Brazil: Pantanal Safari (Birds & Jaguars) & Chapada dos Guimaraes: Aug 05—17, 2013
Register NowTour Details
Price: To Be Announced.
Departs: Cuiaba
Tour Limit: 14
Operations Manager: Erik Lindqvist
Download Previous Itinerary (2012): PDF (120.6 KB)
Tour Leaders
Kevin Zimmer
Kevin Zimmer has authored three books and numerous papers dealing with field identification ...Andrew Whittaker
Andrew Whittaker's passion for birding and natural history started at the early age of s...More Information
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Tour Reports:
- Jul 27, 10: Grand Brazil Part II: Pantanal Safari & Chapada dos Guimaraes
- Jun 22, 08: Mato Grosso, Brazil
- Aug 01, 07: Mato Grosso, Brazil
- Jun 03, 06: Mato Grosso, Brazil
Past Birdlists:
- Jul 27, 10: Mato Grosso, Brazil: PDF (102.9 KB)
- Jun 22, 08: Mato Grosso, Brazil: PDF (103.5 KB)
- Aug 01, 07: Mato Grosso, Brazil: PDF (98.3 KB)
- Jun 03, 06: Mato Grosso, Brazil: PDF (95.6 KB)
Connecting Trips:
Register for this Tour
Register for this tour by phone (800/328-VENT or 512/328-5221), or by downloading a tour registration form. Signed and completed forms can be faxed, mailed, or scanned and emailed to the VENT office.
Jaguar, male, Rio Tres Irmaos, Mato Grosso, Brazil, July 8, 2011— Photo: Kevin Zimmer
Tour of the fabled Brazilian Pantanal, one of the premier wildlife spectacles in the world. Seasonally flooded savannas brimming with birds and mammals, and a very good chance of seeing jaguar; easy birding in one of the birdiest locations on the planet, for spectacular Hyacinth Macaws, Jabirus, Bare-faced Curassows and many others. Time also in scenically spectacular Chapada dos Guimarães, where campo and cerrado specialties abound. 
Lying in the seasonally flooded basin of the Paraguay River, the vast lowlands of the Pantanal are home to countless numbers of waterbirds, raptors, and other wildlife. The abundance and diversity of large mammals—capybara, marsh deer, black howler monkeys, giant anteater, Brazilian tapir, giant otter, crab-eating fox, coatimundi, ocelot, and even the rarely seen jaguar—coupled with throngs of herons, ibis, storks, raptors, and kingfishers—is reminiscent of Africa.
Among the prizes we will seek are Greater Rheas, Snail Kite, Maguari Stork, Jabiru, Plumbeous Ibis, Southern Screamer, Chaco Chachalaca, Blue-throated Piping-Guan, Chestnut-bellied Guan, Bare-faced Curassow, Sunbittern, Sungrebe, the incomparable Hyacinth Macaw, Golden-collared Macaw, Black-hooded Parakeet, Turquoise-fronted Parrot, Toco Toucan, Pale-crested and White woodpeckers, Great Rufous Woodcreeper, Chotoy Spinetail, Red-billed Scythebill, Gray-crested Cacholote, Mato Grosso Antbird, Yellow-billed Cardinal, Orange-backed Troupial, and others.
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Hyacinth Macaw— Photo: Andrew Whittaker |
The Chapada is situated near the western rim of Brazil's Planalto Central—a land of beautifully eroded and fractured red rimrock formations, drained by spectacular waterfalls and dissected by deep ravines containing fingers of Amazonian forest. Huge Greater Rheas and bizarre Red-legged Seriemas frequent this open country where the melancholy whistles of Red-winged Tinamous may be nearly drowned out by the rollicking duets of the endemic White-rumped Tanagers. Special attention will be made to locate the newly described (2001) Chapada Flycatcher discovered by Kevin Zimmer and Andrew Whittaker.
Good accommodations and good food throughout; easy terrain; most birding along lightly traveled gravel roads or on good, flat trails; full mornings of birding, with significant post-lunch breaks on most days; some afternoon boat trips; generally warm to hot, dry climate.
