and bromeliads until 11:20 but found only a single D. israelianus in a bromeliad. The Pseudoeurycea seem truly to be gone. We drove down to Finca Chiquita and tried to find more bromeliads in the cypress forest for ~30min, but I could only find stumps to search in. I got a Eleutherodactylus mexialis under a piece of wood. On the way out towards the road, we searched in fairly good secondary forest (with some original big trees) from 13:45-15:00, but found nothing despite opening some nice bromeliads. It rained during the afternoon. We drove up to the high plateau above San Marcos and searched at the junction of the Tajumulco and Jacara roads under great rocks in bunchgrass habitat for 45 min (16:55-17:40) but found nothing. Finally, we drove up to the forest near Flores de Chichiguan where we searched in 2005. I got a Salpormus in a rocky area and a P. rex under the bank of a log from 18:00-18:45, as well as a Mesopogon. We searched on
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Kevin, Dean 2007 Journal San Marcos area, Depto San Marcos, Guatemala (cont.) Aug. 14 ...the roadbank with lights from 19:00-19:40, I got 2 adult P. rex, and Ted got 1 P. rex and 2 adult B. reistrei. It was cold and rainy, so conditions were good. Some guards from the local village stopped us and called the police. More locals showed up; got angry, and some threatened us and called us liars. They were upset that we were out at night and that we didn't ask permission in town to search. The situation was tense, but I eventually talked them into letting us go. The police eventually arrived, checked our permit and let us leave. We got back to San Marcos at 10:30pm. Volcan Chicabal, Depto. Quetzaltenango, Guatemala Aug. 15 We left San Marcos in the morning and drove to Volcan Chicabal. We hiked up to the crater and searched in rotten logs from 12:15-14:35. Once again, conditions seemed perfect and there were plenty of good logs, but we got no salamanders. We found 2 Bufo on the path around the lake. We walked down and drove to the village of Las Tunas, 19km by road from Cobanla. We searched in a canyon where Ted, Dave and Mark saw a Bolitoglossa sp. last year. We looked under cover objects for ~10 min and then searched in Bromeliads for ~20 min. Some kids came along and told us they see the salamanders mostly on the ground, and we got 4 of them to look. Immediately, the eldest one, Luis Ramirez Mendez, found a big adult female Bolitoglossa in some leaf litter on the slope above the road.
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Karito, Dear 2007 Journal Junca El Volcán, Sanhuí, Depto. Alta Verapaz, Guatemala Aug. 19 We drove up to the cornfields above the Junca with our 2 guides from yesterday, Marcelino and Arnoldo, plus the local school teacher, Oscar. We hiked past the cornfield through some secondary forest to a beautiful area of primary forest with huge trees. We opened lots of logs starting at 09:30, but found nothing. There were no bromeliads to open in most of the areas we passed through. At about 11:00, we came to an area with more bromeliads, mostly small but some larger. The first small bromeliad Oscar opened had a Cryptotriton in it! This may be a new species - collected in 70's and provisionally assigned to C. versipax, but it is somewhat separated from Puebla. This was the only salamander we got, although we continued searching in bromeliads and logs until 15:00. I got a snake (Lepidodora?) in a bromeliad, and Carlos got an Eleutherodactylus and a Thoros. It rained lightly as we walked back to the car. Most of the forest here has been cut, with only the mountain tops being forested. The area where we were was given to the Universidad del Valle as a reserve. We even saw some cloud forest elements (tree ferns) at the highest point we walked to (~1480m elar). It didn't rain much at the Junca, so we didn't go out to search at night. We pressed specimens and a steady stream of animals were brought in by local people, including a Didron, an clitmantodes, some lepidophyums, and many, many Rufoscens (which we stopped buying).
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Journal Aug, 23 Chilascó area, Depto. Baja Verapaz, Guatemala We wanted to try B. melanica once more, so we returned to Chilascó. We went past the tour, past Foresta, and went through a gate and some land belonging to Agroindustrias Chilascó, a leather for producer. Most of the forest here has been cut down for for production. We went left at the gate and parked at a small dam on the edge of some very nice liquidambar oak forest with many big bromeliads and some good stumps. We searched from 11:20 - 15:20, focusing mostly on bromeliads, and I got one B. holmrichii. We wanted to get back to Guatemala City by about 5PM, so we left and drove back. The bromeliads were very full of water from a heavy rain yesterday, so it seemed like it might not be very productive to stay. On the road back, we cought a big Cryptophanes percalinatus on the side of CA-9 at km 33. Aug, 26 San Joaquin, Capan, Depto. Capan, Honduras Yesterday, Ted and I left Guatemala City and drove to Capan, Honduras. It rained hard around 5PM, so we drove the road back to the border looking for frogs at night. We found Bufo, Similis, Physalaemus and heard several other species. Today, we went east out of town to San Antonio, then turned N on a dirt road to El Paraíso and stopped in Aldea Buena Vista. We tried to get some locals to look for B. delarivis, since they seem to know it, and one man said he would look. We got another man, Reinaldo, to guide us to Aldea San Joaquin, up a rough dirt road ~30 min away.
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Ronto, Sean 2007 Journal Copán Ruinas to Reserva Biológica Muisayote, Depts. Copán and Ocotepeque, Honduras Aug. 28 We left Copán Ruinas in the morning and drove back to Buena Nista. Rolando Intierro (I had his name wrong before) was there waiting for us with 13 B. rufescens, a B. mexicana, and 2 B. delfini (one a small juvenile) that someone from the village had collected. We then drove to Santa Rosa de Copán and on towards Nuevo Ocotepeque. We turned off to the south on a dirt road from the high point on the highway into the Reserva Biológica Muisayote. There were nice big trees but no bromeliads in most places. We found an area of very nice cloud forest with big, old oak trees with tons of good bromeliads and tree ferns ~0.5km from the highway. We opened bromeliads here from 94:10-16:10 but found nothing (14.45948°N, 89.06625°W [WGS 84, 10m acc., 7,218m elev]. We were looking for B. cmentis, but may have been slightly too high. We then drove further on the road and up to a communication tower at nearly 2300m elev. There were no big bromeliads here, but I found an adult Mesaspis. While we were opening bromeliads at the first spot, we left the salamanders in the car since it was cloudy and cool. The sun came out and they all died and dropped their tails—a disaster. We drove back to Santa Rosa de Copán, where some sort of festival was going on and every single hotel was full, so we continued to La Entrada. We stayed in the Hotel [illegible] San Carlos, where I fixed all the specimens.
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into, Sean 2007 Journal Parque Nacional Cusuar, Depto. Cortes, Honduras Aug. 29 We drove from La Entrada to Coprodio and then took a good dirt road north to the small town of Buenos Aires. We left our stuff at an albergue run by the community, got 2 guides and drove up to the parking area of PN Cusuar. We walked just beyond the parking area and started searching in bromeliads in a pine and hardwood forest. There were tons of great bromeliads, but I got only 1 B. conanti between 15:30 and 17:30. Ted found a small green toad in a bromeliad. We went back to town and I decided to search a little at night. I walked down a steep vegetated slope below the albergue and found a small creek flowing through a small patch of nice forest. In ~30min of searching, I found a subadult B. delevini, a B. rufescens, and 2 Anilimenshyla soralia; all on vegetation along the stream. I would have searched for longer, but I forgot to bring bags and my hands were full. I found a big Drangaster in a cafetal on the way up. Aug. 30 Ted, a guide (Miguel (sp?)) and I searched in leaf litter in cafetales around the albergue from 07:00-08:00, hoping for more B. delevini; but found nothing. We got another guide, Jesus, and drove to ~1km from the national park parking lot. We opened some spectacular bromeliads at this site (15.497832 N, 88.20275 W WGS84, 32m asc, J, 1446 m elev.) in nice forest but found no salamanders. Miguel found a toad on the ground. worked here 08:45-10:20 We drove up to the national park parking lot, walked past
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{ "text": "Loving\nDear Quill,\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the right way to write to you, but I feel it necessary.\n\nI have been trying to find a way to express my feelings to you, but I cannot seem to find the words.\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the right way to write to you, but I feel it necessary.\n\nI have been trying to find a way to express my feelings to you, but I cannot seem to find the words.\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the right way to write to you, but I feel it necessary.\n\nI have been trying to find a way to express my feelings to you, but I cannot seem to find the words.\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the right way to write to you, but I feel it necessary.\n\nI have been trying to find a way to express my feelings to you, but I cannot seem to find the words.\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the right way to write to you, but I feel it necessary.\n\nI have been trying to find a way to express my feelings to you, but I cannot seem to find the words.\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the right way to write to you, but I feel it necessary.\n\nI have been trying to find a way to express my feelings to you, but I cannot seem to find the words.\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the right way to write to you, but I feel it necessary.\n\nI have been trying to find a way to express my feelings to you, but I cannot seem to find the words.\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the right way to write to you, but I feel it necessary.\n\nI have been trying to find a way to express my feelings to you, but I cannot seem to find the words.\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the right way to write to you, but I feel it necessary.\n\nI have been trying to find a way to express my feelings to you, but I cannot seem to find the words.\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the right way to write to you, but I feel it necessary.\n\nI have been trying to find a way to express my feelings to you, but I cannot seem to find the words.\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the right way to write to you, but I feel it necessary.\n\nI have been trying to find a way to express my feelings to you, but I cannot seem to find the words.\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the right way to write to you, but I feel it necessary.\n\nI have been trying to find a way to express my feelings to you, but I cannot seem to find the words.\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the right way to write to you, but I feel it necessary.\n\nI have been trying to find a way to express my feelings to you, but I cannot seem to find the words.\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the right way to write to you, but I feel it necessary.\n\nI have been trying to find a way to express my feelings to you, but I cannot seem to find the words.\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the right way to write to you, but I feel it necessary.\n\nI have been trying to find a way to express my feelings to you, but I cannot seem to find the words.\n\nI hope you are well. I have been thinking about you and your work.\n\nI am not sure if this is the [TRANSCRIPTION_TRUNCATED_DUE_TO_LOOP]
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Joins, Sean 2007 Journal Sept.1 Sierra de Onza, W of San Pedro Sula, Depto. Cortes, Honduras. We left Tela in the morning and drove to San Pedro Sula, where we got a room at the Microtel. We then drove south out of town to the Hospital Gomeza, and then turned W, went past the Apart Hotel Cordillera and up into the mountains on a good dirt road. We stopped at 1270m, opened ~6 lorombirds and got a B. rufescens. We continued on to ~1470m, 12.7 km from the hospital, and opened a bunch of great lorombirds along the road for about 1.5 hrs. Jed shook out a huge B. dummi - the first either of us had ever seen. The forest hole looked pretty good, and lorombirds were abundant. I found 2 juvenile B. conanti in lorombirds. We continued 0.5 km up the road and opened a lot more lorombirds, but got only 1 more B. dummi. On all, we worked until 18:00 and opened ~100 lorombirds; I was disappointed not to get a Cryptotitrus. There were tadpoles in many lorombirds, not sure what species. It looked like rain but a storm never actually came, so it was quite dry at night. We searched in the forest at the last stop we made for ~50 min, but found nothing. Sept.2 Sierra de Onza and PN Casuar, Depto. Cortes, Honduras. We drove back up into the mountains to the last spot where we worked yesterday. We worked in lorombirds here and at a nearby spot further up the road from 10:30-13:00 and got 2 juvenile B. lutoglossa. The lorombirds were much better than yesterday, since it appeared to have rained at night.
