38+ resident Costa Ricans from the communities surrounding the ACG are dedicated to the collection, rearing, identification, data-entry, barcoding, and photographing of thousands of species, many of which are undescribed. The parataxonomists work across a system of twelve research stations, often in very remote areas of ACG's tropical forests, with typically 2-3 people per station on a rotating schedule. We also have two marine parataxonomists, who are based in the small fishing village of Cuanjiniquil. Many of the parataxonomists pictured here have been working in the ACG for more than ten years and they have developed a keen understanding of the natural history of this region. Several papers have been written about their role in discovering and cataloging the tremendous species richness of the ACG and as a model for science research that is well integrated into the surrounding rural communities.
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- Dan Janzen
- Winnie Hallwachs
- Frank Joyce
- Stephen Stroud
- Eric Palola
- Brad Zlotnick
- Rob Pringle
- Jessie Hill
- Scott Miller
- Alex Smith
- Sara O'Connor
- Jorge Cortés Núñez
- Rex Hamilton
- Alejandro Masís
- Patrick Goodwillie
- Anne Lambert
- Nicholas Lapham
- Jason W. Green
- Robert Puschendorf
- Béryl Lacoste Hamilton
- Terri McCarthy
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- Season's Greetings and Latest Newsletter
- Announcing New GDFCF Executive Director!
- Insect Decline May Be Cause for Population Drop in Neotropical Birds
- Studying the Small Stuff: 2nd BioMar Mini Symposium
- Got Fish?
- Parataxonomists Expand Skills to Firefighting
- The BioMar Project Represents at the iBOL Conference in Brazil
- Read Our Late Rainy Season Newsletter!
- Reading Life to Save It
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