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Students Experience Tropical Ecotourism
By Jenny Bjelland
UW-RF News Bureau
APRIL
8, 2005--While entertainment is a driving force in American tourism, some
countries center tourism efforts on their plant and animal biodiversity.
In countries like Costa Rica and Nicaragua, ecotourism and agri-tourism
may very well become the center of the economy and draw tourists with
their natural resource uniqueness and beauty.
To compare ecotourism and agri-tourism in Costa Rica and Nicaragua, UW-River
Falls environmental studies Professor Kelly Cain and biology Professor
Brad Mogen traveled with 16 UW-RF students to Central America for a comparative
study tour on sustainability in Nicaragua and Costa Rica.
According to Cain, the destinations for the trip during January term were
chosen for a number of reasons, including that the countries are neighbors.
"Costa Rica and Nicaragua lend themselves to both of our areas, especially
the ecotourism end of things for which Costa Rica is the best known international
model," said Cain. "They also touch the biological conservation
end of things with diversity."
In addition, the group had connections in Nicaragua with an instructor
at the Universidad Nacional Agraria. Matilde Sombarriba, who attended
UW-RF in 2003 through a faculty exchange program, guided, interpreted
and traveled with the group throughout the first week of the trip.
Faculty and students spent their first six days visiting points of ecotourism
interest throughout Nicaragua. The itinerary included a stay at Selva
Negra, a mountain resort of international acclaim combining nature tourism,
shade-grown coffee and other sustainable agriculture enterprises; a daylong
tour of the El Diablo nature preserve; a boat tour of a unique island
archipelago ecosystem; a trip to the El Mombacho volcano nature preserve;
and lessons in Nicaraguan history and culture at UNA.
The ecotourism, agri-tourism and New Year’s celebration within Nicaragua
was something that students and faculty will remember for years to come,
as is the state of development that both the country and the capital city
were going through.
"The experience in Nicaragua is something we will never forget,"
says Mogen. "To be in a country where virtually every store in the
capital city has an armed guard, in many cases with a machine gun, sitting
outside the door was an enlightening experience for everybody."
Graduate student and study-tour participant Kara De Vriendt believes that
Nicaragua has the potential to develop an ecotourism and agri-tourism
model close resembling the more developed Costa Rican one.
"The beauty of Nicaragua is surely comparable to that of Costa Rica,"
said De Vriendt. "However, economic and political unrest reflect
the missing factors which will metamorph the caterpillar into the butterfly."
Following a lengthy border crossing into Costa Rica, the group began another
six days of adventure. Students experienced much of Costa Rica, from guided
hikes at the Santa Rosa National Park, the Monteverde National Park and
the Tamarindo Wildlife Refuge to sea canoeing, snorkeling and traveling
by elevated walkways and canopy zip-lines. The variety of activities allowed
them to view the biodiversity in the flora and fauna of the country.
Through a variety of tours, lessons and presentations, the students discovered
the beauty of Costa Rica and Nicaragua's ecotourism and agri-tourism industries.
"It was a good eye opener for [the students] to recognize that ecotourism
is a major economic industry within these countries, " said Cain.
"They saw the broader view while they, themselves, were paying customers."
He adds that even with the further knowledge of ecotourism "clearly
the international experience was the most critical portion of the trip
in the sense of how much it really broadens not only students,’
but our own perspectives, in terms of we're just that much better in the
classroom with a broader world sort of view."
After observing Costa Rica's and Nicaragua's diverse range of flora and
fauna including monkeys and a leatherback sea turtle, UW-RF senior Dain
Zimmer believes "the hardest lesson of the whole trip was probably
that by experiencing [ecotourism and agri-tourism] we could destroy the
biodiversity. So the lesson I really learned was that maybe, just maybe,
we can save it and still enjoy it."
The students from Wisconsin, Minnesota, and New York who participated
in the study tour are alphabetically listed below by hometown with major
and year in school.
WISCONSIN
Cambridge- Amanda Stenjem, graduate student, WRNT
Cedarburg- Ann Grey, senior, animal science
Frederic- Jaime Thompson, junior, conservation
Grafton- Jenny Cassel, sophomore, animal science
Luck- Nathaniel Palmer, junior, conservation
River Falls- Noah Cain, sophomore, geography; Brock Anderson, junior,
psychology; Stephanie Johnson, senior, biology; Brian Mogen, student at
River Falls High School.
MINNESOTA
Byron- Nina Petersen, senior, biology
Forest Lake- Sherry Zielinski, senior, biology
Ham Lake- Beth Hayes, senior, biology
Minneapolis- Joel Probst, senior, conservation
Owatonna- Kara De Vriendt, graduate student, WRNT
Plaineview- Bekka Nelson, senior, biology
NEW YORK
Chittenango- Dain Zimmer, senior, land use planning
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Last updated:
Tuesday, 22-Jun-2010 16:21:21 CDT
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