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{ "text": "Lomrøf\n\nGud - I går til Coop - det kan jeg ikke, så vi må vente til i morgen.\n\nBørnehuset har i går været lukket, og nu bliver det åbent kl. 09:30 til ca. 15:30. Jeg skal også hen for at hente børnene hjem fra skole, men vi prøver at komme tidligt på hospitalet, så de kan være der indtil ca. 17:00. Kl. 17:00-18:00 er der en aktivitet i børnehaven (se nedenfor), og jeg har aftalt med dem, at vi kommer hen kl. 18:00 for at hente dem.\n\nJeg har også talt med en veninde, som har været hos børnehuset i går, og hun fortalte, at de har fået besked om, at der skal være en aktivitet i børnehaven kl. 17:00-18:00. Hun sagde også, at hun ville tage med til børnehaven kl. 16:30 for at hjælpe med at opsætte tingene.\n\nJeg har også talt med en anden veninde, som har været hos børnehuset i går, og hun fortalte, at de har fået besked om, at der skal være en aktivitet i børnehaven kl. 17:00-18:00. Hun sagde også, at hun ville tage med til børnehaven kl. 16:30 for at hjælpe med at opsætte tingene.\n\nJeg har også talt med en tredje veninde, som har været hos børnehuset i går, og hun fortalte, at de har fået besked om, at der skal være en aktivitet i børnehaven kl. 17:00-18:00. Hun sagde også, at hun ville tage med til børnehaven kl. 16:30 for at hjælpe med at opsætte tingene.\n\nJeg har også talt med en fjerde veninde, som har været hos børnehuset i går, og hun fortalte, at de har fået besked om, at der skal være en aktivitet i børnehaven kl. 17:00-18:00. Hun sagde også, at hun ville tage med til børnehaven kl. 16:30 for at hjælpe med at opsætte tingene.\n\nJeg har også talt med en femte veninde, som har været hos børnehuset i går, og hun fortalte, at de har fået besked om, at der skal være en aktivitet i børnehaven kl. 17:00-18:00. Hun sagde også, at hun ville tage med til børnehaven kl. 16:30 for at hjælpe med at opsætte tingene.\n\nJeg har også talt med en sjette veninde, som har været hos børnehuset i går, og hun fortalte, at de har fået besked om, at der skal være en aktivitet i børnehaven kl. 17:00-18:00. Hun sagde også, at hun ville tage med til børnehaven kl. 16:30 for at hjælpe med at opsætte tingene.\n\nJeg har også talt med en syvende veninde, som har været hos børnehuset i går, og hun fortalte, at de har fået besked om, at der skal være en aktivitet i børnehaven kl. 17:00-18:00. Hun sagde også, at hun ville tage med til børnehaven kl. 16:30 for at hjælpe med at opsætte tingene.\n\nJeg har også talt med en ottende veninde, som har været hos børnehuset i går, og hun fortalte, at de har fået besked om, at der skal være en aktivitet i børnehaven kl. 17:00-18:00. Hun sagde også, at hun ville tage med til børnehaven kl. 16:30 for at hjælpe med at opsætte tingene.\n\nJeg har også talt med en niende veninde, som har været hos børnehuset i går, og hun fortalte, at de har fået besked om, at der skal være en aktivitet i børnehaven kl. 17:00-18:00. Hun sagde også, at hun ville tage med til børnehaven kl. 16:30 for at hjælpe med at opsætte tingene.\n\nJeg har også talt med en tiende veninde, som har været hos børnehuset i går, og hun fortalte, at de har fået besked om, at der skal være en aktivitet i børnehaven kl. 17:00-18:00. Hun sagde også, at hun ville tage med til børnehaven kl. 16:30 for at hjælpe med at opsætte tingene.\n\nJeg har også talt med en ellevte veninde, som har været hos børnehuset i går, og hun fortalte, at de har fået besked om, at der skal være en aktivitet i børnehaven kl. 17:00-18:00. Hun sagde også, at hun ville tage med til børnehaven kl. 16:30 for at hjælpe med at opsætte tingene.\n\nJeg har også talt med en tolvte veninde, som har været hos børnehuset i går, og hun fortalte, at de har fået besked om, at der skal være en aktivitet i børnehaven kl. 17:00-18:00. Hun sagde også, at hun ville tage med til børnehaven kl. 16:30 for at hjælpe med at opsætte tingene.\n\nJeg har også talt med en trettenende veninde, som har været hos børnehuset i går, og hun fortalte, at de har fået besked om, at der skal være en [TRANSCRIPTION_TRUNCATED_DUE_TO_LOOP]
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Boots, Dean 2007 Journal Camp 2 to Camp 3, trail to Cerro Kamuk, Parque Internacional La Amistad, Prov. Puntarenas-Limon, Costa Rica Dec. 18 We left camp 2 around 08:00 and climbed up through nice mossy oak forest to the top of Cerro Duku, which I think is on the Talamancan crest. The habitat there consisted of paramo with tons of moss and ferns, some Clusia trees, and some bunchgrass. I pulledmo and I opened about 30 bromeliads in a little over an hour but found only one Mesaspis marticola. Cachi focused on moss and found nothing, as did Aljido. Hugo (our guide) found an elatiorhiza picadori and some tadpoles in bromeliads (9.24276°N, 83.07140°W [WGS84, 7m acc], 2963m elev). This area seemed great for salamanders and I was surprised that we didn't find any. We continued on to a small area of very mossy forest and searched in moss and a few bromeliads for ~30min but found nothing. We then climbed out of the forest and stayed in paramo for the rest of the day, aside from some stands of short Clusia trees. I opened a bromeliad from one of these trees and found a black salamander with golden flecks on its sides and ventr, of about the same size as the first salamanders we got on the trip, although less robust (9.25450°N, 83.05912°W [WGS84, 7m acc], 3089m elev). Cachi found another one nearby in mossy. I looked in a big patch of moss in the same area and found a small orange-brown Bolitoglossa, which Cachi says looks like the ones from Cerro Fabrega. We searched for ~20 minutes in moss but found nothing more. The final ascent to our camp passed into a zone of drier bamboo paramo that doesn't look as good for salamanders. It was cold and very windy at night, so we didn't search.
