Tambopata is a river, a national reserve and a province in Madre de Dios state, southeastern Peru. It harbors some of the most biodiverse rainforest in the country (and possibly the entire Amazon basin), huge protected areas, and is home to several thousand people. Remote, wild, but still easily accessible, this contrasting combination has helped it to become one of the global hotspots for ecotourism.
You get a hint of why Tambopata is such a wild area just before you land at the Puerto Maldonado airport. At the end of a quick flight to Tambopata from Lima or Cuzco, a sprawling carpet of jade green comes into view and stretches to the horizon. There are a few farms, a couple of roads, and the city of Puerto Maldonado is visible but these are still dwarfed by the sea of Amazon rainforest that marches into the distance. Meandering, coffee-colored rivers weave their way through the green. Massive, old growth Ceibas and other rainforest giants emerge from a 90 foot high canopy. Hidden beneath the trees are troops of monkeys, toucans, brilliantly colored macaws, and even jaguars. You never know what you are going to encounter in the rainforests of Tambopata but that view from the plane promises adventure and a once in a lifetime experience.
“Tambopata” is derived from two Quechua words that mean “inn” or “place of accommodation” (tambo) and “high point” (pata). The reason why the rather flat, lowland rainforests of Tambopata received this name is not forthcoming but may reflect Andean foothill areas of Tambopata that were visited by Incan peoples. Despite its Quechua name, the region wasn’t really used by the Incans for much of their history. Tambopata was first settled thousands of years ago by indigenous, Amazonian ethnies such as the Ese’Eja. Living in small villages, they cultivated yuca and hunted in the surrounding forests. The plants of the rainforests also provided them with building materials and a wide variety of medicine.
During the Spanish colonial period, access to the Tambopata region was so difficult that it was largely ignored and left to its own devices. This changed at the beginning of the twentieth century during the Peruvian rubber boom. As people from outside the region searched Tambopata and many other areas in southeastern Peru for rubber trees, they frequently came into conflict with indigenous groups. Many locals were enslaved and perished from diseases brought by the new colonists. Although the rubber boom didn’t last that long, it made a big impact on indigenous groups of the Tambopata region and their populations declined as a result.
Decades later, colonists to Tambopata began to arrive from the highlands in search of a better life and gold that had been found in the rivers. Shortly thereafter, the first eco-lodge was built in the area and tourists slowly began to make their way to Tambopata. As word spread about the amazing diversity of the Tambopata region, it grew in popularity as a destination and became one of the most popular sites to visit in Peru after the year 2000.
Tambopata continues to be a destination of choice for thousands of people experiencing Peru. Increasing numbers of colonists and pressure on the rainforests from mining and a new road linking the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans have been challenges to conservation, but large protected areas and the importance of ecotourism help to buffer these threats.
The first protected area in Tambopata was the Tambopata Reserved Zone. Established in 1977, it encompassed over 5,000 hectares of lowland rainforest and palm swamps near Explorer’s Inn. In 1990, this protected zone was expanded to include the watersheds of the Tambopata and Candamo Rivers and thus grew in size to a massive 271,000 hectares. Shortly thereafter, the name of this protected area was also changed to the Tambopata National Reserve. Combined with the adjacent Bahuaja Sonene National Park and the Madidi National Park in Bolivia, these sister reserves protect a scarcely inhabited tropical rain forest the size of Belgium (over 3,000,000 hectares or 30,000 square kilometers)
Situated on the southern side of the Tambopata River, this huge area of beautiful lowland rainforests harbors an equally impressive array of biodiversity. The numbers of species that make their homes in these rainforests demonstrates why the Tambopata region is often referred to as the most biodiverse place on Earth. It harbors:
Our guests have the chance to experience this biodiversity because lodges such as Refugio Amazonas and Posada Amazonas are located adjacent to the Tambopata National Reserve. The wild nature of the Tambopata National Reserve is further protected by the presence of the one million hectare Bahuaja Sonene National Park that abuts the reserve to the south. This is also where the Tambopata Research Center is located.
Wildlife in the Tambopata National Reserve
The combination of these huge protected areas makes it possible for Rainforest Expeditions guests to encounter fantastic wildlife in Tambopata such as:
Macaws: 6 species of these large, colorful parrots make their home in Tambopata. Many are common and easy to see as they visit clay licks and fly over the rainforest.
Parrots: 20 species of parrots and parakeets screech from the canopy of the forest and are a common feature of every Tambopata adventure.
Toucans: 8 species of exotic-looking toucans inhabit the rainforests of Tambopata and are often sighted from canopy towers and on excursions to oxbow lakes.
White-lipped Peccaries: Difficult to see in other areas of the Amazon that have been impacted by people, herds of this large rainforest pig species are regularly encountered in the Tambopata National Reserve.
Caimans: Both Black and Spectacled Caimans are frequently seen along the river and at oxbow lakes.
Giant Otters:Giant Otters: This large, interesting, aquatic mammal is often seen on visits to oxbow lakes in Tambopata. An endangered species, it has disappeared from many other parts of its range.
Monkeys: 8 species of monkeys reside in the jungles of Tambopata. The gentle Dusky Titi Monkey, the bizarre Night Monkey, Red Howler Monkeys, Saddleback Tamarins, and large troops of Brown Capuchins and Squirrel Monkeys are regularly sighted on rainforest hikes.
Jaguars: Seen by a rather small percentage of guests, this big, shy cat is nonetheless still sighted more often by people visiting the Tambopata Research Center than in many other parts of its range.