Birding Mato Grosso specializes in providing customized birding and natural history tours to Brazil, with a special emphasis on the Amazon rainforest and the cerrado savannas of the Brazilian Interior. We are committed to delivering quality tours based on the preferences of our clients.


Time to be moving along, is it? Try these recommended sites...

Wiki Aves - The Encyclopedia of Brazilian Birds - Wiki Aves is a tremendous resource for Brazilian birds, hosting nearly 90000 photographs and 7000 sounds covering more than 1500 species of birds. A top-notch site and showcase for some of Brazil's many talented wildlife photographers. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.

Xeno Canto :: bird sounds from around the world - another superlative resource made great by its many collaborators from around the world. The pre-eminent source for bird songs from more than 6500 species worldwide! HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

Fatbirder - linking birders worldwide - an impressive web resource for birders, with good information from around the world. A good place to start when beginning to plan any foreign trip.

Denis Lepage's Bird Links to the World - more than 30000 links to bird-related websites, including a powerful trip report search engine.

Travelling Birder - a site hosting and linking to more than 9000 trip reports from around the world

the Internet Bird Collection - online collection of bird media boasting more than 40000 videos, nearly 20000 photos and 4000+ sounds. Impressive for the quality of some of the contributions, particularly the videos. Worth a look.

BirdLife International- leading international bird conservation organization. Visit their site, read about threatened species and conservation programs, but most importantly -- donate now!

Neotropical Bird Club - joining NBC had always been a bargain for the excellent regional journal Cotinga, but the club's excellent new magazine Neotropical Birding is aimed at interested Neotropical birders and comes HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.

Sociedade Brasileira de Ornitologia - for birders interested in Brazil and its birds, you would do well to join the Brazilian Ornithological Society. Its journal, the Revista Brasileira de Ornitologia (formerly Ararajuba) is a high quality publication with plenty of interesting distributional and ecological data on Brazilian birds.