South of the Amazon Basin lies a series of high plateaux where you can see for ever. The ground is carpeted in grasses and shrubs, and there are small, gnarled trees with thick, corky bark. This vast area of grassland and scrub is known as cerrado or savannah, and it covers South America’s high plains, the Planalto Central – about 500-800 metres (1650-2600 feet) above sea level – and surrounding areas.Ten Brazilian states share the 2 million square kilometers (800,000 square miles) of cerrado, an area the size of western Europe, and it is rich in wildlife. Some estimates suggest that 5% of the world’s species of animal live here, and there are over 10,000 recognized species of plant, including 420 different grasses and shrubs. The cerrado is the second largest habitat in Brazil and represents just over a tenth of the world’s savannah, but it is far more endangered than the rainforest. It has been estimated that 40-50% had disappeared during the past 30 years due to cattle ranching and then huge scale of arable agriculture, particularly soya, corn and sunflowers. Although the soils are poor, vast quantities of lime and fertilizers have made them productive. Today, about half of the original cerrado remains but only 2% of this is protected as either national park or a reserve. It is in these remnant areas that you can get a glimpse of what the cerrado was like decades ago, oases for wildlife and wildlife watchers alike.Emas NP, undoubtedly the wildlife jewel in the cerrado’s crown, is 8 hours drive from Cuiaba, on the north-eastern edge of the Pantanal. The area is relatively flat and criss-crossed by a network of dirt roads and fire breaks along which you travel in four-wheel drive vehicles. There is a lot to see, including giant anteaters, peccaries, armadillos, maned wolves as well as a multitude of birds including Greater Rheas, macaws, toucans and numerous birds of prey perching on the many termite mounds. Here, the entire ecosystem is driven by fire and water, the patterns of grass, scrub and trees determined by when the previous bush fire passed through and when it last rained. The seasons are marked, half a year each of wet and dry, but fires aside, there is little change in the landscape from one half of the year to the other – the grass is simply green in the wet season and brown in the dry. In the wet season, from October to March, mornings are clear, but in the afternoon clouds build up; the atmosphere is hot and humid, and it rains almost daily. From April to September, the dry season brings blue skies with handfuls of white fluffy clouds. It is hot during the day, but the nights are cold, clear and sharp. The Emas NP grasslands, however, are not dominated by large herbivores. Aside from a few pampas deer and tapirs, the antelope of the Serengeti and the buffalo of the American prairies are replaced here by ants and termites. They are the main grazers, and it is these tiny creatures, working together as super-organisms, that drive the entire ecosystem.At Emas NP, there are 90 known species of termites, and as far as the eye can see, there are termite mounds. The mud walls of these mounds are a hard as concrete, and inside there are interconnecting passageways and galleries with walls of softer chewed wood.At the beginning of the rainy season (October and November) as darkness falls, however, you gradually become aware that the termite mounts are covered in myriad luminous specks, like the lights of a high-rise office block. Closer examination reveals that the tiny pinpoints of light are produced by the larvae of a beetle (Pyrearinus termitilluminans) with a luminous tip to its abdomen. Each termite mound has hundreds of larvae living in its outer skin. With such a large number of ant and termites colonies on the plains, it is not surprising to find one or two larger animals that exploit them as food. The biggest of these predators is the Giant Anteater, and those individuals living on the cerrado have a preference for termites rather than ants. Chapada dos Guimaraes NP is situated near the western rim of Brazil’s Planalto Central – a land of beautifully eroded and fractured red rim rock formations, drained by spectacular waterfalls and dissected by deep ravines containing fingers of Amazonian forest. The surrounding countryside is cerrado. Although sharing some cerrado avifauna with Emas NP, the Chapada region is home to many highly localized species that we won’t see at Emas NP. The most memorable aspects may be the scenic canyons with rich tropical forest and screaming macaws.A great spot deserves a great program, we are proud to offer a 7 day program in the cerrado habitat visiting Emas NP and Chapada dos Guimaraes NP, exploring these amazing National Parks. Due to far distances between any Brazilian capital, our tours start and end in Cuiab?, Mato Grosso. This allows you to enhance your Brazilian experience taking one of our combined tours in Mato Grosso.Birding open grasslands and cerrado offer possibilities to spot Red-winged Tinamou, Spotted