Baird's Tapir (Tapirus bairdii)
Spanish Name: Danto, Danta
Baird's Tapir Photo - Costa Rica Baird's Tapir Photo - Costa Rica

About the Baird's Tapir of Costa Rica

Habitat

This tapir survives in dry deciduous forest and tropical evergreen forest and other habitats.

Range

This species of tapir can be found from Veracruz, Mexico down to Ecuador.

National Parks
La Selva, Corcovado National Park, Santa Rosa National Park, Cerro de la Muerte, and Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve.

Physical Description

Baird's Tapir is the largest of three South American tapir species; there is another tapir in the South America lowlands, Tapirus terrestris; in the Mountains of South America resides the smaller, furrier tapir, Tapirus roulinil; one other tapir which is black and white exists in peninsular Malaysia, Tapirus indicus.

Adult tapirs have short sparse black hair over leathery black skin. Their skin is really tough-1 to 3 cm thick! Juveniles will be brown with white spots and stripes. The tapir has a short tail and a long flexible upper lip, with which it picks leaves and pushes food into its mouth.

Biology and Natural History

Tapirs have incredibly strong dentate molars for grinding hard seeds and tough plant material. They are particular about what and how much they eat of certain plants. It has been noticed that tapirs prefer to defecate in water or repeatedly in the same place on land, most likely to reduce their trail to predators.

The endangered tapir is the largest indigenous terrestrial mammal in Central America. Perhaps due to previous heavy hunting, the tapir has become extremely shy, covert, and evasive. Their behavior is crepuscular, meaning they are active at dusk and early morning, but they have also been known to be active at night. They can smell and hear quite acutely, compensating for their poor eyesight. They use routine trails to and from wallowing and feeding sites – which can make them vulnerable to hunters. If they are startled, they can run as fast as a human on their short, powerful legs. Considering their size, they can move surprisingly quietly even over muddy forest floors because their toes come together when they lift up their feet.

The tapir used to be common in all kinds of habitat in Costa Rica; but that all changed once guns were introduced to the area. Now they are mostly found in national Parks, and their numbers are still recovering from past hunting. Today they reside in medium numbers in Santa Rosa National Park and large numbers (100-300) in Corcovado National Park.

Adult tapirs live independently except when a female is raising her young. Females have one baby at a time, which stays with her for a year, at which point it will be about two-thirds of her weight. The baby is camouflaged by its spots and stripes so it is safe hiding while it waits for its mother to come back and nurse it. It will start following the mother at 10 days old. Mothers are aggressively defensive of their young, and in the past have attacked humans for this reason. However, they can become docile around other animals. In captivity, peccaries were seen picking ticks off of a tapir and eating them, and Coatis have done this to tapirs in the wild as well. Coatis and peccaries perform such mutual grooming in the wild, but the tapir does not. In these observed instances, the tapir did not return the favor, but did not seem to mind their contact, either.

Diet

The tapir mostly eats leaves, twigs, fruits, and some seeds. It is an important disperser of seeds for several plants (e.g., Raphia faedigera).

Height/Weight
An adult tapir weighs 150 to 300 kg.

Taxonomy
Order: Perissodactyla
Family: Tapiridae

Sources
Eisenberg, John. Mammals of the Neotropics, Vol. 1. The University of Chicago Press: Chicago, 1989.
Janzen, Daniel H. Costa Rican Natural History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983.
Wilson, D. E. in Janzen, Daniel H. Costa Rican Natural History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983.

Costa Rica locations where the Baird's Tapir can be viewed

Corcovado National Park ~ Hitoy-Cerere Biological Reserve ~ La Amistad International Park Costa Rica-Panama ~ La Selva Reserve and Biological Station ~ Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve ~ Penas Blancas ~ Rincon de la Vieja National Park ~ Santa Elena Reserve ~ Santa Rosa National Park ~ Sirena Biological Station

Destinations

All Travel Destinations

Beaches

Cloud Forests

Rain Forests

Volcanos

Mountains

Cities

Waterfalls

Airports

National Parks

National Reserves

Rivers

Regions

Costa Rica Regions

Nicoya Peninsula

Guanacaste

Central Valley

Central Pacific

South Pacific

South Central

Caribbean

Northern Lowlands

Central Highlands

Costa Rica Info

Costa Rica Maps

Costa Rica History

A Sustainable Future

Weather Forecast

Biodiversity

Amphibians

Birds

Mammals

Reptiles

Sea Mammals

Photo Journal

Costa Rica votes on CAFTA


Volcano Arenal in Photos


Independence Day Photos

(888) 456-3212

Costa Rica Travel

Costa Rican Birds

Costa Rican Mammals

Costa Rican Sea Mammals

Travel Assistance

Search Site

Baird's Tapir Photos

Click thumbnails to enlarge photos

All Costa Rica Mammals Birds

Bananaquit

Bare-necked Umbrellabird

Brown Pelican

Chestnut-headed Oropendola

Chestnut-mandibled Toucan

Fiery-billed Aracari and Collare

Great Green Macaw

Green Heron

Keel-billed Toucan

Long-tailed Hermit

Long-tailed-Manakin

Magnificent-Frigatebird

Resplendent Quetzal

Scarlet Macaw

Three-wattled Bellbird

Turquoise-browed Motmot

Violet Sabrewing