One noticeable feature of the new MUNAE exhibits of Director/Administrator Christopher Martínez is the biodiversity of the fauna presented by the artifacts that he selected to be featured in the new exhibits. So far I have found over a dozen animals and one conch shell. There are also several scenes with flowers but the present web page is on the animals of the newly featured ceramics and stone sculptures that you can see and experience when you come to visit MUNAE, near the airport in Zona 13.
Spider monkey inside mammiform tetrapod, MUNAE.
Spider monkeys (Howler monkey almost never pictured)
Maya dog (no fur on most of body, no barking sound)
Armadillo (on ballgame hacha)
Deer (3D ceramic figurine)
Jaguars (Quiche Urns; plate showing human sacrifice from Uaxactun; Tikal stela)
Puma (no spots so I suggest it is a cougar)
Snake (on ballgame hacha)
Parrots (3-dimensional ceramics)
Macaw (3-dimensional ceramic)
Vulture (3-dimensional ceramic)
Bufo toad (large stone sculpture, Rhinella marina, previously Bufo marinas)
Bat (on Chama polychrome vase)
Fish (on Kaminaljuyu stone panel)
Conch shell (on polychrome plate with gorgeous flower above)
Two easy to see jaguars leap down to grab the bleeding body of a sacrificed victim. There are several vases and plates that show trained jaguars assisting in human sacrifice ceremonies; this plate from Uaxactun is one. There are also two black spider monkeys in the upper left. Their role in this scene needs to be researched. The bottom ring of the plate has jaguar pelage spot designs.
To provide documentation for school children, it would help to have a book for their age to describe each animal in the MUNAE collection. We have many years experience preparing (MayanToons) books and animated videos for school children.
Plus for the general public who are visiting the museum, and for archaeologists and iconographers, it would be great to have a book that introduces the iconography of each mammal, each bird, each reptile and the conch shell. FLAAR has the experience.
Posted by Biologist Mariana Rivas Gálvez on March 15, 2024
Who are the Abronia Lizards?
One of the most fascinating reptiles in the Mesoamerican region are the lizards of the genus Abronia, representing one of the most notable endemic reptiles in the area. These remarkable animals belong to the family “Anguidae”, and some studies suggest their inclusion in the taxonomic group “Toxicofera”, which also includes “helodermatids” (Helodermatidae), “iguanas” (Iguania), and “monitor lizards” (Varanoidea). Their main distribution spans in Mexico and Central America, with Guatemala being a significant distribution point. Approximately 28 to 30 species of these lizards have been identified within this genus, with 12 found in Guatemala alone, at least 8 of which are endemic to the region. Endemic species in this area include A. anzuetoi, A. aurita, A. campbelli, A. fimbriata, A. frosti, A. gaiophantasma, A. meledona, and A. vasconselosii. It is essential to consider that taxonomy, classification, and the number of recorded species may change as more comprehensive research is conducted and new populations are identified.
Abronia. vasconcelosii - “Dragoncito esmeralda” - Photography by PH. Pedro Pablo Ranero - Zoológico La Aurora - Guatemala City - March 5. 2024.
Posted by Alejandra Valenzuela Cofiño on January 31, 2024
Feathered, warm-blooded and fast-hearted; with a strong yet light-weight skeleton and a four-chambered heart. Birds are egg-laying animals that have been around since before Pangea’s continental breakup, and are direct descendants from a group of meat-eating dinosaurs called Theropods. These were small feathery raptor-like dinosaurs, from the same group to which the infamous T-Rex belonged to! Their smaller size, ability to fly, plus their wide range of food sources (and maybe a little bit of luck) made them the only dinosaurs to survive Earth’s fifth mass extinction. With fossils of their ancestors dating up to 150 million years ago, Modern Birds (Neornithes) are now a group of almost ten thousand known species!
Nowadays, at least a few of these species can be found nearly on every spot on Earth. They have been seen flying all over the world, including over places as bleak as the South Pole or the top of the Himalayas. A wide array of adaptations have resulted in high-speed flying birds of prey as well as non-flying 300 pound ostriches; black and white penguins as well as vibrant scarlet-red macaws with colorful tail feathers. In between all this diversity, the main characteristics that describe all modern birds are: their feathers, wings, toothless beaks, bipedal locomotion and the laying of hard-shelled eggs where embryos conclude their development.
