Spread across a patch of dry forest on the tiny island of Naos, a former U.S. defense site during the two world wars, Punta Culebra is a kid-friendly attraction run by the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. It’s a well-designed but small exhibition, with a short path that offers sweeping views and mounted telescopes that you can use to scan the horizon and get up-close views of ships waiting to transit the canal.
The center will take a backseat to the Biodiversity Museum (once it opens). Really, if you’re an adult without kids and you’re having lunch at Mi Ranchito or riding a bike around, it makes sense to swing through here quickly — otherwise don’t go out of your way to visit the center when there are so many other attractions in and around Panama City.
Within the center’s grounds are a “touching pool” that allows kids to handle and closely examine aquatic life such as sea cucumbers, sea urchins, and starfish; an aquarium with tropical fish and a comparison between coral reefs of the Pacific and Atlantic; and an information center with videos. An interpretive trail winds through dry forest, which long ago was common up and down the Central American Pacific Coast; if you’re lucky, you will catch sight of a sloth or an iguana. Call ahead for a guided tour. You’ll see the Marine Exhibitions Center sign just before Mi Ranchito.