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ants, Sean 2007 Journal Dec. 19 Cerro Kennek, Parque Internacional La Amistad, Prov. Limon, Costa Rica Last night was incredibly windy- the pole holding up the plastic sheet over our tents blew over and crashed into my tent. This morning we left our packs and hiked to the summit of Cerro Kennek. The vegetation along the way and at the top is paramo, but without fars and with Chusquea and a comosite that grows into short trees. We had a view of the Caribbean from the summit. We searched under rocks and in some good-looking moss for ~30 min but found nothing (9.27075°N, 83.03237°W [WGS84; 6m acc.], 3556m elev.). We sampled some good moss on the way down but didn't find anything aside from a juvenile Masopis. The salamanders here don't seem to be very abundant, although they may just be hard to find. We had a good lunch at camp 3 (9.26256°N, 83.04550°W [WGS84; 7m acc.], 3324m elev.) and then hiked back to camp 2. We searched in more moss for ~10 min and opened about 15 bromeliads along the way, with no luck. The day was mostly sunny with some clouds but no rain. Dec. 20 Camp 2 to Camp 1, P.I. La Amistad, Prov. Puntarenas, Costa Rica We got a somewhat late start today; everyone was tired. We hiked from Camp 2 about halfway up Cerro Thai and searched for ~1 hr in a very mossy area with a few bromeliads, but found nothing. We hiked to the top of Cerro Thai and searched as we went down. We stopped at the paramo on Cerro Kesir and searched in moss and bromeliads for 1 hr but found nothing only 1st picadori. I searched from 19:30-21:00 along the stream at camp 1 with fairly humid conditions, but saw nothing and heard only a single clothmstyle picadori call once.
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To: Don 2007 Journal Camp I to La Laguna Seca, Parque Internacional La Amistad, Bras. Puntarenas, Costa Rica Dec. 21 We hiked track toward La Laguna Seca, between Cerro Beke and Aracias a Hios. On the way to Cerro Beke, we searched from 09:30-14:00 in bromeliads, leaf litter and logs in oak forest with Chusquea. I made a special effort with bromeliads, and we opened a lot but found absolutely nothing. Many were rather wet but some seemed good and most had abundant insect life. We went from La Laguna Seca down a side trail to a house that had been built along a stream in a big cleared area. It rained hard in the afternoon, so we stayed in and listened to Cachi tell off-color stories for about 3 hours - amusing. After dinner, Cachi, Ruido and I walked up the trail back into the forest and searched from 22:15-23:00 with lights along the trail. We saw nothing but heard many clothe-style picadis calling from up in the trees. This elevation doesn't exactly seem to be a hotspot of herb diversity. We spent a comfortable night in the house, not caring about the weather for a change. La Laguna Seca to Tres Colinas, I La Amistad, Bras. Puntarenas, Costa Rica Dec. 22 We walked up to La Laguna Seca and searched for ~45 min in good moss and leaf litter among big oak trees and Chusquea but found nothing. We hiked over Aracias a Hios and started looking in bromeliads as we went down. Our luck improved dramatically below 2600m. We found an elshnstyle picadi in a bromeliad, a 2 large packeypus on the ground and under a log.
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with Sean 2007 Journal Dec. 22 La Laguna deca to Juan Gutierrez, P.I. La Cristaled, Par: Punkenas, Costa Rica (cont)... (9.16394°N, 83.03286°W [WGS84, 20m acc.], 2550m elar). We opened 9 bromeliads at this site. We continued on to the base of Cerro Pelon, where we opened 22 bromeliads; someone found a Thoraps pachypus on the ground (I think). On the top of Cerro Pelon, we opened 5 bromeliads and found an adult and a juvenile bl. picadori (9.16374°N, 83.03416°W [WGS84, 10m acc.], 2525m elar.) and a Thoraps pachypus (not collected) in a short secondary forest (I think this area was burned in the past). Coming down from Cerro Pelon, I opened about 10 bromeliads and found 1 a Bolitoglossa sp. of the same species that I got on Dec. 16 lower down - it has no white spots on the ventor. I now agree with Cachi that there are 2 species in our sample from this area. One has white spots under its tail and on the posterior part of the venter and is more distinct, while the other has only tiny dots of light color (no white spots) on a dark ventor, a narrower head and is thinner. We opened 33 bromeliads total in this area. We continued on to an area with many bromeliads, mostly on the ground, and opened 67 of them. I found a beautiful Bolitoglossa with a broad yellow dorsal band (9.16092°N, 83.06531°W [WGS84, 17m acc.], 2450m elar.) in a bromeliad on the ground. It has white spots on the venter and, except for the stripe, looks like the other salamanders with the white spots. All of the salamanders we are getting have similar feet, so it is hard for me to tell which are different species, until their coloration seems to be so variable. In any case, the
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{ "text": "Catalog\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n [TRANSCRIPTION_TRUNCATED_DUE_TO_LOOP]
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{ "text": "\"Catalogue\"\n\n\"and if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must be taken to the\njudge.\"\n\n\"20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthis is the one I am looking for.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthe other one I saw yesterday.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nand if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must be taken to the\njudge.\"\n\n\"20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthis is the one I am looking for.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthe other one I saw yesterday.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nand if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must be taken to the\njudge.\"\n\n\"20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthis is the one I am looking for.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthe other one I saw yesterday.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nand if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must be taken to the\njudge.\"\n\n\"20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthis is the one I am looking for.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthe other one I saw yesterday.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nand if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must be taken to the\njudge.\"\n\n\"20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthis is the one I am looking for.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthe other one I saw yesterday.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nand if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must be taken to the\njudge.\"\n\n\"20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthis is the one I am looking for.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthe other one I saw yesterday.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nand if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must be taken to the\njudge.\"\n\n\"20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthis is the one I am looking for.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthe other one I saw yesterday.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nand if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must be taken to the\njudge.\"\n\n\"20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthis is the one I am looking for.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthe other one I saw yesterday.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nand if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must be taken to the\njudge.\"\n\n\"20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthis is the one I am looking for.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthe other one I saw yesterday.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nand if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must be taken to the\njudge.\"\n\n\"20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthis is the one I am looking for.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthe other one I saw yesterday.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nand if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must be taken to the\njudge.\"\n\n\"20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthis is the one I am looking for.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthe other one I saw yesterday.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nand if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must be taken to the\njudge.\"\n\n\"20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthis is the one I am looking for.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthe other one I saw yesterday.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nand if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must be taken to the\njudge.\"\n\n\"20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthis is the one I am looking for.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthe other one I saw yesterday.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nand if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must be taken to the\njudge.\"\n\n\"20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthis is the one I am looking for.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthe other one I saw yesterday.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nand if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must be taken to the\njudge.\"\n\n\"20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthis is the one I am looking for.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nthe other one I saw yesterday.\n\n20/4/11 HOF-Vald\nand if (a man) Z will fight, you must fight against him; but\nif he is a child of the people, he must [TRANSCRIPTION_TRUNCATED_DUE_TO_LOOP]
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{ "text": "Catalogue\n8008\n\n[illegible]\n\nH:18+40, N:23.52, P:18+40, H:18+40, N:23.52, P:18+40, H:18+40, N:23.52, P:18+40\n\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n\" \" \" ZWR62\n [TRANSCRIPTION_TRUNCATED_DUE_TO_LOOP]
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{ "text": "Cupolote\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nat sunset, sunset and light in the air, sunset at sunset.\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nZKR4-11: \"thru sample, sample, sample.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"sample #2, thru, sample, sample #3.\"\n\nCRVAV5: \"through the water.\"\n\nCRVAV6: \"through the water.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"at sunset, sunset and light in the air, sunset at sunset.\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nZKR4-11: \"thru sample, sample, sample.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"sample #2, thru, sample, sample #3.\"\n\nCRVAV5: \"through the water.\"\n\nCRVAV6: \"through the water.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nat sunset, sunset and light in the air, sunset at sunset.\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nZKR4-11: \"thru sample, sample, sample.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"sample #2, thru, sample, sample #3.\"\n\nCRVAV5: \"through the water.\"\n\nCRVAV6: \"through the water.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nat sunset, sunset and light in the air, sunset at sunset.\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nZKR4-11: \"thru sample, sample, sample.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"sample #2, thru, sample, sample #3.\"\n\nCRVAV5: \"through the water.\"\n\nCRVAV6: \"through the water.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nat sunset, sunset and light in the air, sunset at sunset.\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nZKR4-11: \"thru sample, sample, sample.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"sample #2, thru, sample, sample #3.\"\n\nCRVAV5: \"through the water.\"\n\nCRVAV6: \"through the water.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nat sunset, sunset and light in the air, sunset at sunset.\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nZKR4-11: \"thru sample, sample, sample.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"sample #2, thru, sample, sample #3.\"\n\nCRVAV5: \"through the water.