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Watershed Protection at TFI | New TFI Nursery | 2007 Internship Report | Photos

Watershed Protection at TFI
Mary Jawlick, TFI farm manager

Projects abound at TFI, as we extend our reach further into the community and attempt to integrate reforestation techniques and watershed protection. Water is something we all depend on, not just for drinking, but for cattle, vegetation and climate. Soil and water are the foundation of all life and resources that are essential to our survival. Without their protection and conservation, severe environmental degradation ensues. Cattle pasturing is the main form of income in the Guabo Valley where TFI is located. Trees have been eliminated from these landscapes, including the banks of rivers and streams.

Leaving waterways unprotected and exposed, makes them extremely susceptible to erosion. In fact, even the smallest rainfalls will turn deforested streams brown with sediment from surrounding fields. As streams funnel into rivers, massive amounts of soil are lost. Such soil leaving the pastures is the very fertility of the land. Every rain event brings about a further loss of fertility. A professor of mine once told me as we watched the Rio Guabo from the bridge in Trés Piédras, "Mary, there goes the future of Costa Rica down the river."

Denuded river and stream banks result in immediate drinking water contamination. Cattle wastes enter the water, making it unsuitable for drinking. Likewise, without the shade provided by vegetation cover, water is exposed to the sun's evaporative power. It is not uncommon to find such streams dried up in the dry season, while forested streams run strong with water. In this valley, people have temporarily solved the problem by piping in potable water from high up on the ridge where a water source lies in a primary forest. But what will happen as development expands and this water is inadequate to supply the population?

It is extremely important to protect the valley's watersheds, as the future of the people that live here depend on them. However, education is essential before any actions can be taken. The immediate need to feed their families often inhibits them from looking very far into the future.

TFI, in association with ASANA (a local environmental organization), is hoping to account for these needs while encouraging watershed protection and reforestation. This process will begin with community meetings where we will collaborate with local landowners to develop initiatives that will work in their best interest. We will provide trees free of cost to any Costa Rican who wishes to reforest, while helping with the labor of planting.

A progressive Costa Rican government program provides a significant financial reward for every tree planted on a landowner's property. Given that the trees will be free, local Costa Ricans can earn a substantial sum of money by reforesting. We hope that through education and this government program, there will be enough incentive to reforest waterways. Any further reforestation will be greatly encouraged.

This year we have planted more than 1000 trees along previously denuded waterways. We hope plant significantly more in the years to come as this initiative takes hold and spreads!

 


The New Nursery at TFI
Mary Jawlick, facility manager


TFI Work Crew

Ornamentals and fruit trees comprise the makings of a new nursery at TFI. We are expanding our repertoire, while keeping our main nursery of reforestation and hardwood species. By diversifying our supply and promoting other species, we hope to provide a source for landscapers, as well as for those who wish to do more to attract animals to their property. They hope to draw animal species into the valley by providing them with a food source. We plan to add a few species ourselves to the TFI property in the hopes of creating a corridor for monkeys that will extend from Lagunas to the Rio Guabo. Jobo fruits attract monkeys, peccaries, various bird species and many other animals. Breadfruit is a favorite among pacas. Likewise, we are currently planting flowering plants that will attract hummingbirds, butterflies, and even Scarlet macaws!

Fruit tree grafting is quite an art and we are currently learning from an expert in the field and experimenting on our own. In the next few months, we hope to have several hundred trees of a dozen different varieties available for sale. These native plants will serve not only to beautify a property and provide fresh fruit, but will help to attract many animals that have become sparse in the valley.

The Tilapia are Back!
We have restocked the pond and created a second pool for the propagation of tilapia. These beautiful pink fish grow more than a foot in length and can weigh more than 1.5 kilos. Since starting with 20 in March, 2007 we now have hundreds of tilapia happily swimming about. In a few months, they will be a steady food source to visitors at TFI, and will be sold at the San Isidro Farmers Market and to surrounding communities. Tilapia are vegetarian and require little more than a constant moving water source (oxygen) and a little shade. With fish food and the occasional rice leftovers, these guys are plumping right up!

The fish culture trend has spread throughout Trés Piedras, as at least three other families have made their own tilapia ponds. These tasty fish are easy to care for and provide a great local protein source! Dinner's on!


2007 Internship Report
Dick Andrus

This past summer (2007) at TFI, the intern group headed by Dr. Andrus of SUNY Binghamton consisted of nine students from his home university, plus one from Cornell University and three from the work college of Warren Wilson. The students were: Michael Parish, Kieran Seay, Marisol Maddox, Julie Morrissey, Briana Hauff, Alexander Mott, Stephanie Craig, Colleen Feeney, Alicia Caruso, Gillian Paul, Aubrey DeLone, Heather Aziz and Julia Mead. A quarter of the way through the four-week session the students were joined by a butterfly expert, Jeremy Lombardo, who studied the variety of butterflies around TFI.

Along with periodic bouts of tree-planting as a service to neighboring Ticos, the students would work in separate groups on projects that the professor devised on their behalf.

The first group had to prepare for Jeremy's experiments. First, they rigged butterfly traps by attaching netting to boards and hanging the contraptions in scattered locations. Every few days the team would add food (rotten fruit ) to the traps and take notes on the butterflies they caught. According to their notes they found thirty different species of butterfly, with the greatest diversity in secondary forest. This accounts only for the butterflies that spend most of their time in the understory and happen to be fond of alcohol produced by rotten fruit.

Another group did construction around the farm area. Students experimented with building stairs that would be resistant to erosion and storm water. They also built a second tilapia (a food fish) pond in one corner of the property. Though they built it well, Mother Nature helped us test it when she hit us with twelve inches of water in the space of twenty-four hours that flooded us. Though the walls of the pond got knocked down, when the students looked the next morning they found most of the fish still swimming around the bottom.

We knew that twelve inches of rain fell thanks to the students who set up rain gauges at different sites on the property. They found measurable differences in precipitation due to the amounts of foliage and evapotranspiration levels.

In Costa Rica and much of the Central and South American countries, farming practices altered the landscape. The infiltration crew found that it took hours longer for water to sink into the ground that had been farmed than it did in a healthy forest floor. A couple of students ended up looking into a hypothesis on what happens if farmed land is abandoned. A massive colony of vines and ferns springs up, leaving scientists wondering what this means for the surrounding forest. Some vines appear to grow at very fast rates, but the students are not yet sure of the growth limits.

Many of these projects will continue for several summers. There is always the additional job of bagging soil for seeds in the nursery. When a good supply of seedlings was available, the students loaded the trucks and took them to neighboring properties to plant and, it is hoped, to promote biodiversity.

Around TFI there was a never-ending stream of interesting events. Once in the middle of dinner, the girls on side of the table began yelling, one by one, and I looked under the table just in time to lift up my feet and avoid having the enormous, but beautifully colored locust crawl over my toes.

Having lectures outside left us vulnerable to the surrounding wildlife. One time the class got to take a toucan break. Another time one of our friends, Mary, came to the table to inform the group that there were some white-faced Capuchin monkeys by the upper cabins throwing stuff on the roofs.

Every day was unique at TFI during the successful internship of July 2007.


Photos



Oxen team pulling out Mayo colorado from Los Arboles.


Logging team with Mayo colorado at Los Arboles



Michael Murrell from East Carolina University painting local birds on one of the TFI buildings.


Michael's paintings

 

 




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