Talk:Tiputini Biodiversity Station

Latest comment: 12 years ago by Afechtmeyer in topic Indigenous People:

General Information edit

The Tiputini Biodiversity Station (TBS) is a field study facility in which students and other scientists perform different research projects. This station is located in the Eastern Ecuadorian Amazon in the Yasuni Biosphere Reserve and provides a remote locale for ecological research on the Tiputini River. The forest surrounding TBS is terra firme. The TBS was established in 1995 by Universidad San Francisco de Quito in collaboration with Boston University. TBS was built with sustainability in mind so deforestation was kept to a minimum when building the cabins and lab (Quito).

Life at the Station: edit

The facilities are located around a two-story lab. The station includes 9 cabins, a few labs, and a cafeteria. Four cabins are for the head researchers and employees that work there full-time and include 2 beds and a full bath. The other 5 cabins are for additional researchers and student groups that visit and include bunk beds and a full bath. The bathrooms have running water and flush toilets but no hot water. TBS has electricity available in the cabins for about 6 hours a day (3 in the afternoon and 3 at night), and for 24 hours in the lab. The Station has a large cafeteria that can comfortably accommodate about 60 individuals. There are 3 meals served everyday with box lunches available to researchers in the field that may miss a scheduled meal. There is internet access but it is limited because of the physical location of the station. Students can usually use about 1 hour of internet a day, but the researchers have almost unlimited access. In the researcher’s downtime they can go on hikes to lookout towers around the facility (Quito).

Goals of the station: edit

TBS has initiated a river turtle nest project in which locals collect turtle eggs on the river banks by the Tiputini station and rear them in captivity. Their populations have been decimated in recent years due to collecting of turtle eggs for sale at market. Podocnemis unifilis has shown improvements in recent years, but P. expansa is still in danger in this region of the river (Quito). TBS also has camera traps set-up around the facility and in the neighboring forest to capture photos of the various species in the surrounding national forest. These camera traps are used to estimate population sizes of certain species and to document rare species. TBS also serves as a place to reintroduce captive animals into the wild. A black caiman farm near the station closed down not too long ago and most of the captive caimans were introduced into the rivers near TBS. However, the main goal of this station is to provide a place for people to perform experiments and research (Quito).

Research: edit

The station has been the site for many research projects and has led to the publication of many papers. Bird population studies, reproductive behavior, social structure, and seed dispersal characteristics have all been studied across multiple bird species. Primatology is a large topic of study in this area because of the diversity and abundance of primate species. One paper looked at the relationship between primates and naturally occurring mineral licks using camera traps to identify different species that visited the lick, as well as the frequency and duration of their visits (Blake, 2009). TBS has also been the host for many genetic research projects. One project looked at the genetic relationships between offspring and parents to determine reproductive behavior in manakins (Tori, 2006). This project was very important because it used a new technique for sampling genetic material. In order to sample genetic material from offspring they must take a sample from the bird after it hatched or from the egg after it develops and veins become visible. The problem is that these birds suffer high nest predation rates and so not all the offspring from a nest can be sampled. So in order to get around these problems researchers would take eggs from the nest and replace them with plaster eggs that the mother could take care of. In the meantime the eggs were incubated until they were ready to have a genetic sample taken. After that the eggs were put back in the nest with the mother (Tori, 2006).

Indigenous People: edit

TBS is located near the Huaorani Reserve. These local people are generally friendly and a few stop by the station to ask for food or other supplies. The Huaorani are not considered a threat to the station and do not mind the researchers and students that visit there. The Huaorani can be found in villages along the side of the roads established by oil companies. Since 1968 the oil companies have encroached onto Huaorani land, which has caused tensions between them. Afechtmeyer (talk) 18:11, 17 November 2011 (UTC)afechtmeyerReply