\"\n\nCRVAV6: \"through the water.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nat sunset, sunset and light in the air, sunset at sunset.\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nZKR4-11: \"thru sample, sample, sample.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"sample #2, thru, sample, sample #3.\"\n\nCRVAV5: \"through the water.\"\n\nCRVAV6: \"through the water.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nat sunset, sunset and light in the air, sunset at sunset.\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nZKR4-11: \"thru sample, sample, sample.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"sample #2, thru, sample, sample #3.\"\n\nCRVAV5: \"through the water.\"\n\nCRVAV6: \"through the water.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nat sunset, sunset and light in the air, sunset at sunset.\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nZKR4-11: \"thru sample, sample, sample.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"sample #2, thru, sample, sample #3.\"\n\nCRVAV5: \"through the water.\"\n\nCRVAV6: \"through the water.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nat sunset, sunset and light in the air, sunset at sunset.\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nZKR4-11: \"thru sample, sample, sample.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"sample #2, thru, sample, sample #3.\"\n\nCRVAV5: \"through the water.\"\n\nCRVAV6: \"through the water.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nat sunset, sunset and light in the air, sunset at sunset.\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nZKR4-11: \"thru sample, sample, sample.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"sample #2, thru, sample, sample #3.\"\n\nCRVAV5: \"through the water.\"\n\nCRVAV6: \"through the water.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nat sunset, sunset and light in the air, sunset at sunset.\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nZKR4-11: \"thru sample, sample, sample.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"sample #2, thru, sample, sample #3.\"\n\nCRVAV5: \"through the water.\"\n\nCRVAV6: \"through the water.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nat sunset, sunset and light in the air, sunset at sunset.\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nZKR4-11: \"thru sample, sample, sample.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"sample #2, thru, sample, sample #3.\"\n\nCRVAV5: \"through the water.\"\n\nCRVAV6: \"through the water.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nat sunset, sunset and light in the air, sunset at sunset.\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nZKR4-11: \"thru sample, sample, sample.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"sample #2, thru, sample, sample #3.\"\n\nCRVAV5: \"through the water.\"\n\nCRVAV6: \"through the water.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nat sunset, sunset and light in the air, sunset at sunset.\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\nZKR4-11: \"thru sample, sample, sample.\"\n\nDate: 12/08/77\n\n\"sample #2, thru, sample [TRANSCRIPTION_TRUNCATED_DUE_TO_LOOP]
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{ "text": "Catalog\n\n2WR508 19F9MZ\nsteganus Crandalls\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nthulu\n2WR508 Crandall's\nFF-Los Altos\nQuay, WA 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801.yad\nDay 17.38N 164.32W 19724F:2P VHF888.FI+801 [TRANSCRIPTION_TRUNCATED_DUE_TO_LOOP]
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Parrots, Dean 2008 Journal New Panalito, Depto. Zacapa and a Volcan Quetzalteques Depto. Chiquimula, Guatemala Jan. 3 Yesterday, Ted and I arrived in Guatemala city at 08:00 to find that the bag with the prep kit hadn't made it on our flight. We met Carlos and Gustavo and drove to near his home, where we stayed at the Hotel Longara. We drove north along the Rio Hondo through Alder Parajuya and walked on a trail through good dry forest to an old dam with a cement wall. We walked along the wall for ~1hr and Carlos and Ted each got a Phyllodactylus tuberculosis (Ted saw another). On the way down, we saw a striped skunk. This morning, we got a fairly early start and drove out of Zacapa through La Tremontina towards Panalito, where we had been in May 2007. A cold front from the north brought rain, and we had to turn back just before the puente de Salud because of a very steep muddy stretch. We parked at the football field (after trying and failing to drive up) and walked up a road to a finca; got a B. Rufescens in a branchad along the way. We could only see pine forest, but a man on the finca told us that ~20 min away by car, just over the high ridge, is a big primary cloud forest with huge tree ferns. The road ends in this forest at Finca Bordicón, owned by Carlos Perez. We opened ~8 Bromeliads and Carlos found an adult B. calanti. We gave up here since we couldn't get to any good habitat and decided to drive to Volcan Quetzaltepeque. We drove to the town of Quetzaltepeque and took the old highway
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Coro Negro Norte, Sierra de Caral, Depts. Izabal, Guatemala Jan. 5 We woke up somewhat late today, since we were tired and it was still cold and rainy. The rain was lighter than yesterday, and stopped by about 09:00. Augusto Carlos and I found a trail down to the creek for night work, and then we walked up the road to do more bromeliad work. We arrived at the area that still had big trees but no smaller trees or understory and started cutting bromeliads at 12:00. We quickly got a B. rufescens, but the bromeliads were filled to the brim with water and we opened many without success (or much hope of it). Carlos and Augusto got a huge male B. dunnii in a sideways bromeliad on a fallen tree, as well as a Bromeliphyllum bromeliad. We opened many bromeliads at this site, and searched in some excellent logs as well. We continued opening bromeliads as we walked up the road, but the forest on both sides quickly became cafetales and then cattle pasture. We had lunch on top of Coro Negro Norte on the Honduran border (so the locals said), where not a tree was left standing, although some forest was left on a steep slope. We kept working bromeliads until 16:00 without getting anything else and then walked back to the house. At 17:00 we walked down to the creek, searching along the way - Augusto found a male B. delfini on low vegetation. We walked along the creek for 30-40 min, and Carlos got a Dullmandyia sadin and a Phycothyla hypomycter), and he and I each got a Pleiothryle matidae, tall on vegetation. This creek is where Guptobiter wakei was found (we think) and looks very nice, with big trees and lots of broad-leaved understory plants like
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Puerto, Sean 2008 Journal Jan. 5 Sierra Negra Norte, Sierra de Cural, Puerto Chical, Guatemala (cont.) Heliconia. I think that we could find a lot here with more time. We worked our way back up to the house, arriving at 21:30; I found another male B. d. lintoni and a Pteropus capito, both on vegetation. It rained lightly while we searched. Jed went to bed while the rest of us made dinner and took chiropteran swabs. Carlos and I went back out to search along the creek from 01:00-02:15. It was raining harder, and I found a Gracupator in front of the house and a beautiful P. soratin on a palm along the stream. We went to bed exhausted and soaked around 3AM. Jan. 7 Mountains west of San Pedro Ayula, Puerto Cortes, Honduras We woke up at 06:30 yesterday, prepared all the specimens and drove down to Morales. The road was somewhat more washed out and we had to fill in some ditches and make some stone reinforcements - it took a long time to get down. With less rain, the extent of deforestation along the road way more apparent - this place looks like it's in trouble. We dropped Carlos and Austero off at the bus station and then crossed the border west of Puerto Barrion and spent the night in San Pedro Ayula. Today, we drove up to the same area we worked in September in the Sierra de Oma, W of the city. We started opening branchiads at 11:00 at a spot 13.7 km (by road) from the Hospital General, and I immediately found an adult Gymnotis rosalia on a branch under a branchiad I pulled off.
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Hairs, Dear 2008 Journal Jan.7 Mountain west of San Pedro Sula, Depto. Cortes, Honduras (cont.) ... Bromeliads are quite wet but not as lush as at Cerro Negro Plaza. We searched until 13:00, and I got a juvenile B. orcutti while Jed got an adult and juvenile B. lemnii. We had lunch and took photos, and then searched in logs, leaf litter and bromeliads from 14:00-15:30, but found nothing more. I was surprised by how much C. masalis looks like C. versicolor, although this C. masalis seemed to have smaller nostrils. We then went downhill to where we got the first B. rufescens in Sept. and walked along a trail through good lowland forest. We opened the few good bromeliads we saw (less than 10) and searched in logs, but found nothing. We emerged at a point slightly lower down on the road (15.48720°N; 88.09592°W [WGS84], 10m acc.), 1229m elev.), having searched from 15:30-17:00. This trail would be a good area to work at night. We then drove back to San Pedro Sula. Jan.8 Montanuelas near "Barrazas de Francheras", Depto. Olanigua, Honduras We got a late start today, because Jed was trying unsuccessfully to arrange a visit to Los Cayos Cochinos off Gaste for a golfer he wants. We drove to Siguatepeque and I was stopped twice by police, once for doing a U-turn without a green arrow and once for not having an emergency fire extinguisher at a checkpoint, but talked my way out of a ticket both times. We wanted to visit the supposed sole locality for B. verdonalis in Honduras, "Barrazas de Francheras", near Olanigua. Jed
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I have been very much in doubt as to whether I should "give up" altogether. I feel that most of the work which I have done has been for nothing. It is not too late to reconsider and perhaps it will be a pleasure now to some extent to see that those who knew me better than others, had a chance to know more about my own experience. It seems as if this was at top of priority. And yet I have to begin again because I have no idea what I should do next. It is hard to tell you where to go or what to do, but I hope that you will understand that I am in a difficult position and that it may take some time before I can be sure of what to do. It seems as if this was at top of priority. And yet I have to begin again because I have no idea what I should do next. It is hard to tell you where to go or what to do, but I hope that you will understand that I am in a difficult position and that it may take some time before I can be sure of what to do. I know that surely God has given me enough to start over. And so I must try my best to get back on track. But I do not see how to do that without help from others who have had similar experiences. It seems as if this was at top of priority. And yet I have to begin again because I have no idea what I should do next. It is hard to tell you where to go or what to do, but I hope that you will understand that I am in a difficult position and that it may take some time before I can be sure of what to do. I know that surely God has given me enough to start over. And so I must try my best to get back on track. But I do not see how to do that without help from others who have had similar experiences. It seems as if this was at top of priority. And yet I have to begin again because I have no idea what I should do next. It is hard to tell you where to go or what to do, but I hope that you will understand that I am in a difficult position and that it may take some time before I can be sure of what to do. I know that surely God has given me enough to start over. And so I must try my best to get back on track. But I do not see how to do that without help from others who have had similar experiences. It seems as if this was at top of priority. And yet I have to begin again because I have no idea what I should do next. It is hard to tell you where to go or what to do, but I hope that you will understand that I am in a difficult position and that it may take some time before I can be sure of what to do. I know that surely God has given me enough to start over. And so I must try my best to get back on track. But I do not see how to do that without help from others who have had similar experiences.
