Guatemala travel  Traveling Guatemala
Your guide to Guatemala
Home          
  Guatemala
  Background
  Maps
  History
  Economy
  Flora and fauna
  
  Where to go ?
  Antigua
  Lake Atitlan
  Archeological sites
  Mayan markets
  Caribbean sea
  Pacific coast
  Volcanoes
  Festivals
  Guatemala travel gallery
  
  What to do ?
  Guatemala travel packages
  Sports and activities
  Work and studies
  
  Planning your travel
  Reading
  Guatemala travel board
  Booking flights online
  Getting in
  Touching down
  
  
  
  
  

Guatemala : flora and fauna

Guatemala is a small country which is home to 19 different ecosystems, ranging from the mangrove forests on both Pacific and Caribbean coasts to the pine forests of the mountainous interior, to the cloud forests at higher altitudes and to the sub tropical jungle at lower altitudes. These ecosystems include 250 species of mammals, 600 species of birds and 200 species of reptiles and amphibians, many species of butterflies and other insects... and more than 8,000 species of plants !

Here are some examples of this diversity.

Fauna

Tapir

Tapirs are large browsing mammals, roughly pig-like in shape, with short, prehensile snouts. They inhabit jungle and forest regions of South America, Central America, and Southeast Asia. All four species of tapir are classified as endangered or vulnerable. Their closest relatives are the other odd-toed ungulates, horses and rhinoceroses.

Baird's Tapir has a distinctive cream-colored marking on its face and throat and a dark spot on each cheek, behind and below the eye. The rest of its hair is dark brown or grayish-brown. The animal is the largest of the three American species and, in fact, the largest land mammal found in the wild from Mexico to South America. Baird’s Tapirs usually grow to 2 meters in length (6.5 feet) and 1.2 meters (4 feet) in height, and adults weigh between 240 and 400 kilograms (525 and 880 pounds).

Tapir Guatemala
Like the other types of tapir, they have small stubby tails and long, flexible proboscises. They have four toes on each front foot and three toes on each back foot.
 
Parts of this text are from Wkipedia
Flora

 

 

Travel packages in Guatemala
 
Guatemala Tourism Commission

 

Contact us | Advertising | How to link to us | Site map

© 2007 Guatemala travel guide

http://www.travelingguatemala.com