- Red crowned woodpecker (Melanerpes rubricapillus) seen in Cali
- Statues of mortuary monument side view, San Agustín
- Humboldt's woolly monkey Lagothrix lagothricha threw dead branches at us from the tree tops, Isla Escondida
- Cordyceps abundance in Isla Escondida, Orito, Putumayo
From left: Ophiocordyceps melolonthae on a giant Melolontha larva (Scarabaeidae), Beauveria diapheromeriphila on a stick bug, nidentified cordyceps, Ophiocordyceps engleriana on a spider, tiny Ophiocordyceps nidus, Ophiocordyceps amazonica on a grasshopper and Isaria/Cordyceps polyartha. - Salto de Bordones Colombia’s highest waterfall at 400 m / 1300 ft
- Cordyceps sp. growing from a Lepidoptera larva, Isla Escondido, Putumayo
- Ophiocordyceps binata, aka Ophiocordyceps lloydii var binata top side
- Cyphellostereum pusiolum showing top and underside of fruiting body with scale 10mm = 1cm
- Anadenobolus, a harmless giant millipede which was ubiquitous in Isla Escondida, Putumayo
- fertile head of Ophiocordyceps evansii seen in Isla Escondida. This and parasitizing species was previously clustered with O. australis, which has a round head.
Tatiana Sanjuan named this species in honor of Harry Evans, who has worked a lot on Cordyceps. - Bothrops asper - Fer-de-lance head close up, luckily lens and editing creates a proximity that I had not to experience in reality!
- Beauveria sp. on a small grasshopper, Isla Escondida
- Ophiocordyceps curculinoum seen in Isla Escondida, Putumayo
- Marasmius berteroi seen at Rio Magdalena Narrows near San Agustin
- Frog in San Agustín
- Beauveria sp. on a small grasshopper with scale showing 2.6 cm
- Megacollybia? seen in Isla Escondida
- Podoscypha sp. as water basin seen in Isla Escondida, Putumayo
- bioluminescent trail of the Headlight Elater beetle - Pyrophorus noctilucus
- The same Mycena showing its gills in Isla Escondida, Putumayo