ATTENTION: Due to COVID-19, international orders are being strongly delayed
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQs)
Primary Materials
All About Shipping and Packaging
ALL ABOUT SHIPPING & PACKAGING
We work with our local shipping company, Correos de Costa Rica. We love working with them because this way, we not only support the Costa Rican local economy but also because they have an environmental strategy and are working to become C-neutral, an action we wish to support. We use a shipping method called “Certified” that has a tracking number that can be followed with each country’s post mail office and usually takes around 10 days to arrive at its destination.
Our products come packed plastic-free. The jewelry comes in a jute bag with a paper card with all the details about your product (SalBa bracelets, Give it for the rays!, ETC products, and the apparel only come with the card). The card will soon have an EQR code that will help you track your impact. This means, by scanning this code, you will be able to see where your money went to and how it is being used, as well as where your product came from or who formed part of the development of it.
The jute bag (or other products) will be packed inside a paper manila bag to be shipped by Correos de Costa Rica to your defined destination.
We hope you have an exciting unpackaging eco-friendly experience!!!
Income Distribution
Income Distribution
Each of our collections behaves differently, meaning, they all help research, conservation, and community empowerment with different donation percentages, as stated below. Keep in mind that since the business itself is a research center, in the end, all income will be directly and indirectly used to support coastal and marine research and conservation, including that of salaries and business growth.
ALLURE TO CONSERVE:
25% of the income is donated to a conservation & research project chosen by the buyer. All projects are carried out by ETC Staff and collaborators.
55% is used to maintain the salaries of our workers (us scientists, designers, local assistants) and other operating expenses.
15% of the income goes to finance new research and equipment for the research center.
5% of the income goes to promote the research center and online shop to gain more income and research collaborators.
BLACK CORAL COLLECTION:
25% of the income is donated to a conservation & research project chosen by the buyer. All projects are carried out by ETC Staff and collaborators.
45% is used to maintain the salaries of our workers (us scientists, designers, local assistants) and other operating expenses.
30% of the income goes to finance new research and equipment for the research center.
THE APPAREL:
25% of the income is donated to ETC to support general program expenses such as the renovation of the research equipment, paying the boat monitoring expenses, salaries of sea turtle patrollers and ray research assistants, among others.
50% is used to maintain the salaries of our workers (us scientists, designers, local assistants) and other operating expenses.
15% of the income goes to finance new research and equipment for the research center.
10% of the income goes to support the designer’s career.
ETC PRODUCTS:
50% of the income is donated to ETC and will be used as they see fit.
45% is used to maintain the salaries of our workers (us scientists, designers, local assistants) and other operating expenses.
5% of the income goes to promote the research center to gain new research collaborators.
SalBa Bracelets:
20% of the income is donated to ETC and will be used as they see fit.
48% is used to maintain the salaries of our workers (us scientists, designers, local assistants) and other operating expenses.
15% of the income is used to pay for beach cleanups in Costa Rica.
15% goes to finance new research and equipment for the research center.
2% of the income goes to promote the research center to gain new research collaborators.
All About Shipping and Packaging
Primary Materials
All products are 100% cotton made, natural colored. Our suppliers make the shirts in Costa Rica. Being 100% cotton guarantees no microplastics will remain at sea. The ink used to print over the shirts is oil-based.
The bracelet is made with a silk cord supplied by local store Ekrea. The ray and beads are 925 Sterling Silver and the logo is made from Stainless Steel. The beads are also supplied by Ekrea and the logo is made in China by a Social Responsibility audited factory.
All our jewelry is hand-picked from several suppliers, mostly supplied by our neighbor country Panama. We guarantee all products are Sterling Silver or Stainless Steel, but we can’t say the origin of the product itself being confidential for each supplier. Most products are made in Italy, UK, and Thailand.
Apparel products are made in Costa Rica with primary material from El Salvador. The shirts are not 100% cotton made and neither are the caps. Stainless Steel Straws are made in China.
Our star product! These bracelets are made with stainless steel supplied by local store Ekrea, and residual bags picked up at the beach or in its surroundings.
The Brains Behind the Products
The Brains Behind the Products
Meet Eduardo, Ivania, and Marlon!
