Biogeography and conservation of the herpetofauna of the Upland Pine-Oak Forests of Honduras
The upland pine-oak forest herpetofauna constitutes the smallest segment distributed in the major habitat types in Honduras, due to its occurrence at moderate elevations in relatively inhospitable environments, compared to more mesic habitats in the country. This segment, however, is subject to cons...
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description | The upland pine-oak forest herpetofauna constitutes the smallest segment distributed in the major habitat types in Honduras, due to its occurrence at moderate elevations in relatively inhospitable environments, compared to more mesic habitats in the country. This segment, however, is subject to considerable environmental threat as a consequence of annual burning and logging. Of the 356 herpetofaunal species known from Honduras, 105 are known from these habitats. These forests occur throughout much of the mountainous interior of Honduras. They are subject to the Intermediate Dry climate. Four salamanders, 27 anurans, four turtles, 29 lizards, and 41 snakes comprise the herpetofauna. These species are partitioned into restricted, widespread, and peripheral distributional categories. They can be allocated to eleven broad distributional categories, with most belonging to the category containing species whose ranges extend from somewhere in Mexico north of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec to somewhere in South America. The large majority are terrestrial forest inhabitants, arboreal forest inhabitants, terrestrial pondside species, or terrestrial forest pondside species. Most species are judged common, with the next largest group considered to be of infrequent occurrence, and the smallest group of rare occurrence. Upland pine-oak forest species are distributed among four ecophysiographic areas, with the greatest number of species being found in the Southeastern Uplands. Construction of a CBR diagram illustrates that the herpetofaunas of the Northwestern and Northeastern Uplands, the Northeastern Uplands and Southeastern Uplands, and the Southeastern Uplands and Southwestern Uplands are about equally related to one another. The greatest significance of the upland pine-oak forest herpetofauna lies in the relatively high percentage of members presently possessing stable populations, indicating their apparent greater ability to resist anthropogenic habitat disturbance. Few species currently have populations in decline, but about a third lack sufficient data to characterize their population status, indicating the need for considerable additional fieldwork before their conservation issues can be properly addressed.
La herpetofauna de los bosques de pino-roble del altiplano constituye el segmento más pequeño distribuido en los habitats principales de Honduras, debido a su ocurrencia a elevaciones moderadas en ambientes relativamente inhóspitos, especialmente comparados a los |
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La herpetofauna de los bosques de pino-roble del altiplano constituye el segmento más pequeño distribuido en los habitats principales de Honduras, debido a su ocurrencia a elevaciones moderadas en ambientes relativamente inhóspitos, especialmente comparados a los ambientes más húmedos de país. Este segmento, sin embargo, está sujeto a una amenaza ambiental considerable, debido a las quemas anuales y a la tala de árboles. De las 356 especies de herpetofauna conocidas en Honduras, 105 son de estos habitats. Esta clase de bosques es prevalente en gran parte del interior montañoso de Honduras. Están sujetos al clima Seco Intermedio. La herpetofauna consiste de 4 salamandras, 27 anuros, cuatro tortugas, 29 lagartijas, y 41 serpientes. Estas especies se clasifican en categorías de distribución restrictas, extensas, y periféricas. Es posible colocar estas especies en once categorías de distribución, con la mayoría encontrándose en la categoría que contiene las especies cuyos rangos se extienden desde alguna parte de México al norte del Istmo de Tehuantepec hasta alguna parte de Suramérica. La gran mayoría son habitantes terrestres del bosque, habitantes arbóreos del bosque, especies terrestres de la orilla de estanques de agua, o especies terrestres del bosque encontradas a la orilla de estanques de agua. La mayoría de las especies se consideran comunes, con el próximo grupo más grande considerado como de ocurrencia poco frecuente, y el grupo más pequeño de rara ocurrencia. Las especies de bosques de pino y roble del altiplano están distribuidas en cuatro áreas ecofisiográficas, con el mayor número de especies encontradas en los altiplanos del sureste. La creación de un diagrama de Coeficientes de Semejanza Biogeográfica (CBR por sus siglas en inglés) ilustra que la herpetofauna de los altiplanos del noroeste y del nordeste, la de los altiplanos del nordeste y del sureste, y la de los altiplanos del sureste y del suroeste, están relacionadas entre sí en forma equitativa. Lo más importante sobre la herpetofauna del bosque de pino-roble del altiplano yace en su porcentaje relativamente alto de los miembros que actualmente poseen poblaciones estables, indicando, aparentemente, una mayor capacidad para resistir disturbios antropogénicos del ambiente. Actualmente hay pocas especies que tienen poblaciones en declive, pero alrededor de un tercio carecen de suficiente información para caracterizar su estado de población, indicando la necesidad del trabajo del campo adicional significativo antes de poder tratar los asuntos de su conservación correctamente.</description><identifier>ISSN: 1676-0603</identifier><identifier>ISSN: 1676-0611</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1676-0603</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1676-0611</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1590/S1676-06032007000100018</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Instituto Virtual da Biodiversidade | BIOTA - FAPESP</publisher><subject>Anura ; BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION ; Caudata ; Lacertilia</subject><ispartof>Biota Neotropica, 2007, Vol.7 (1), p.131-142</ispartof><rights>This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.