Big Bend National ParkWildlife
The rugged mountains, harsh desert, and majestic river habitats of Big Bend are home to a wide variety of unique creaturessome of which can be found nowhere else in the world. The extreme temperatures and geographic isolation of the place has given rise to animals specifically adapted to the area's many environmental niches. The Colima warbler, the greater long-nosed bat, and the Sierra del Carmen Mountains white-tailed deer are found nowhere else north of Mexico. The endangered Big Bend mosquitofish lives only here. And although this isn't the only place in the world to spot mountain lions or black bears, sightings of these gorgeous creatures are always a delight for park visitors. Nearby Big Bend Ranch also offers visitors opportunities to spot some unusual creatures. If there is one thing wildlife watchers at the park can be sure of, it's that a unique surprise is just around the bend.
The River The garfish and some turtles that swim in the river are living fossils that help describe its former life as a lush savannah and swamp some 50 million years ago. Their ancestors then swam in company with crocodiles and hippopotamus-like creatures. Near the river lives an extreme and ancient example of geographic isolationthe Big Bend mosquitofish (Gambusia gaigei). Not only is this creature's range restricted to the park, but it is also restricted to a single pond. The fish was first identified in 1928 in Boquillas swpring, which led scientists to believe it was extinct when the spring dried up. Then, in 1954 the species was rediscovered near Rio Grande Village. With the help of conservationists and biologists, the fish have survived, even though two males and one female were the only living representatives of the species at one point. The Big Bend mosquitofish gives birth to live offspring and has been around as a species since the time of the mastodons. They feed largely on mosquito larvae. The Rio Grande riverside is home for a most unusual amphibianCouch's spadefoot toad. The toad evades drought by burrowing with some specially adapted, shovel-like feet. When rains come, the toads move to the nearest puddle and mate. Their eggs hatch six times faster than those of garden toads and the tadpoles quadruple their birth weight by the second evening of life. With luck some mature before the puddle evaporates, when they can dig in to await another wet spell.
The Desert Other animals have their own unique ways of beating the daytime heat. Some insects fly straight up in the air a short distance, where it is significantly cooler. There is a beetle that seems to walk around and raise itself up on stilts periodically. It, too, is just achieving a critical distance from the desert floor's killing heat. The Chisos Mountains are also home to two powerful and potentially dangerous animalsthe mountain lion and the black bear. The regal cat, locally called a panther, has given its name to the lion's share of park places, such as Panther Pass and Panther Junction. Most park sightings of mountain lions take place at Panther Pass, usually in May or June. In an extraordinary turn of events, the black bear began recolonizing the Big Bend area in the mid 1980s. Visitors to the area around the turn of the century (1900) reported seeing numerous black bears, but by the time the park was established in 1944, hunting and trapping had virtually decimated the region's resident population. Surprisingly, in the 1980s, park visitors began reporting black bear sightings and the numbers have just increased since then. In 1996, 572 sightings occurred. Black bears thrive in the juniper, piqon pine, madrone, oak, and persimmon trees of the Chisos Mountains where they find shade and shelter. They eat pine nuts, madrone berries, and acorns, as well as prickly pear fruit, sotol, and yucca. Mountain pools provide drinking water much of the year. These Chisos mountain plantsspecifically the blooming century plantsalso provide sustenance to a rare species of mammalthe Mexican longnose bat. The bats spend most of the year in Mexico, but can be seen in the park in June or July when they feed on the nectar of these flowering plants.
The details, dates, and prices mentioned in this article were accurate at the time of publication.
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