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Ravito, Dean 2008 Journal Above San José de los Andes, Montána de Santa Barbara, Aerito. Santa Barbara, Honduras Jan. 7 We drove up to San José de los Andes after breakfast with Malcolm, a British bird guide who moved here a few months ago. We met Mares, a guide recommended by Bob Dale at P&D, and started walking uphill around 09:30. At first we passed through moist forest and cleared areas but we quickly started to see big trees with epiphytes and good bromeliads. We started opening bromeliads at 10:30 around 1700m, but found nothing although they seemed great. We kept hiking uphill and got into nice cloud forest with immense hardwood trees, a lot of epiphytes and a good understory around 1800m and opened a lot of bromeliads without success before stopping for lunch. Malcolm didn't search for salamanders, but Mares did. After lunch, we hiked up to 2000m and one of the first bromeliads I opened had 2 Dendrobates sanctibartbarus. We searched in the very abundant bromeliads here from 14:00- 15:30; I got 1 more, Ted got 4 and Marcos got 2. The salamanders seem abundant here, but I don't understand why there isn't a Blitoglossa sp. known from this area. We chopped some more bromeliads on the way down around 1800m and heard a male quetzal calling (Marcos saw it). We got back to San José just as a light rain started, after having been nice or just cloudy all day. This was an exciting day of collecting for me, and I expect that this mountain really merits further searching.
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Panto, Sean 2008 Journal Jan. 10 Marcos and Malcolm met us for breakfast and we drove to the village of San Luis Los Planos, on the north side of Montaña de Santa Barbara. We met Don Adán, a friend of Marcos and Bob, and drove through the town of El Sauce to a coffee field on the edge of the forest. We walked south from here and arrived at the edge of primary forest in less than 10 min. We walked uphill on a loop trail to a high point on the trail at 1700m. We had lunch and then started searching for at 12:00. There were some big trees, although parts of the forest were apparently logged ~40 yrs ago, but not many bromeliads. The first bromeliad I opened had a D. santibariensis, not previously known from here. I got another in a bromeliad lower down on the path. After opening the few bromeliads we could find, Fred, Marcos and I started raking in leaf litter and opening logs (Adán watched our packs while Malcolm birded). We walked up to 1800m and searched until ~15:00 without success. Starting down, I raked through leaves between the buttresses of a massive tree and saw a very tiny Nototriton limospectatus, which escaped in the leaf litter despite our best efforts. I continued searching and caught an adult in the same tree - what luck! The litter here was deep, which must be the key for this species. On the way down, Fred got a Craugastor laticeps under a board. We finished walking and searching at 17:00 and drove back to Los Planos happy - I didn't expect to get a Nototriton today.
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Havits, Joan 2008 Journal Jan. 13 CURLA Research station, La Ceiba, Apto., Atlantida, Honduras (ent.) Bromeliads growing on a fencepost. Lots of the bromeliads had angry ants and wasps, so he couldn't open many of them. We searched for about 2 hours (12:00-14:00) and also found an armadillo cerrocha in a bromeliad. Wanted to find a B. rufescens but no luck. We then spent the rest of the day driving to Santa Rosa de Copán. Jan. 14 Belén Hauch and Corio Yzavante, Apto., Ocopeguo, Honduras We drove from Santa Rosa de Copán to Cucuyagua on CA4 and then turned south towards Belén Hauchos. We drove past Corquin and stopped in the first area we saw with bromeliads. It was a small remnant of [illegible] forest, part of which had the understory cleared, 7.3 km N (by road) of Belén Hauchos. We opened some great bromeliads from 10:00-11:45 (maybe 30 bromeliads) and Ted quickly got a small B. smithi, but then we got nothing else. We drove to Belén Hauchos and then returned to near the high point on the road, 6.2 km N of town, where there were many oak trees with tops of great bromeliads; although the forest was highly disturbed. We searched in bromeliads for ~25 min and Ted got an adult Bromelichyla bromeliacia. We then went back to the highway and drove W to Lucerna, where we turned N on a good road. We drove to La Reserva Escapa, which seemed heavily deforested; and took a road along the N side of the reserve. There was no forest here along the road but I could see some higher up on the hill. We searched in vain.
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Porto, San 2008 Journal Belen Hondo and Cerro Moriente, Dept. Ocotepes, Honduras (cont.) Jan.14 ... for a good spot and cut down about 7 big bromeliads from isolated big trees but got nothing. We drove back along the western side of the reserve and took a dirt road south, which quickly climbed up to an area with remnants of great oak forest and many big bromeliads on a hill (2000m) called Cerro Moriente. I cut through some ferns to a large oak tree and got a juvenile B. cranti in a big bromeliad. We searched here from 16:30 until 18:00 when it got dark but found nothing more. The liquidambar and oak forests here in Ocotepes seem very temperate - strange to see so many bromeliads. I think that this region merits further exploration. We drove back to Santa Rosa and prepped animals. El Portillo de Ocotepes and Arbolos Merendon, Dept. Ocotepes, Honduras Jan.15 We drove on CA4 to the high ridge at El Portillo de Ocotepes and turned south on the road to the microwave towers in la Reserva Aiiisayote. I have a military checkpoint at the entrance, supposedly to keep woodcutters out, and sent a soldier with us. We drove just past the turnoff to the towers and then walked south along the road. We wanted to take a turnoff to the E that dropped down below 2000m to get B. cranti but missed it and never got lower down. We got a M. moreletii and a N. rossii along the road and quickly got into an area of nice cloud forest with big bromeliads. We opened them from ~12:30-14:30 or 15:00 and
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Porto, Spain 2008 Journal March 21 Juxtla Amierrey to Comitán, Chiapas, Mexico We arrived in Juxtla Amierrey at 13:00 after a long overnight flight. Waited a long time for the rental car and got a truck with no 4WD, since they hadn't kept the car we wanted, which apparently wasn't 4WD either. We drove through San Cristóbal and south to Comitán. We stopped at the Laguna Chamula microwave tower, ~2 km W of the highway between San Cristóbal and Comitán. We continued just past the towers and spent ~30 min opening bromeliads before it got dark. We opened about 10-12 bromeliads, which were rather dry inside, and I found a small green hydrid in the first one I opened. We spent the night in Comitán. Laguna de Montebello, Chiapas, Mexico March 22 We drove to Parque Nacional Laguna de Montebello and continued ~0.5 km on the road to Fajscos, where we turned right onto a good dirt road. We stopped a short distance down the road and began to open bromeliads in a pine-oak forest with lots of vines and a scrubby understory (presumably secondary forest). I quickly got a juvenile salamander with fully webbed feet and a speckled ventral - it looks to be either B. hartwegi or the elusive B. stuarti! We searched from 10:30-12:50 and got a total of 2 adult males and 7 juveniles, all in bromeliads. They really look like B. hartwegi to me, but I have I'ded 2 salamanders from here in the FROSUR collection as stuarti. The adults have some red-brown areas at the base of the tail, and several of the
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Lagos de Montebello, Chiapas, Mexico (cont.) March 22 ... juveniles also have extensive red coloration. The juveniles could be B. Rufescens, as several of them have coloration typical of that species. All appear to have triangular toes and broad feet. The forest here has some dry elements, including large spiky agave-type plants, and is not like other bartwege habitat I've seen. We went to search at Laguna de Montebello, but it was overrun by vacationing Mexicans and the forest didn't look good; so we only spent about half an hour opening bromeliads and turning logs. We drove back and parked 1.7 Km from the park entrance at the intersection of the highway and a dirt road. We walked up the road through a pine forest with some liquidambar and opened bromeliads from 14:00-15:45. I got 2 more juvenile Batelodossa. Finally, we went into the park itself and spent ~25 min opening bromeliads, but good habitat was sparse and we found nothing more. We drove back to Comitán and spent the night there. Laguna Chamula microwave tower, between Comitán and San Cristóbal, Chiapas, Mexico March 23 We drove from Comitán back to Laguna Chamula and searched from 11:15-13:00. We walked past the towers and across a small cleared area to a patch of decent oak forest and opened many bromeliads (perhaps 100 or more) but found nothing. Habitat destruction for charcoal continues unabated here, and the forest is rather open. I think it's possible that habitat alteration may have made it
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Roots, Dear 2008 Journal Laguna Chamula microwave station, between Comitán and San Cristóbal, Chiapas, Mexico (cont.) March 23 Too dry at times for the salamanders. We then drove east from the highway towards Platicas where good-looking forest with no Bromeliads turned into fields and Zapatista villages. We drove past an area with a few Bromeliads and then the habitat turned to scrubby forest without a big tree in sight. We drove a couple of guys to San Luis, at the end of the road, and then went back about halfway. We stopped in an area with a few trees and opened about 15 Bromeliads for ~30 min, about 10.5 km (by road) from MX 190 (the highway to San Cristóbal). We found nothing, but could see some mountains to the north of the road which seemed forested. We drove on to Justita and met Antonio and Flora at the Best Western, where we stayed. 16,49516°N, 92,22825°W [WGS84], Elevation: 2,272m elev. March 24 El Triunfo Biosphere Reserve, Chiapas, Mexico We left Justita at 8:45 after hitting the breakfast buffet and drove to Jaltenango, in the dry central depression of Chiapas. We then drove west uphill towards Santa Rita and past a large abandoned coffee finca, Finca do Busay, to the end of the road. Four mules were waiting for us and we let them carry our bags as we walked uphill towards the field station at El Triunfo in the Reserva de la Biosfera El Triunfo. We started in coffee fields and then went through pine and liquidambar forest. The forest was in great condition above the coffee tree
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auto, Dean 2008 Journal Campamento El Friunfo, Reserva de la Biosfera El Friunfo, Chiapas, Mexico. March 25 We woke up around 8 and left camp around 09:30, heading downhill on the same trail we came up on yesterday. Bromeliads were abundant near camp, but the reachable ones were quite small and we had no luck. We then got separated from Ted and Juan Carlos, who headed up the trail to Cerr El Friunfo. Juan Carlos collected a completely black Botryoglossa franklini migiflavescens under a log (15.39'052"N, 92.49'39"W, 220m elev.), and saw a Corrophila godmani and a Dyacopsis. I climbed a medium-sized tree and got 3 big Bromeliads about 0.5km on the path from the station (15.64'920"N, 92.80815"W [WGS84, 25m acc.], 2048m elev.). One of these, which was exposed to the sun on a dead branch, had an adult B. franklini migiflavescens in it. We walked downhill further into an area where the only Bromeliads were very high up in the trees. We continued downhill to an old landslide bear, and I clut down a big bromeliad on a branch overhanging a near vertical slope. After retrieving it, we shook out an adult Pseudobroma xalocae, which looked indistinguishable from D. bromeliacus to me (15.66535"N, 92.80337"W [WGS84, 19m acc.], 2058m elev.). This was about 2km down the path from camp. We kept going for about a km more and then turned back. We saw a hooved guan (el pavo) along the path, plus a lot of small birds. I got a few bromeliads off the ground on a steep slope, one of which had 2 juvenile D. xalocae.
