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Bocas del Toro Archipelago
Islands of Panama From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Bocas del Toro Archipelago is a group of islands in the Caribbean Sea in the north-west of Panama.
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Geography
Summarize
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The archipelago is part of the Bocas del Toro District, located in Bocas del Toro Province.[1] The archipelago is separated in two bodies of water, Almirante Bay and Chiriquí Lagoon. The north region of the archipelago includes the islands of Colon, Carenero, San Cristobal, Bastimentos as well as Swans Cay and Zapatilla Cays, while the south region includes Popa island and Cayo de Agua.[2] The main islands are: Isla Colon, Bastimentos, Solarte, San Cristobal, Cayo de Agua and Popa. The archipelago also includes 50 cays and some 200 tiny islets.[1]
Protected areas within the archipelago of Bocas del Toro include Isla Bastimentos National Marine Park, Municipal Reserve of Bluff Beach and Hydrological Municipal Reserve of Río Mimitimbi.[3]
Demography
The area is 250 km2 (97 square miles) which is about 60% of the district's area, and the population about 13,000, which is 75% of the district's population. The major city is Bocas del Toro, also called Bocas Town, on Isla Colón, other settlements include Bastimentos, Cauchero, Tierra Oscura, and Punta Laurel.[4]
Climate
Dry seasons in the archipelago are from January to April and then from late August to October, while wet seasons are from April to August and November to December[5]
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Biodiversity
Bocas del Toro Archipelago is composed of reef, mangrove, and seagrass bed ecosystems.[6] Additionally, the archipelago fosters a variety of wildlife, including dolphins, birds, crocodiles, poison dart frogs and it also serves as a nesting site for marine turtles.[7] The archipelago has also been designated as a Hope Spot. [8]
Strawberry poison dart frogs (Dendrobates pumilio) found in the archipelago exhibit color polymorphisms in their populations among the islands of Colon, Popa, and Bastimentos, as well as other sites in the mainland.[9]
The major islands of the archipelago, Colón, Bastimentos, Cristóbal, Popa, Solarte, and Cayo Agua, have been designated an Important Bird Area (IBA) by BirdLife International because they support significant populations of white-crowned pigeons and three-wattled bellbirds. [10]
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See also
Notes
External links
- BocasDelToro.com Archived 2017-09-26 at the Wayback Machine OFFICIAL WEBSITE - Everything about Bocas del Toro
References
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