In FLAAR, we love to photograph the tropical bird diversity that we are lucky enough to find during our adventures. These captivating Wood Storks (Mycteria Americana) are a perfect example of the beauties we can find in Mesoamerica’s wetlands! These birds may not appear big through the lens, but in fact they can grow to be over 50 inches tall. They are called “wading birds” because they are almost always found wading along shorelines in search of aquatic insects or crustaceans. As you may see in the pictures, they have long and thin legs that help them wade across the wetlands, and an unfeathered head with a high-vascularised skin that helps them with heat dissipation. The beautiful Mycteria americana species is adapted to the hot and moist weather of these tropical wetlands, just like our passionate FLAAR adventurers.
Two Mycteria americana on a grass field.
Photography by: María Alejandra Gutierrez, FLAAR Mesoamérica, 2024. La Blanca, Petén, Guatemala.
This PowerPoint presentation will show scenes not available elsewhere. If you are a student you will find topics for your BA thesis, MA thesis or your PhD dissertation.
If you are a professor this PPTx provides you digital rollouts by Nicholas Hellmuth that have never previously been published. You have permission to download any and all images from this lecture and add to your own presentations.
For the general public this full-color lecture will introduce you to aspects of Classic Maya art (including derived from Olmec art) and continuing into the Post Classic Dresden Codex.
So on the evening of January 22, join us for several thousand years of art, iconography, architecture plus epigraphy of hieroglyphs.
The attached document shows sample illustrations from the lecture.
On August 14 we celebrate World Lizard Day. These are a fairly large group of vertebrates with thousands of species and with quite peculiar characteristics. Do you want to know what they are and why are they so interesting? Keep reading to learn more about them.
Anolis sp. Reserve Tapon Creek, Livingston, Izabal. David Arrivillaga, 2021.
Lizards are a big and widespread group of reptiles that belong to the order Squamata. There are around 12,000 species and live across the world except in Antarctica. Lizards are scaly-skinned reptiles that are distinguished from snakes because they possess legs, movable eyelids, and external ear openings. However, some species of lizard’s lack one or more of these features. Lizards are by far the most diverse group of modern reptiles in body, shape, and size. Representatives of some families are limbless and resemble snakes, whereas may be outfitted with a wide array of ornamentation such as extensible throat fans and frills, throat spines, horns or casques on the head, and tail crest.
Coleonyx elegans, gecko. Posada Caribe, Sayaxché, Petén. David Arrivillaga, 2021.
Lizards have a diverse range of habitats, from underground warrens and burrows to the surface and elevated vegetation. Some are slow, move with caution and rely on cryptic coloration for protection, whereas others can run fast across. Small species such as geckos, not only have colonized islands but also invaded cities around the world. Hemidactylus species are common in houses and buildings that most people know more about it. They appeared to do very well living with people in disturbed areas but did not seem to invade undisturbed habitats.
The department of El Progreso has unique biological diversity in the region however, that has been little known and admired by the population; since among the different ecosystems present in the department, the most outstanding is the Dry Forest, also known as thorny forest, scrubland, chaparral o xerophytic forest, alluding to its characteristic. Dry forests have generally been associated with low attractiveness, because they are composed of plant communities comprised of trees with small structures, scattered, losing their leaves during the dry season of the year, as well various shrubby plants. However, they have a unique diversity with many endemic flora and fauna species.
Dry forests in Guatemala occupy 4.49% of the country’s total area. These are being affected by the expansion of the agricultural frontier, the formation of pasture, and the extraction of wood for firewood. The research in this area is very limited, despite being one of the places with the greatest endemism in Guatemala. Even though several studies have been carried out in the dry forest, there are few records of fauna, especially for the department of El Progreso.
Calocitta formosa (White-throated magpie-jay). El Rancho, El Progreso. Edwin Solares, 2023.