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Enito, Dear 2008 Journal Campamento El Triunfo, Reserva de la Biosfera El Triunfo, Chiapas, Mexico March 26 Jed woke us all up at 6:20AM, very anxious to go find a D. xalocalcae, since he didn't get to see one yesterday in the field. We reluctantly got going by 7:30, after we insisted on having breakfast and coffee in a relaxed manner. We walked down the same trail towards the cars, past the point where we worked yesterday. We opened a couple of bromeliads that I had to climb up to get, but they were few and far between. We tried walking down the path further, but didn't find a better area. We took a trail from the start of the zona nuclear to the NE, but only found 1 bromeliad. Antonio and Juan Carlos continued after the path ended in an attempt to reach the pine forest lower down. I climbed up in a small tree and with a big effort (almost breaking the bromeliad cutter), we got the bromeliad down and found a juvenile D. xalocalcae. We worked our way back slowly, opening the very few bromeliads we found by walking off the path, but we found nothing more. We only opened about 15 good bromeliads up to this point. Jed went off to the ridge NE of the camp and found 3 B. franklinii microflaversons in the 15 bromeliads he opened. Noli, Nora and I walked ~15 min up the Cerro El Triunfo trail and opened about 20 bromeliads, most of which had fallen out of trees already. This area had many good bromeliads, but we found nothing and returned to camp at 16:00. Antonio and Juan Carlos arrived back at camp around 17:30 with 9 D. xalocalcae, including 2 adults, which they had found in the cloud forest - pine forest ecotone. They opened about 10 small bromeliads, which had nothing, and 20 big ones, which had all the salamanders. 15.674772 N 92.79GG1°W [WGS84, 43m acc.] 2011 m elev.
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into, Dean 2008 Journal March 27 Reserva de la Biosfera El Triunfo, Chiapas, Mexico Antonio and Flora stayed at camp to collect tadpoles and Juan Carlos went back to where he and Antonio were yesterday to search for a lost salamander in a log (which we later found with all the others) while Ted, Gabriela and I started to hike back to the cars. We wanted to stop at the pine forest to look for more Dendrobates. We walked down to the Mirador Santa Rita where the cloud forest changes to pine and liquidambar forest with lots of small bromeliads. I opened 3 big, fruit-losing bromeliads at this spot and got 2 Bolitoglossa that look somewhat like B. occidentalis (15.68451°N, 92.7794-79°W [WGS84, 6m acc.], 1777m elev.). They were somewhat more blotchy on the dorsal side and had light speckling on a fairly dark background on the venters. The forest here was fairly open with some grass and arids on the ground. We walked down further and opened many small bromeliads, but found nothing in them; they were dry except in the very center. I opened a total of about 6 big bromeliads and about 20 or more small ones and got 1 more adult female Bolitoglossa (15.6733°N, 92.771325°W [WGS84, 20m acc.], 1700m elev.) in a big bromeliad. I met Abby at the junction with the Ejido Santa Rita trail (15.69102°N, 92.79125°W [WGS84, 8m acc.], 1484m elev.). She and Juan Carlos had found 7 more Bolitoglossa in big Heliconia plants. We looked a lot more here and they got 3 more, Ted got 1 and I got 1. Their coloration varies but all are brown-red to tan with fairly dark undersides. We hiked out and drove back to Fortele. Things I forgot - I got a dead Lephis on trail near camp. J.C. got a juni: neblina/escena where he and Antonio found all the Hendrobates.
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Rovito, Sean 2008 Journal March 29 Area N of Pueblo Nuevo & distahuacan, Chiapas, Mexico We left Furtela around 15:30 yesterday, after dealing with all our specimens from El Friinfo. We drove north to Pueblo Nuevo & distahuacan) and stayed at the Siempre Norte cabanas, just south of town. They have 4ha of very nice liquidambar and pine forest. We arrived around 17:30 and [illegible] opened 8 or so nice, big bromeliads in the forest until just after it got dark, but found nothing (17.14348 N, 92.88740 W [WGS84, 19 m acc.], 1611 meter.). The Hotel was full for tonight (too bad - it was nice), so we drove to Pueblo Nuevo (Hotel closed), Rayon (no hotel) and finally to Tapilula, where we stayed in a tiny room on the playa. We drove back to Puerto del Niento, the high point between Pueblo Nuevo and Rayon, and opened bromeliads in a tiny forest patch with 3 big, old trees and some secondary growth. We opened about [illegible] 20 bromeliads and got 3 B. reflexens, and I got a Diphleumorphus under bank (17.2170 N, 92.96500 W [WGS84, 4 m acc.], 1875 m elev.). All is alarming how deforested this area is - all the flat land is now pasture or milpas; and the only big trees are on nearly vertical slopes above the road. We are here mostly to look for Cryptotetrax adwareletorisi, but I'm afraid he won't be in good enough forest to find it. We drove towards Rayon and stopped to open about 10 big bromeliads on the ground in pine forest just above the road, and we found 2 more B. reflexens (17.21053 N, 92.97479 W [WGS84, 8 m acc.], 1740 m elev.). We stopped at the C. adwareletorisi type locality, a creek next to the road in a canyon, 17.4 km N of Pueblo Nuevo (17.19875 N, 92.99046 W [WGS84, 9 m acc.], 1556 meter.).
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Rants, Sean 2008 Journal March 29 Area north of Pueblo Nuevo, Distabucan, Chiapas, Mexico (cont.) ... The messy bank where the holotype was collected is still there, and Fed says it looks just like it did the last time he was here. There are some older-looking trees on the slopes above but no bromeliads in sight. We left and turned W on a side road just N (towards Rayon) from this spot; it was also heavily deforested here, but some trees seem to have been left on the steep slopes and hilltops. Fed dropped me off and returned to Tapilula to get the flashlights while I opseal bromeliads in isolated trees in a mostly cleared cattle pasture from 16:50-18:00. I opened about 20 big bromeliads and found 2 B. reflexens and 12 Electrhyde. (17.19193N, 92.82756 W [WGS84], 16 mase., 17:30m elev.) Finally, we returned to the type locality to look for Cryptotriton. We saw many Electrhyde and Moxas (collected 11), but no salamanders. I was dry except near the waterfall from the small reservoir and on the mossy wall near the road where the holotype was found. We searched from 18:30-20:00, and then decided to call it quits, since it was so dry. The weather today was warm and sunny in the morning (and cooler and damply in the afternoon). It was a little hard for me to work today, since I think I may have cracked a rib (a re-cracked, if it's the same one) hurt searching for Hydromantes in 2005) while climbing trees in El Triunfo. It has been hard to use the branched cutter, and hurts when I laugh or cough.
