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Property Type: Lots/Farms |
Property ID: MAP-MAP 55 |
| Property Name: Mountain of the Stars |
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| Mountain of the Stars is 225-acre propety in the mountains of Mal Pais next to Cabo Blanco National Park. |
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Property Type: Commercial |
Property ID: MAP-PC 42 |
| Property Name: Hotel Playa Mal Pais |
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| The hotel is located 150 meters from the beautiful beaches of Malpais next to the crystal clear ocean and surrounded by exuberant vegetarian that makes I tan exotic paradise. |
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Property Type: Lots/Farms |
Property ID: COB-COB 05 |
| Property Name: Finca Futuro Verde de Cobano |
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| Excelente propiedad ideal para desarrollar y muy cerca de todo. |
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Property Type: Beach Properties |
Property ID: TAMB-TAMB 05 |
| Property Name: Beachfront Playa Mango |
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| Gorgeous piece of property right next to the marine Project in Tambor. |
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Property Type: Investment/Development |
Property ID: MZ-DEL 02 |
| Property Name: Finca Cuesta Rollando |
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| 100-hectares of a developers dream in Delicias. Ocean views, muliple water sources, and 2-km of public road frontage! |
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Property Type: Investment/Development |
Property ID: MZ-MZ 06 |
| Property Name: Finca Pura Vida |
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| This 101-hectare farm is ideal for development! |
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Property Type: Investment/Development |
Property ID: CAB 04 |
| Property Name: Sueno Azul de Cabuya |
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| Perfect opportunity for investors to develop. |
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Costa Rican Coastal Properties Tel: (506) 2640-0472 - Fax: (506) 2640-1905 |
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Costa Rica news |
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| Photos: world's top ten 'lost frogs' |
| The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and Conservation International (CI) have sent teams of researchers to 14 countries on five continents to search for the world's lost frogs. These are amphibian species that have not been seen for years—in some cases even up to a century—but may still survive in the wild. Amphibians worldwide are currently undergoing an extinction crisis. While amphibians struggle to survive against habitat loss, climate change, pollution, and overexploitation, they are also being wiped out by a fungal disease known as chytridiomycosis. |
| Inga alley cropping: a sustainable alternative to slash and burn agriculture |
| It has been estimated that as many as 300 million farmers in tropical countries may take part in slash and burn agriculture. A practice that is environmentally destructive and ultimately unstable. However, research funded by the EEC and carried out in Costa Rica in the late 1980s and early 1990s by Mike Hands offers hope that it is possible to farm more successfully and sustainably in these tropical regions. |
| How an agricultural revolution could save the world's biodiversity, an interview with Ivette Perfecto |
| Most people who are trying to change the world stick to one area, for example they might either work to preserve biodiversity in rainforests or do social justice with poor farmers. But Dr. Ivette Perfecto was never satisfied with having to choose between helping people or preserving nature. Professor of Ecology and Natural Resources at the University of Michigan and co-author of the recent book Nature’s Matrix: The Link between Agriculture, Conservation and Food Sovereignty, Perfecto has, as she says, "combined her passions" to understand how agriculture can benefit both farmers and biodiversity—if done right. |
| How tree communities respond to distance to edges and canopy openness |
| Tropical forests frequently experience the opening and closing of canopy gaps as part of their natural dynamics. When an edge is created, and the area outside the boundary is a disturbed or unnatural system, forests can be seriously affected even at some distance from the fragmented edge, since sunlight and wind penetrate to a much greater extent. This increases tree mortality and, consequently, canopy openness close to the edge. Thus, canopy openness can be both part of a natural gap-dynamics cycle and the direct manifestation of human edge effects. |
| Costa Rica proposes to downgrade Las Baulas National Park, threatening leatherback sea turtles |
| Costa Rica is considered by many to be a shining example of environmental stewardship, preserving both its terrestrial and marine biodiversity while benefiting from being a popular tourist location. However, a new move by the Costa Rican government has placed their reputation in question. In May of this year the President of Costa Rica, Oscar Arias, presented a law to the legislature that would downgrade Las Baulas from a National Park to a 'mixed property wildlife refuge'. The downgrading would authorize a number of development projects that conservationists say would threaten the park's starring resident: the leatherback turtle. |
| Protection of land crabs critical to the conservation of coastal tropical forests |
| The impact of land crabs on the near-ocean forests in which they live has long been overlooked, with emphasis placed instead on water levels, salinity, and other abiotic influences. However, a new research synthesis published in Biological Reviews shows that land crab influence is among the most important factors affecting tropical forest growth along coasts, on islands, and in mangroves. |
| Conservation through commerce in Costa Rica |
| While Costa Rica is lauded for its conservation ethic, environmental concerns remain in the country. Overdevelopment is tied to many issues, including pollution, degradation of ecosystems, deforestation, and soil erosion, while unsustainable fishing plagues coastal waters. Costa Rica's wildlife is also directly affected by hunting as crop and livestock pests, predation and displacement by introduced species, and the illegal pet trade. |
| Infant blue whale filmed underwater |
| Off the waters of Costa Rica in January 2008 scientists and photographers with National Geographic filmed an infant blue whale swimming near its mother. They believe this is the first time a baby blue whale has been filmed underwater. |
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