Eduardo Rojas
Eduardo is a 27-year-old designer from San Jose, Costa Rica. He started his brand, Asequir, to finance his art studies in the Universidad de Costa Rica. Being an artist, you will deeply fall in love with his work. He creates our shirts by serigraphy and has a lot of new ideas to develop together with us in the near future!
Ivania Mora
Ivania is a 24-year-old mom from El Jobo that loves to handcraft keychains and jewelry. She has two kids and a husband that works as a fisherman. When we were starting to develop the store, we reached out to her because we knew she liked to work handcrafting and she was happy to form part of it! At the moment, she is making the Give it for the rays! bracelets, as well as the SalBa bracelets (soon to be available), both designed by us. Hopefully, if our business grows, she will be in charge of the other people we will have to employ to develop the bracelets.
Marlon Mora
Marlon, also known as “Pirricho”, is one of ETC’s main sea turtles research assistants from El Jobo. He was an octopus fisherman, and now, he can sustain his family as a turtle protector, running night patrols six days a week to protect the turtles, and in-water monitoring once a month. Since he runs a night job, during the day, he likes to handcraft jewelry with old boat resin. We will soon release some of his designs which are absolutely gorgeous and a piece of art!
Our Research Results
Our Research Results
Álvarez-Varas, R., Véliz, D., Vélez-Rubio, G. M., Fallabrino, A., Zárate, P., Heidemeyer, M. Godoy, D.A. & H.A. Benitez. 2019. Identifying genetic lineages through shape: An example in a cosmopolitan marine turtle species using geometric morphometrics. PLoS ONE 14(10): e0223587(10)
Heidemeyer, M., Delgado-Trejo, Hart, C. E., Fonseca, L., Clyde-Brockway, C., Mora Vargas, R., Mora Vargas, M., Lara, A., R. Obando. 2018. Long-time in-water recaptures of reproductive Black turtles (Chelonia mydas) provide implications for flipper tagging methods in the Eastern Pacific. Herpetological Reviews, 49(4): 653-657.
Fonseca, L., Saltidrián Tomillo, P., Villachica, W., Quirós, W., Pesquero, M., Heidemeyer, M., Joyce, F., Plotkin, P., Seminoff, J.A., R. A. Valverde. 2018. High Nesting Abundance of East Pacific Green Turtles (Chelonia mydas) in Costa Rica. Chelonian Conservation and Biology. En prensa.
Klarian, S.A., Canales-Cerro, C., Barría, P., Zárate, P., Concha, F. Hernández, S., Heidemeyer, M., Sallaberry-Pincheira, P. & a & R. Meléndez. 2018. New insights on trophic ecology of blue (Prionace glauca) and mako sharks (Isurus oxyrinchus) from the oceanic eastern South Pacific. Marine Biology Research, 14 (2): 173-182.
Chaves, J.A., Peña, M., Valdés-Uribe, J.A., Muñoz, J.P., Vallejo, F., Heidemeyer, M. & O. Carvajal. 2017. Connectivity, population structure, and conservation of Ecuadorian green sea turtles. Endangered Species Research, 32: 251–264.
Álvarez-Varas, R., Contardo, J., Heidemeyer, M., Forero-Rozo, L., Brito, B., Cortés, V., Brain, M.J., Pereira, S., de Abreu Vianna, J. 2017. Ecology, health and genetic characterization of the southernmost green turtle (Chelonia mydas) aggregation in the Eastern Pacific: implications for local conservation strategies. Latin American Journal of Aquatic Research, 45(3): 540-554.
Heidemeyer, M., Arauz, R. & E. López. 2014. New foraging grounds for hawksbill (Eretmochelys imbricata) and green turtles (Chelonia mydas) along the northern Pacific coast of Costa Rica, Central America. Revista de Biología Tropical, 62 (Suppl. 4): 109-118.
Our Company’s Strategy
Our Company's Strategy
Our company’s long-term vision includes the development of an integrated research center with the promotion of scientific research and conservation of the local ecosystems. Being a new, recently created company, for the next four years, our main objective is to focus on the establishment of our business model in order to become a sustainable economic income for the NGO Equipo Tora Carey. To do so, we defined several goals and four key market-entry strategies (with metrics) as follows:
1. We are to define and formalize the administrative structure of our company, meaning, we will define all roles and responsibilities, the economic structure, publicity strategy, among others.
