Animal Life From Bolivia
Bolivian highland animal life is distinguished by the presence of members of the camel family-the llama, alpaca, guanaco, and vicua, all native to the Andes. The llama and alpaca are domesticated varieties of the wild guanaco, which survives in the mountains. The llama, the largest animal on the Altiplano and seldom seen below elevations of 7,500 feet (2,300 metres), is the traditional beast of burden and is also a source of meat, wool, leather, tallow, and fuel (in the form of dried dung) in rural Andean communities. It is also used for ancient Aymara and Quechua religious rites, in which it may be sacrificed in honour of Pachamama (Pacha Mama), goddess of the Earth. The smaller alpaca is reared for its soft wool, although the wild, legally protected vicua that is found in the southern and northern parts of the Altiplano produces an even silkier type of wool.
Highland rodents include the chinchilla, the viscacha (a burrower), the mara (a long-legged, long-eared cavy), and the cui (a guinea pig bred for its meat and often kept as a pet). The Andean condor, a New World vulture and the largest flying bird in the Americas, roosts and breeds at elevations between 10,000 and 16,000 feet (3,000 and 4,900 metres). Many smaller birds and waterfowl, including grebes, coots, cormorants, ducks, geese, and gulls, live around Lake Titicaca, and large flocks of flamingos appear during several months of the year on Titicaca’s shallow shores and farther south around Lake Poop. Trout are found in several of the rivers on the Altiplano. The rivers of the eastern plains, most of which belong to the Amazon system, have an abundance of fish, and there are numerous frogs, toads, and lizards, along with myriad forms of insect life. The armadillo, anteater, peccary (wild pig), puma, and marsh deer all inhabit the plains, as do the capybara (the largest rodent in the world) and the rhea (a flightless bird that resembles the ostrich but is much smaller).
The rich animal life of the northern forests includes such mammals as the jaguar (the largest of the American cats), sloth, and tapir and several species of monkey; the largest of the numerous reptiles is the caiman (a member of the alligator family), and among the many fish species is the carnivorous piranha (caribe). Varieties of snakes include constrictors and such venomous species as the fer-de-lance and the bushmaster. Many brightly coloured birds, notably parrots and toucans, inhabit the forests, seldom descending to the forest floor; high in the sky above them may be seen the king vulture and the black vulture, gliding in search of carrion. In the eastern wetlands along the Brazilian border, Noel Kempff Mercado (formerly Huanchaca) National Park alone has more than 500 species of birds. Madidi National Park, established in northwestern Bolivia in 1995, supports a wide range of animal life, including 1,000 or more bird species.
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