Location: Departments of Cusco and  Madre de Dios, province of Paucartambo, districts of Paucartambo and Piscota. 
Area: 1 717 295.22 hectares
Altitude: 250-4050 masl.
Temperature:  10°C to 35°C
Rainy Season: January to March 
Season: April - December. 
Access: 
From Cusco: 
By road and river: Land  travel from Cusco to Shintuya and then by boat from Atalaya to Boca Manu  (7 hours), Itahuania (6 hours) to conclude the 287 km / 178 miles trip.  
By air and river boat: by light plane from Cusco to Boca Manu (30 minutes) and then by motor boat to the camp site (6 hours).
Activities: Nature observation, Birdwatching, Trekking, camping, investigation trips, photo and filmmaking.
Manú National Park is a 
 biosphere reserve located in Madre de Dios and Paucartambo, 
Cusco.  Before becoming an area protected by the Peruvian government, the Manú  National Park was conserved thanks to its inaccessibility. The park  remains fairly inaccessible by road to this day. In 1977, UNESCO recognised it as a 
Biosphere Reserve and in 1987, it was pronounced a World Heritage Site.  It is the largest National Park in Peru, covering an area of  15,328 km². The Biosphere Reserve includes an additional 2,570 km², and a  further 914 km² are included in a "Cultural Zone" (which also is  afforded a level of protection), bringing the total area up to 18,811  km².
The park protects several 
 ecological zones ranging from as low as 150 meters above sea level in parts of the 
Amazon Basin to Puna grassland at altitudes of 4200 meters. Because of this topographical range, it has one of highest levels of biodiversity  of any park in the world. Overall, more than 15,000 species of plants  are found in Manú, and up to 250 varieties of trees have been found in a  single hectare. The reserve is a destination for birdwatchers from all  over the world, as it is home to over 1000 species of birds, more than  the number of bird species found in the United States and Canada  combined. It is also acclaimed as having one of the highest abundances  of land vertebrates ever found in Latin American tropical forests
Park administration
As with all national parks in Peru, Manú is operated by INRENA, the National Natural Resources Institute (Instituto Nacional de Recursos Naturales).
 Humans in the park
Permanent human habitation is restricted to several small communities of the Matsigenga Amazonian tribal group, largely along the Manú river or one of its main tributaries. Several protected areas adjoining the park allow mixed use including tourism, hunting, logging,  and harvesting of other resources. These areas, notably downstream on  the Manú River, are included in the broader Manú biosphere reserve, but  are not part of the national park.
Visitors within the national park include medical and educational  professionals upon invitation by the indigenous community, and  researchers with permits from INRENA. The Cocha Cashu Biological Station, under the guidance of renowned Duke University ecologist John Terborgh  is the largest and most established research site in the park, and is  among the most well-studied sites for biological and ecological research  in the tropics.
The Manu Learning Centre (MLC) lies within the Cultural Zone of the Manu Biosphere Reserve along the South-Eastern border with the Alto Madre de Dios River. The MLC facilitates research work within the disturbed 'buffer' zone of the park where human impact is at its greatest.
 Flora
 Flora
More than 20,000 species. 40% of the park is Amazonian lowland tropical rainforest, including varzea, oxbow lakes, 
Iriartea palm swamps, and upland forest types.
 
Fauna
 
- Mammals : 159 species
- Reptiles  : 99 species
- Amphibians  : 140 species
- Birds  : 1000 species
- Fish  : 210 species
- Insects (numerous undescribed species not included) - Butterflies : 1307 species
- Ants  : 300 species
- Dragonflies  : 136 species
- Beetles  : 650 species
 
See also
 References