2. We will create an online shop and an on-site shop with products related to coastal and marine ecosystems and activities, in which we will employ community artisans to design and develop some of the products, and donate part of the income to the NGO, as well as save and invest part of it on the development of new research.
3. We will formally establish the scientific tourism program, aligning the activities carried out by the NGO with those offered by our company, and define all the programs that can be offered for groups.
4. We will begin to establish a consultancy offer to expand our knowledge to those who are interested in protecting and conserving the environment and promoting community empowerment.
Hopefully, and with your help, we will reach our goals and can carry on working for the development of the research center facilities to strengthen the marine conservation efforts and circular economy principles on Punta Descartes and later on, on similar projects across the globe.
Our Research Programs
Our Research Programs
Sea Turtle Monitoring
This is our original program and our biggest! Three years ago, we funded the NGO Equipo Tora Carey to begin a sea turtle conservation project with the community. It has grown to a point where we can employ 7 local persons to work as night patrollers (research assistants) and a long list of other people interested in joining the team! Our main problem, we don’t have enough income to employ more people, in fact, we struggle monthly to sustain the ones we have. That being said, we have three turtle species nesting in the area, and records of five species on our waters (Black turtle, Hawksbill turtle, Olive Ridley, Green Indo-Pacific Turtle, and the Leatherback turtle). Our beaches are nesting grounds for the hawksbill turtle, which is critically endangered, with a population of less than 200 reproductive females in the entire Eastern Pacific; and one of the main nesting areas for the black turtle (Chelonia mydas agassizi) in this same ocean basin. We gather data daily on all the turtles nesting on some of our beaches (Punta Descartes has 15 nesting beaches, we have the resources to monitor 5), including species, size, temperature, amount of eggs, location, we take a tissue or blood sample for genetic analysis and we put unique identification metal tags to trace them and keep a record of all the times they visit our beaches. Besides this, we re-locate every nest to protect them from egg-poachers. Besides the beach monitoring, we also have in-water monitoring on foraging ground, where we visit once a month and gather the same data on juvenile turtles that live in our waters. All this information allows us to predict behavior patterns, to understand our ecosystem’s health and menaces, to see if our conservation efforts actually work, to have information to sustain criteria against unsustainable development, to educate the people on the area, among other benefits we constantly receive.
Ray Monitoring
Our most recent research program and one of the most innovative ones! Punta Descartes has an enormous diversity of ray species, with more than 24 species identified so far. The most abundant species belong to the Urotrygonidae family, which are commonly known as round stingrays, but we also have electric rays, torpedo rays, butterfly rays, Mobula rays, among others. We have a team of two local research assistants gathering data three days a week regarding species, weight, size, gender, pregnancy, sight diseases, location and we also take tissue samples for genetic analysis and put unique identification tags on them to identify re-captures and estimate population sizes and behavior trends. What is really cool about this program is the fact that rays haven’t been extensively studied so we continuously discover new information about them, not to mention the fact that they are indicators of healthy beaches, so it is very important to monitor their presence!
Yellow-naped Parrot Monitoring
We also have a smaller program regarding another species in danger of extinction that is present in the area, the yellow-naped parrot. We identified a population of these organisms that resides in the area, so we ask ETC’s volunteers to count parrots and their flight tendencies. Also, ETC usually has long-term volunteers that get a project assigned, so we also have sporadical projects that help us study them further.
Other programs in Punta Descartes
Besides our research programs, we have an environmental education program with the school from the community, and a “club” called Environmental Protectors for kids that want to get more involved in conservation. With them, we go to a beach every Saturday to clean, and we are creating a beach-debris database that could eventually evolve into another program. Besides this, some volunteers also work on short-term research projects with us.
Our Accomplishments
Our Accomplishments
CONTACT US
El Jobo, Guanacaste, Costa Rica
E-mail: info@bahiasalinasresearchcenter.com
Tel: +506 8310 9813
Tel: +61 416 699 708