Angiosperms, Los Tuxtlas Biosphere Reserve, Veracruz, Mexico
Author(s) -
Víctor ArroyoRodríguez,
Jacob C. Dunn,
Julieta BenítezMalvido,
Salvador Mandujano
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
check list
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.276
H-Index - 22
ISSN - 1809-127X
DOI - 10.15560/5.4.787
Subject(s) - geography , endangered species , rainforest , liana , floristics , rubiaceae , flora (microbiology) , deforestation (computer science) , diameter at breast height , forestry , fabaceae , cloud forest , tropical rainforest , ecology , biodiversity , biosphere , agroforestry , biology , species richness , habitat , montane ecology , genetics , bacteria , computer science , programming language
The Los Tuxtlas Reserve has been heavily deforested and fragmented since the 1970’s. Although the flora of Los Tuxtlas has been described previously, most floristic lists come from the large forest reserve of the Los Tuxtlas field station. Here we present a check list of Angiosperms recorded in 45 rainforest fragments (< 1 to 266 ha) located in three landscapes with different levels of deforestation. We sampled all trees, shrubs, lianas, palms and herbs with diameter at breast height (dbh) Ā 2.5 cm within ten 50 m x 2 m plots per fragment. We recorded 9,435 plants belonging to 73 families and 372 species. Fabaceae, Rubiaceae, and Moraceae were best represented. Eight species are classified as Endangered by the Mexican government, and five are human-introduced species. We conclude that the conservation and restoration of all the remaining rainforest fragments are necessary to effectively preserve the plant diversity of this region.
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