and Lesser Nothura, Greater Rhea, Red-legged Seriema, Yellow-faced Amazon, Peach-fronted Parakeet, Fork-tailed Palm-Swift, Campo Miner, Pale-breasted & Sooty-fronted Spinetails, Rufous-winged Antshrike, Cock-tailed Tyrant, Streamer-tailed Tyrant, Gray Monjita, White-rumped Monjita, Collared Crescent-chest, Black-masked Finch, Bearded Tachuri, Sharp-tailed Grass-Tyrant, Bran-colored Flycatcher, Grass Wren, White-rumped & White-banded Tanager, Yellow-rumped Marshbird and a good array of seedeaters among them Plumbeous, Marsh, Chesnut, Capped, Tawny-bellied, Black-bellied and many more. Birding gallery forest produces Pale-crested Woodpecker, Planalto Foliage-Gleaner, White-striped Warbler, Large-billed Antwren, Plain Antvireo, Pale-bellied Tyrant-Manakin, Helmeted Manakin, Flavescent Warbler, Sepia- capped Flycatcher, Rufous Casiornis, Guira Tanager, Fawn-breasted Tanager, Thick-billed Euphonia, Fuscous Flycatcher, Pale-breasted Thrush, and many more. In August 1938 a single individual of an uncommon bird was collected and then described as a full species, its name: Cone-billed Tanager. Nothing else was known about this mythical bird, which became to be called the phantom tanager. In August 2003, during one of our birding tours, our guide Braulio A. Carlos saw a black-and-white bird moving inside vegetation, immediatly recognize it and point it out as being a male Cone-billed Tanager. Despite that the habitat was wrong, the site was thousand kilometers away from type locality, the bill was bluish white and not black as shown in the very few illustrations at that time. Unfortunately no vocalizations were heard at that time. It was Braulio’s word spreading the news mouth-to-mouth among most Brazilian birdwatchers. With the help of our friend Dante Buzetti (studying White-winged Nightjars in Emas NP), vocalizations and a territorial pair was found in the same area in October 2004. Since there, our tour participants are seeing this near-mythical bird. Join one of our tours and be part of this restrict group of people. We know the territory, the vocalization and behavior! If this is not enough, Emas NP is also the destination for one of the most rare and beautiful nightjars in the Neotropics: the enigmatic and Critically Endangered White-winged Nightjar. Until fairly recently, known only from two museum specimens dating from 1820’s. This species was reported only from three sites anywhere in South America this century! Aguara ?u in Reserva Natural del Bosque Mbaracay?, E Paraguay, where up to 20 pairs discovered in suitable habitat during September-December 1995. Male captured at Beni Biological Station in N Bolivia in September 1987 suggests possibly of a population in this area, though not recorded there again as yet. And at Emas National Park in central Brazil where we manage to see them in every single tour we go there. Birding nights deserves a good array of species such as: Striped Owl, Short-eared Owl, Barn Owl, Tropical Screech-Owl, Ferruginous Pygmy-Owl, White-winged Nightjar, Scissor-tailed Nightjar, Spot-tailed Nightjar, Least Nighthawk, Nacunda Nighthawk, Pauraque.This is not a destination just for birders, but also for mammals seekers and wildlife photographers, Emas NP boast with the Pantanal of Mato Grosso, the fame of best mammals watching spot in South America. An array of mammals such as Giant and Collared Anteaters, Maned Wolf, Pampas and Marsh Deers, Brazilian Tapir, White-lipped & Collared Peccary, Hoary Fox, Crab-eating Fox, Bush Dog, Puma Jaguarundi, Pampas Cat, Pampas Skank, Brown Capuchin Monkey, and Giant, Southern Naked-tailed, Yellow, Nine-banded and Seven-banded Armadillos were seen and photographed in our tours since our scouting trip in August 2000. We still need to see the largest predator Jaguar, but we are trying every tour.Apart from wildlife, the most interesting features of Emas NP are the termite mounds (cupinzeiros) that strech as far as the eye can see in most of the park. Hundreds of thousands of brickle-red mounds are more or less evenly distributed over the countryside, usually campos limpos. Most are as tall as a man, but some reach 10 feet. During the day they lend an unearthly aspect to the landscape, and at the beginning of the rainy season (September-November) some acquire an eerie but spectacular aspect at night when they glow greenish blue, the result of phosphorescent larvae raised by the termites. Most birding in-and-out of our vehicle, with short walks along roads, trails in gallery forest, or into grasslands; easy terrain; full mornings in the field, usually returning to lodge for lunch and midday break, followed by late afternoons back in the field; some night drives; moderate to warm temperatures and relatively dry climate.2011 Fixed Departures : We have fixed dates to departure for this program every month on the dry season (July-October) limited to just 08 participants. We need a minimum of 02 participants to run this tour in these dates:2011: July 15-21; August 12-18; September 16-22; October 23-29