{"id":12453,"date":"2017-10-13t12:00:00","date_gmt":"2017-10-13t12:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dpetrov.2create.studio\/planet\/wordpress\/a-bird-nerd-in-the-amazon-understanding-the-diverse-ecosystem\/"},"modified":"2017-10-13t12:00:00","modified_gmt":"2017-10-13t12:00:00","slug":"a-bird-nerd-in-the-amazon-understanding-the-diverse-ecosystem","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.getitdoneaz.com\/story\/a-bird-nerd-in-the-amazon-understanding-the-diverse-ecosystem\/","title":{"rendered":"a bird nerd in the amazon: understanding the diverse ecosystem"},"content":{"rendered":"
if a watershed can be thought of as a puzzle, a myriad of pieces that intricately fit together, the amazon basin would be the world\u2019s most difficult puzzle. for decades researchers have been studying the amazon to better understand pieces and how they connect, and to uncover those unknown. i had an opportunity to learn more about this incredibly complex system and see firsthand a fraction of the amazing diversity of life that calls this place home on my trip to the brazilian amazonia.<\/p>\n
our first day was spent in the bustling and sprawling city of manaus in northern brazil along the banks of the rio negro, just upstream of where its black water meets the white water of the amazon river. as a \u2018bird nerd\u2019, i was looking forward to the possibility of seeing different and amazing birds. the open habitats of the river and urban environment provided some of the best looks at birds that have managed to make a living with humans. the birds were hardly shy; many of them hung around the hotel and in the trees along the water\u2019s edge. black vultures<\/a> were omnipresent, blue-gray tanagers<\/a>, yellow-browed sparrows<\/a>, and social flycatchers<\/a> sat close by intently searching for food, while oropendolas<\/em><\/a> flew back and forth to their bizarre pendulum shaped nests<\/a>. dragonflies and damselflies perched and patrolled the river, hunting for their own dinner and dessert. unfortunately i was unable to find any books on odonates<\/em> <\/a>\u2014 an ancient order of carnivorous insects, which includes dragonflies and damselflies \u2014 for brazil or the amazon.<\/p>\n