Sian Kaʼan Biosphere Reserve

Coordinates: 19°30′N 87°45′W / 19.5°N 87.75°W / 19.5; -87.75
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Sian Kaʼan Biosphere Reserve
National Commission of Natural Protected Areas
Latin America and the Caribbean
Designated27 November 2003
Reference no.1329[2]

Sian Kaʼan Biosphere Reserve (

Mexican state of Quintana Roo. It was established in 1986 and became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987.[3]

The term Sian Kaʼan, from the Yuatec Mayan language, "means 'gate of heaven' or 'a place where heaven begins.'"[4]

With the participation of scientists, technicians, students, fishers, farmers, rural promoters, and administrators, together with regional and international partners, have successfully carried out more than 200 conservation projects basing all conservation actions on scientific and technical information for planning and implementing environmental policies and the proposal of viable solutions for sustainable use of natural resources and focusing their efforts established within eight protected natural areas that include the reefs of

Cancun, the island of Cozumel that is located in front of Xcaret and Isla Contoy up north, covering 320,000 hectares (780,000 acres). These areas lie in parts of all seven Caribbean Sea coastal municipalities of the state, with the largest part being in eastern Felipe Carrillo Puerto
, where the vast majority of Sian Kaʼan Biosphere Reserve lies.

Part of the reserve is on land and part is in the Caribbean Sea, including a section of coral reef. The reserve has an area of 5,280 square kilometers (2,040 sq mi).[5]

The reserve also includes some 23 known archeological sites of the Maya civilization[3] including Muyil. Remains of the Decauville railway Vigía Chico-Santa Cruz, which was operated from 1905 to 1932, can be found at several places.

Within the Amigos de Sian Kaʼan project objectives are the identification, protection, and management of additional areas with high biodiversity value as well as those critical for maintenance of the life cycles of endangered, threatened, and migratory species in the Riviera Maya, providing environmental education through books, journals, and pamphlets, giving technical assistance, and training to Mayan communities working with ecotourism.

Biological species

A list of some of the species recorded in Sian Kaʼan:[6]

  • Alouatta pigra
    (Yucatán black howler monkey)
  • Amazona xantholora
    (yellow-lored amazon)
  • Ardea herodias
    (great blue heron)
  • Ateles geoffroyi
    (Geoffroy's spider monkey)
  • Caracara plancus
    (crested caracara)
  • Crax rubra
    (great curassow)
  • Crocodylus acutus
    (American crocodile)
  • Crocodylus moreletii
    (Morelet's crocodile)
  • Ctenosaura similis (black iguana)
  • Cuniculus paca
    (spotted paca)
  • Dasyprocta punctata
    (Central American agouti)
  • Dicotyles tajacu
    (collared peccary)
  • Eira barbara
    (tayra)
  • Fregata magnificens
    (magnificent frigatebird)
  • Galictis vittata
    (greater grison)
  • Jabiru mycteria
    (jabiru)
  • Leopardus pardalis
    (ocelot)
  • Leopardus wiedii
    (margay)
  • Meleagris ocellata
    (ocellated turkey)
  • Mycteria americana
    (wood stork)
  • Nasua narica
    (white-nosed coati)
  • Odocoileus virginianus
    (white-tailed deer)
  • Panthera onca
    (jaguar)
  • Pelecanus occidentalis
    (brown pelican)
  • Nannopterum brasilianum
    (neotropic cormorant)
  • Phoenicopterus ruber
    (American flamingo)
  • Platalea ajaja
    (roseate spoonbill)
  • Potos flavus
    (kinkajou)
  • Puma concolor
    (puma)
  • Puma yagouaroundi
    (jaguarundi)
  • Ramphastos sulfuratus
    (keel-billed toucan)
  • Sarcoramphus papa
    (king vulture)
  • Tamandua mexicana
    (tamandua)
  • Tapirus bairdii
    (Baird's tapir)
  • Tayassu pecari
    (white-lipped peccary)

References

  1. ^ "Reserve de la Biosfera Sian Ka'an" (PDF). Retrieved 24 December 2022.
  2. ^ "Sian Kaʼan". Ramsar Sites Information Service. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  3. ^ a b "About Sian Kaʼan". Archived from the original on 4 February 2012. Retrieved 2 February 2012.
  4. ^ "Sian Kaʼan Biosphere Reserve". Mexican Routes [mexicanroutes.com]. 2023. Retrieved 10 January 2024. Idea, project and realization: Maya
  5. ^ "Sian Kaʼan – UNESCO World Heritage Centre". Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  6. ^ "Sian Kaʼan". UNESCO. Retrieved 1 January 2015.

External links