This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2017) |
The Spirogyra Butterfly Farm Park Garden, (Spanish: Mariposario Spirogyra), located in San Francisco de Goicoechea, on the edge of Rio Torres,[1] north of Zoológico Simón Bolívar, in Barrio Amon, Carmen District, San José, Costa Rica, is a butterfly house that houses from 50 to 60 different species of live butterflies from around the country in a climate-controlled, glass-enclosed habitat.
Spirogyra Butterfly Farm Park Garden | |
---|---|
9°56′24″N 84°04′22″W / 9.9400494°N 84.0727499°W | |
Location | San Jose Province, Costa Rica |
No. of species | 50–60 |
Website | www |
The conservatory includes flowering plants, cascading waterfalls and trees. There are also several species of free flying "butterfly friendly" birds.
There is a learning center, where guests can get a close up view of a variety of live caterpillars feeding and developing on their host plants. Spirogyra Garden also works with different groups of women from rural areas of Costa Rica find alternative sources of income from field labor cultivating butterflies near forests for export.
Species
editButterfly species in display at Spirogyra Butterfly Garden include:
- Heliconiinae: Heliconius erato, Heliconius charithonia (zebra heliconian), Heliconius hecale and Heliconius cydno
- Swallowtail butterflies: Parides iphidamas and Parides photinus
- Owl butterflies: Caligo memnon, Caligo eurilochus, and Caligo atreus
- Pieridae: Phoebis sennae
- Morpho peleides
- Eurytides (edible)
Gallery
edit-
Tiger Longwings (Heliconius hecale zuleika) mating
-
King Swallowtail (Papilio thoas nealces)
-
Owl butterfly (Caligo memnon)
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Pomareda, Fabiola (26 Sep 2014). "Río Torres festival aims to help clean up one of San José's most polluted rivers". The Tico Times. Retrieved 21 Sep 2016.