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(two) multiply by two. I'm back to the old days of just being able to write down what I want and have it printed out for me. And then I could go through all my notes, look at them, make changes, etc. But now I can't do that anymore because they're too expensive! So instead of having a printer, I have to pay someone else to print things off for me. That's not very efficient either. Also, if you want to get something done quickly these days, it seems like everyone is doing everything online. It used to be that people would come into shops or offices and ask questions face-to-face. Nowadays, most interactions happen via email or phone calls instead. So here we are in 2017-2018 and still trying to figure out how things work without any real guidance from anyone else except maybe Google itself! But even Google doesn't seem very helpful when it comes down to figuring out exactly what needs to happen next step after another chapter of life throws its curveball at you. Oh well... let's hope this isn't permanent either since sometimes things change overnight depending upon who knows best where everyone else has gone wrong previously along with their own mistakes too! Not that mine were perfect either but hopefully over time they'll start becoming less frequent than before now right? Well maybe so long as one day someone finally fixes up those old computers again just like we did back then when first starting out together. Anyway enough rambling already let's move on to something else instead shall we? See ya later alligator!
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Puerto, Dear 2008 Journal Tapulo to Fourta Anterrea, Chipas, Messier March 30 We woke up early and had breakfast in Rayon. cl ordered mondongo, which turned out to be a tripe stew with large bones and gelatinous matter- not food tasting, but odd in texture and more than cl wanted to deal with at 8:30AM. We then drove from Rayon past Pantepoc, looking for good forest but finding none. We stopped in an area with a small patch of pine and liquidambar forest 2.7km W of Pantepoc (17.18491N, 92.06498W [WGS84, 6macc.T], 1711m elev.). We opened about 15 bromeliads in 30 min and found 4 B. rufescens. We drove back towards Tuxtla, stopping at several sites in pine and liquidambar forest around the high point on MX-95 between Jutotal and Puerto Cate (17.02180N, 92.84088W [WGS84, 5macc.T], 1754m elev.). We opened at least 20 very good bromeliads in this area for ~40min, but found nothing. The forest seemed secondary and some of the bromeliads were in isolated trees, but cl still expected to find something. We drove E from Puerto Cate towards Zimijovel looking for forest, but turned back at El Bosque, which failed to live up to its name. The only good forest results was on the other sides and ridges of the impressive Cerro de Bolaa- would be great to sample there someday. We drove 1.2km up a road towards Los Angeles and then parked on a side road and walked up a trail to a remnant liquidambar and oak forest. Some living trees were left, but the under-story had been cleared. Working to the sound of chainsaws from 17:00-17:40, we opened ~20 bromeliads and got 6 B. rufescens (17.04259N, 92.76370W [WGS84, 7macc.T], 1538m elev.). We gave up, drove back to Tuxtla and spent the night there.
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Porto, Sean 2008 Journal Albores cabins; Defensores de la Naturaleza station above San Augustin Acaasquastlan, Sierra de las Minas Dept. El Progreso, Guatemala~ May 27 Yesterday, Fed and I arrived in Guatemala City at 4:30AM. We had meetings at Carlos' museum and with the Dean of the University of San Carlos to discuss the memorandum and the project. This took most of the day, and we then drove to the Hotel Longino, where we spent the night. This morning, we drove to San Augustin Acaasquastlan and met the guards at the Defensores de la Naturaleza offices. One of the guards (Hector) and two policemen came with us in a second truck, and we drove up towards the Defensores field station above Albores. The road started off in thin forest, which was not in great condition but had some OK spots. We then drove through mixed dry forest, much of which was quite disturbed, above about 1200m. We then passed through liquidamber, cypress and pine forest with coffee planted over many areas; around 1500m. Some stands of liquidamber and pine farther from the road appeared in better condition, and the good bromeliads started in this area and were fairly abundant. We finally got to a community called La Trinidad, where the road became much worse (apparently impassible in winter) and the forest got much better. The pine/broadleaf forest at 2000m gradually transitioned to broadleaf forest; both of which had abundant epiphytes. The second truck had to turn back because the road was slick, but we put on chains and got through with no problem- some of us had to walk up. We finally got to the cabins, which are really nice and would be a good
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Ronto, Sean 2008 Journal Allores calino, Sierra de las Minas Biosphere Reserve, above San Augustin Acasagustlan, Dept. El Progreso, Guatemala May 29 This morning, we hiked from the cabins to Cerro Pinalo. The cloud forest was very nice, with huge trees and dense epiphyte growth and some bamboo, and extended up to about 2750m, where the vegetation changed to conifer forest. Alnus and pine were dominant, with some cypress and broadleaf trees. There was a thick understory of shrubs, and several of the same plants I saw in the gardens in Costa Rica. We saw jaguar and tapir prints in mud just at the start of the conifer forest, and heard quetzals just below there. We hiked to the top of Cerro Pinalo to where a small house and an antenna are (), and searched unsuccessfully in logs for ~20 min in secondary pine forest (15.08103°N, 89.92078°W [WGS84, 8m acc], 2762m elev.). On the way up to this spot, we caught a huge Corrophidion godmani that was tracking. This area reminds me of the spot near Chichiguan, San Marcos where we found P. rex. It seems possible that a high elevation salamander lives in this pine-for forest. We walked down another old road through good mixed conifer-broadleaf forest for ~30 min more and searched in some logs but found nothing. We walked back to the cabins, ate lunch and swatted and photographed the animals we had collected. We realized we had forgotten the formalin after killing the reptiles, so we used ethanol for those and kept everything else alive. I briefly felt very sick but decided to go with
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Roits, Sean 2008 Journal May 30 La Union, Depto, Zacapa, Guatemala Yesterday, we drove out of the Sierra de las Minas and tried to reach Chelenhá by way of Jucurú. It rained all day and we made it to the turnoff from the main road from Jucurú, about an hour drive from Chelenhá. The road here was very muddy and we got stuck, at which point we realized that the plastic mud chains we had were worthless. We put the metal ones on and eventually got out, with some help from a local man. We decided to turn back and made a long trip back to the hotel near Río Hondo. The forest on the way to Chelenhá is badly degraded or completely gone. We drove to La Union, Zacapa this morning and searched in the forest near the high point on the road SE of town from 13:00-16:00, but found nothing. The ground was full of water so we focused on logs and leaf litter. There were many birds singing, none of which I could identify. We came back after dark and searched in the forest with lights from 18:45-20:15 in the rain. I found a Geogaster (which escaped) and then a Bolitoglossa conanti on a tree, and saw 2 small rodents. Carlos then found a Crumptitira morgani walking on the ground! I cannot believe we finally found this species after five tries. I quickly found another 2 walking up mossy tree trunks, one near the base of a larger tree and one at about eye level on a smaller tree. Carlos also found 2 more on tree trunks. All the individuals we found were small to very small, but appear to me to be adults. They have grey ventral coloration like C. versipax or C. nasalis and at least 1 has a light
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Ravito, Sean 2008 July 23 San Agustin Acasaguastlán, Depto. El Progreso, Guatemala We started our joint MVZ-MVSHNAT expedition to the Sierra de los Minas, having given talks at the Universidad de San Carlos and met with the people from the school of biology. The following people came: MVZ- me, Ted Papenfuss, Craig Moritz, Rawie Bowie, Nance Norendburg; MVSHNAT: Carlos Paquay, Sergio Perez, Enio Cano, Bianca Bosarreyes, Rosa Jimenez, Jacobo Conde. We drove to San Agustin Acasaguastlán and stayed at the Fincentro Aguilar, on the outskirts of town. We quickly went to the garden and found a bunch of stuff, including Bufo marinus, Basiliscus vittatus, and Amateses alligatorius. Rawie and Rosa set up nets and caught 3 Feridas greja while Carlos, Jacobo, Nance and I drove about 45 min up towards the reserve to the forested stream where we repaired a flat tire in May. The stream had lots of water and the forest in general was rather wet and seemed great for frogs. We searched for ~45 min, up to a point ~200m from the road where the stream emerged from the ground in some very nice forest (Broodleaf). We found 1 Craugastor, 1 Rana williamsi and 1 Rana berlanderi. Heading down, we were stopped both by the police and by a band of shotgun-wielding vigilantes. Back at the hotel, we got a D. brandtii, 2 leptodactylus melanotus and 2 B. lutkeini near the stream in ponds. Sergio caught ~40 lizards in mist nets in the same area. The day was hot and partly cloudy, but it didn't rain.
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Rivets, Dean 2008 Journal July 24 Las Calañas, north of La Trinidad, Reserva de la Biosfera Sierra de las Minas, Depto. El Progreso, Guatemala After taking a long time to organize everyone in San Agustin and pack our things we started our trip to the Sierra de las Minas! We drove up to La Trinidad and loaded all of our gear onto 8 mules. We hiked up in groups - I started with about half the group but ended up with only Nancy and our 2 policemen, who we were required to take. Nancy, Kandi, Bianca, Rita and I started opening bromeliads as soon as we got to good pine forest, about 0.5km from La Trinidad. We found an adult snake B. helminchi in a large bromeliad almost immediately, but nothing else. As we got to the top of the pine forest, it started to rain hard and we stopped searching in bromeliads and walked up to the top. One of the policemen found a B. morio on the way up, close to the cabins. We got set up, made dinner while it rained heavily, and then went out with lights after dinner. We walked a loop on the trail from the cabins down to the road and then up the road back. Craig and Ted went together and found 4 Graugators, 2 of which were very small. Carlos, Jacob, Nancy and I found many Graugators, and collected 7 of at least 3 species, including C. brocchi. I found a Botitoglossa meliana crawling up a tree trunk ~2m off the ground in the cloud forest - it is absolutely black. We also found 3 B. morio on ferns along the road. It was not raining while we were out but was still very wet in the forest, so conditions were perfect for amphibians. We searched for about 2 hours.
