PetĂ©nâVeracruz moist forests | |
---|---|
Ecology | |
Realm | Neotropical |
Biome | tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests |
Borders | List
|
Bird species | 468 [1] |
Mammal species | 191 [1] |
Geography | |
Area | 149,100 km2 (57,600 sq mi) |
Countries | |
Conservation | |
Conservation status | critical/endangered [2] |
Habitat loss | 23.595% [1] |
Protected | 24.25% [1] |
The PetĂ©nâVeracruz moist forests is an ecoregion of the tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forest biome found in Belize, Guatemala, and Mexico.
The PetĂ©nâVeracruz moist forests cover an area of 149,100 square kilometers (57,600 sq mi), extending from central Veracruz state across portions of the Mexican states of Oaxaca, Tabasco, Chiapas, and Campeche, as well as northern Guatemala and most of Belize. It includes the Lacandon Forest of Chiapas and the PetĂ©n Basin of Guatemala. The PetĂ©nâVeracruz moist forests mostly occupy a coastal lowland with meandering rivers, including the Blanco, Papaloapan, Coatzacoalcos, TonalĂĄ, Grijalva, Usumacinta, and Hondo.
The ecoregion is bounded on the south by a series of mountain ranges and highlands, including the Sierra Madre de Oaxaca, Sierra Madre de Chiapas, Chiapas Plateau, and Guatemalan Highlands, where the lowland PetĂ©nâVeracruz forests yield to montane moist forests and pineâoak forests. In central Veracruz, the Veracruz dry forests separate the PetĂ©nâVeracruz moist forests from the Veracruz moist forests further north. The western portion of the ecoregion mostly extends to the Gulf of Mexico, although the montane forests of the Sierra de los Tuxtlas and the flooded forests and wetlands of the Pantanos de Centla constitute distinct ecoregions.
The eastern portion of the ecoregion is bounded on the north by the YucatĂĄn moist forests, which extend east and west across the YucatĂĄn Peninsula. The PetĂ©nâVeracruz moist forests extend east to the Caribbean Sea in Belize, surrounding enclaves of Belizian pine forests in the Maya Mountains and near the coast. The Belizean Coast mangroves run along the Caribbean coast.
The northern PetĂ©nâVeracruz moist forests were home to the Olmec culture, which built cities between 1200 and 400 BCE. The Classic Maya civilisation (250-900 CE) was centered in the eastern and southern portions of the ecoregion, known as the Selva Maya, from Tabasco and northern Chiapas across northern Guatemala to Belize.
Today, modern Mayan people inhabit the eastern portion of the ecoregion, while MixeâZoque and Nahuatl peoples inhabit the western portion.
22% of the ecoregion is in protected areas. [3] These include the Maya Biosphere Reserve in Guatemala, and the Montes Azules Biosphere Reserve in Mexico.
Other protected areas include Tikal, El Rosario, Guanacaste, Monkey Bay, Sarstoon-Temash, Sierra del LacandĂłn, Cañón del Sumidero, Cañón del RĂo Blanco, and Palenque national parks, Calakmul, NahĂĄâMetzabok, and Selva El Ocote biosphere reserves, Bladen Nature Reserve, and Cañón del Usumacinta, Cascada de Agua Azul, and Chan-Kin flora and fauna protection areas. [3]
PetĂ©nâVeracruz moist forests | |
---|---|
Ecology | |
Realm | Neotropical |
Biome | tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests |
Borders | List
|
Bird species | 468 [1] |
Mammal species | 191 [1] |
Geography | |
Area | 149,100 km2 (57,600 sq mi) |
Countries | |
Conservation | |
Conservation status | critical/endangered [2] |
Habitat loss | 23.595% [1] |
Protected | 24.25% [1] |
The PetĂ©nâVeracruz moist forests is an ecoregion of the tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forest biome found in Belize, Guatemala, and Mexico.
The PetĂ©nâVeracruz moist forests cover an area of 149,100 square kilometers (57,600 sq mi), extending from central Veracruz state across portions of the Mexican states of Oaxaca, Tabasco, Chiapas, and Campeche, as well as northern Guatemala and most of Belize. It includes the Lacandon Forest of Chiapas and the PetĂ©n Basin of Guatemala. The PetĂ©nâVeracruz moist forests mostly occupy a coastal lowland with meandering rivers, including the Blanco, Papaloapan, Coatzacoalcos, TonalĂĄ, Grijalva, Usumacinta, and Hondo.
The ecoregion is bounded on the south by a series of mountain ranges and highlands, including the Sierra Madre de Oaxaca, Sierra Madre de Chiapas, Chiapas Plateau, and Guatemalan Highlands, where the lowland PetĂ©nâVeracruz forests yield to montane moist forests and pineâoak forests. In central Veracruz, the Veracruz dry forests separate the PetĂ©nâVeracruz moist forests from the Veracruz moist forests further north. The western portion of the ecoregion mostly extends to the Gulf of Mexico, although the montane forests of the Sierra de los Tuxtlas and the flooded forests and wetlands of the Pantanos de Centla constitute distinct ecoregions.
The eastern portion of the ecoregion is bounded on the north by the YucatĂĄn moist forests, which extend east and west across the YucatĂĄn Peninsula. The PetĂ©nâVeracruz moist forests extend east to the Caribbean Sea in Belize, surrounding enclaves of Belizian pine forests in the Maya Mountains and near the coast. The Belizean Coast mangroves run along the Caribbean coast.
The northern PetĂ©nâVeracruz moist forests were home to the Olmec culture, which built cities between 1200 and 400 BCE. The Classic Maya civilisation (250-900 CE) was centered in the eastern and southern portions of the ecoregion, known as the Selva Maya, from Tabasco and northern Chiapas across northern Guatemala to Belize.
Today, modern Mayan people inhabit the eastern portion of the ecoregion, while MixeâZoque and Nahuatl peoples inhabit the western portion.
22% of the ecoregion is in protected areas. [3] These include the Maya Biosphere Reserve in Guatemala, and the Montes Azules Biosphere Reserve in Mexico.
Other protected areas include Tikal, El Rosario, Guanacaste, Monkey Bay, Sarstoon-Temash, Sierra del LacandĂłn, Cañón del Sumidero, Cañón del RĂo Blanco, and Palenque national parks, Calakmul, NahĂĄâMetzabok, and Selva El Ocote biosphere reserves, Bladen Nature Reserve, and Cañón del Usumacinta, Cascada de Agua Azul, and Chan-Kin flora and fauna protection areas. [3]