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into, Dean 2008 Journal Las Cabanas, N of La Trinidad, Reserva de la Biosfera Sierra de Las Minas, Depto. El Progreso, Guatemala July 25 I woke up early to put up mist nets with Pawe, Rosa and Craig. After breakfast, Craig, Ted, Carlos, Jacobo, Nance and I walked down the path to the Piedra del Angel. On the way, we passed Eric, who had found a B. morio inside a log while looking for beetles. After catching a few Sceloporus on the Piedra, where we saw a lot of white-tailed swallows, we worked our way back to the cabins searching in some great logs and under debris. Craig found a B. morio under a small piece of wood, while the rest of us found nothing. We spent about 3 hours searching in total. Forgot to mention that Craig found an adult C. gastricus in the clearing near the cabins this morning, and then we caught 5 M. morelleti, 6 Sceloporus taeniocercus and a Campylorhynchus. We spent the afternoon numbering and squabbling everything. Meanwhile, Sergeis caught a few Keithrodontomys, Peromyscus gundlii, Pawe got quite a few birds as well (will list at end of trip) and spent most of the day pressing birds with Rosa. We went back out at night and Craig, Ted and I went up towards Cerro Lindon while Nance, Carlos and Jacobo did the same loop as last night. It was sunny all day and clear at night, so the forest was dry. We didn't go far up since it didn't look good, and saw only 2 or 3 Dasyprocta in 1 hr of searching. The others did the same loop as last night and found 3 B. morio, all on ferns along the road! We got a hummingbird and a phylllostomid bat out of one of the nets on the way back.
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site, Dear 2008 Journal Coro Pinala, Reserva de la Biosfera Quirra de las Minas, Depto. El Progreso, Guatemala July 26 Craig, Ted, Carlos, Nance, Jacobo, Rose, Hector and I walked towards Coro Pinala, and started searching in some superb logs and big piles of bark, without any success. We left at 09:00 and started searching around 09:30. Once again, we passed Eric on the trail and he had found 3 B. morio inside logs while searching for beetles. We stopped at Cuatro Caninos and I found a M. madoleti under a rock. Nance found a snake (either Coniophanes or Chajaphis) under a log walking on the road towards the towers. Ted, Carlos and I walked farther along the road while the others went up the trail towards the towers. They got a big C. godmani in the same pile of boards just up the trail from the road, in the same spot where we found one last time; and Ted got another M. madoleti at the junction of the trail and the road. I found another Coniophanes or Chajaphis in a small rotten log and a juvenile C. godmani on sunny rocks. We searched until 14:00, including 30 min for lunch. Craig, Nance and I then spent 40 min searching in moss in an extremely mossy area of fir forest. The others went up the road in the opposite direction towards Estancia de la Virgen as the towers from Cuatro Caninos. Carlos found a huge female B. meliana under a log. We all headed back down to the cabins at ~ 15:30, and spent the rest of the afternoon numbering and swabbing. Kauri found another juvenile C. godmani in front of the cabins. It was sunny all day, so we didn't go out at night to search.
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arts, Sean 2008 Journal Las Calvarias de Albres, Reserva de la Biosfera Sierra de las Minas, Depto. El Progress Guatemala July 27 We packed everything up this morning, loaded the mules at 10:00, and got going on the trail down at 10:30. We went through the cloud forest without searching much and only started looking in bromeliads when we reached that pine forest around 230m. I found a juvenile B. helmrichi in a medium-sized bromeliad on a pine tree, which wasn't very wet since it was tipped to the side slightly. Most of the other bromeliads were filled with water. Nancy, Craig, Rawi, Jed, Carlos, Bianca and I searched in bromeliads and logs from ~ 11:00 - 14:00 without finding anything else. This site looks like it should have Cryptotriton, and would probably be much more productive in the dry season. We had lunch at Finca la Tornonta (La Trinidad), where the cars were parked, and Carlos caught a [illegible] septaigius modustus. We drove down the road to a nice patch of liquidambar forest and searched in huge but very wet bromeliads for ~ 30 min (7 people, 15.0586°N, 89.93621°W [± 10m], 171 m elev.). Carlos found a Ithyohyla hypometye in a bromeliad; again, this area seemed like it would be much better for salamanders in the dry season. B. helmrichi and Cryptotriton should be here. We drove back to the Finicento Auyton in San Agustin Acasagustlan and had a very long discussion on Guatemalan biogeography, involving lots of rum and resulting in a framework for future cooperation and research.
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into, Dear 2008 journal July 28 La Union area, Depto. Zacapa, Guatemala We spent the morning and early afternoon preparing the many specimens we have collected thus far. At 15:00, we set out for la Union, Zacapa with to goal of visiting the cloud forest there and searching at night. We were told that the road was open despite major landslides a week ago in the area. We nearly reached La Union, only to find that a major landslide and river were blocking the road. We found some nearby coffee farms and parked in bananas and a few logs from about 17:30-18:15. Most of the bananas were the not good green kind, but there were some red ones (guajes morados). Carlos and I each got 2 B. rufescens, but one of mine escaped when I went to look for Craig & Nancy to show them; all were in red bananas. I also found a juvenile Aphnomorphus under some banana leaves. We drove back towards Ahulan and stopped at a ditch for Nancy to swab Engystomops, 23.9 km by rd from Ahulan. Carlos found a small Bok Bothrops asper. We continued on 0.4km to a larger temporary pool where we found/heard many Septoctyulus melanostictus, D. Maudinic, Paramerlenderi, E. gulosissus, B. sallipes and maybe a microhylid (my heard call). Carlos got a Grayaestor along a nearby stream, and Nancy saw an armadillo in the brush. We had an excellent dinner at Restaurante El Jardin in Ahulan, and got back to San Augustin around 23:30. 8 of us went on the trip to La Union, while Kaurie and Rosa stayed behind to net and prep birds. The day was hot and clear.
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July 31 Reserva Chelemhá, Depto. Alta Verapaz, Guatemala Yesterday, we spent a long time organizing in Guatemala City, and were joined by Andrea Páiz, a biology student interested in amphibians. We drove to Jucurú and stayed in a hotel/Christian retreat, run by evangelicals, called Manos de Amor. This morning, we got a pickup that we had arranged to drive us north into the mountains to the Reserva Chelemhá, run by an NGO named VIROBON and run by a Swiss man. There was no forest along the road but the forest at the reserve is in good condition. We stayed in a really nice guest house at the edge of the forest (2000 m.) and hiked up to a point on the trail to the mirador (2400 m.) and back. We searched in logs from 14:30-17:00 but found nothing. The forest above the house looks a lot like the small forest at Finca Volcán and has big trees with scattered bromeliads (a big and a small species) and treeferns. At the highest point we reached, bromeliads were abundant (but full of water) and there was a lot more moss. We had an excellent dinner at the house and then searched along the trail from 20:00-22:30. Carlos found a B. helmini in front of the house, and we collected 9 more that were out foraging along the trail. Carlos and Andrea found a Graugaster (guazandí?) and Carlos collected a Gerrophis godmani. We may be too high here for Hylostantis, which is the main reason we came here, but it seems like there should be more species of salamanders at this site.
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Iveto, Dean 2008 Journal Peña Verde area, Sierra de Juarez, Oaxaca, Mexico Aug. 14 We drove down from our campsite to about 2300m on the road to Peña Verde and hiked uphill through broadleaf forest with oak, liquidamber and bamboos. We searched in logs and raked in leaf litter from 11:00-14:00 on a steep slope overlooking Peña Verde. The habitat seemed OK for salamanders, but we found only 2 Graugator. We drove past Peña Verde, through town and out on a smaller road leading to the village of Ixalixtac Nigo. I was primarily interested in finding Cryptotriton adedos, so we wanted to find a site between 1500m and 2000m with bromeliads. We found some nice forest with many great bromeliads 4.0 km (by rd) from Peña Verde and opened them for ~45 min, but they were full of water and we found nothing. It rained heavily for ~20min after we finished. We drove on to Ixalixtac Nigo and I found a Graugator under a rock along the road. We hiked down past houses to a patch of pine forest above a river, which had many logs, ferns and a few bromeliads-Juan Carlos opened 2 but found nothing. We searched in logs until it got dark, for ~45 min. I dug in a mass of dirt and roots under some ferns around a big pine tree and noticed a tail that seemed about the right size for a Thoreus. Despite much searching, I couldn't find the rest of the salamander, so we kept the tail and walked back to the car. We drove back to the area where we had searched in bromeliads and walked along a path starting at the place where the road to Ixalixtac Nigo branches off. The forest
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