</rights><lds50>peer_reviewed</lds50><oa>free_for_read</oa><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed><citedby>FETCH-LOGICAL-c2218-752a8c72c1ea66fb2282a161a3af7bc15d8785d63ec7f99bc300d7b652b75c43</citedby><cites>FETCH-LOGICAL-c2218-752a8c72c1ea66fb2282a161a3af7bc15d8785d63ec7f99bc300d7b652b75c43</cites></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Tsyndetics_thumb_exl</thumbnail><link.rule.ids>230,314,776,780,860,881,27901,27902</link.rule.ids></links><search><creatorcontrib>Wilson, Larry David</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Townsend, Josiah Harold</creatorcontrib><title>Biogeography and conservation of the herpetofauna of the Upland Pine-Oak Forests of Honduras</title><title>Biota Neotropica</title><addtitle>Biota Neotrop</addtitle><description>The upland pine-oak forest herpetofauna constitutes the smallest segment distributed in the major habitat types in Honduras, due to its occurrence at moderate elevations in relatively inhospitable environments, compared to more mesic habitats in the country. This segment, however, is subject to considerable environmental threat as a consequence of annual burning and logging. Of the 356 herpetofaunal species known from Honduras, 105 are known from these habitats. These forests occur throughout much of the mountainous interior of Honduras. They are subject to the Intermediate Dry climate. Four salamanders, 27 anurans, four turtles, 29 lizards, and 41 snakes comprise the herpetofauna. These species are partitioned into restricted, widespread, and peripheral distributional categories. They can be allocated to eleven broad distributional categories, with most belonging to the category containing species whose ranges extend from somewhere in Mexico north of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec to somewhere in South America. The large majority are terrestrial forest inhabitants, arboreal forest inhabitants, terrestrial pondside species, or terrestrial forest pondside species. Most species are judged common, with the next largest group considered to be of infrequent occurrence, and the smallest group of rare occurrence. Upland pine-oak forest species are distributed among four ecophysiographic areas, with the greatest number of species being found in the Southeastern Uplands. Construction of a CBR diagram illustrates that the herpetofaunas of the Northwestern and Northeastern Uplands, the Northeastern Uplands and Southeastern Uplands, and the Southeastern Uplands and Southwestern Uplands are about equally related to one another. The greatest significance of the upland pine-oak forest herpetofauna lies in the relatively high percentage of members presently possessing stable populations, indicating their apparent greater ability to resist anthropogenic habitat disturbance. Few species currently have populations in decline, but about a third lack sufficient data to characterize their population status, indicating the need for considerable additional fieldwork before their conservation issues can be properly addressed.
La herpetofauna de los bosques de pino-roble del altiplano constituye el segmento más pequeño distribuido en los habitats principales de Honduras, debido a su ocurrencia a elevaciones moderadas en ambientes relativamente inhóspitos, especialmente comparados a los ambientes más húmedos de país. Este segmento, sin embargo, está sujeto a una amenaza ambiental considerable, debido a las quemas anuales y a la tala de árboles. De las 356 especies de herpetofauna conocidas en Honduras, 105 son de estos habitats. Esta clase de bosques es prevalente en gran parte del interior montañoso de Honduras. Están sujetos al clima Seco Intermedio. La herpetofauna consiste de 4 salamandras, 27 anuros, cuatro tortugas, 29 lagartijas, y 41 serpientes. Estas especies se clasifican en categorías de distribución restrictas, extensas, y periféricas. Es posible colocar estas especies en once categorías de distribución, con la mayoría encontrándose en la categoría que contiene las especies cuyos rangos se extienden desde alguna parte de México al norte del Istmo de Tehuantepec hasta alguna parte de Suramérica. La gran mayoría son habitantes terrestres del bosque, habitantes arbóreos del bosque, especies terrestres de la orilla de estanques de agua, o especies terrestres del bosque encontradas a la orilla de estanques de agua. La mayoría de las especies se consideran comunes, con el próximo grupo más grande considerado como de ocurrencia poco frecuente, y el grupo más pequeño de rara ocurrencia. Las especies de bosques de pino y roble del altiplano están distribuidas en cuatro áreas ecofisiográficas, con el mayor número de especies encontradas en los altiplanos del sureste. La creación de un diagrama de Coeficientes de Semejanza Biogeográfica (CBR por sus siglas en inglés) ilustra que la herpetofauna de los altiplanos del noroeste y del nordeste, la de los altiplanos del nordeste y del sureste, y la de los altiplanos del sureste y del suroeste, están relacionadas entre sí en forma equitativa. Lo más importante sobre la herpetofauna del bosque de pino-roble del altiplano yace en su porcentaje relativamente alto de los miembros que actualmente poseen poblaciones estables, indicando, aparentemente, una mayor capacidad para resistir disturbios antropogénicos del ambiente. Actualmente hay pocas especies que tienen poblaciones en declive, pero alrededor de un tercio carecen de suficiente información para caracterizar su estado de población, indicando la necesidad del trabajo del campo adicional significativo antes de poder tratar los asuntos de su conservación correctamente.</description><subject>Anura</subject><subject>BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION</subject><subject>Caudata</subject><subject>Lacertilia</subject><issn>1676-0603</issn><issn>1676-0611</issn><issn>1676-0603</issn><issn>1676-0611</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2007</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><recordid>eNp1UFFLwzAQDqLgnP4G--Rb5yVZk_RRh3PCYILzTQhpmmydXVOTVti_t7Uqgvhw3HH3fd_dfQhdYpjgJIXrJ8w4i4EBJQAcAHAf4giNfgbHv-pTdBbCDoCkUy5G6OW2cBvjNl7V20OkqjzSrgrGv6umcFXkbNRsTbQ1vjaNs6qt1HfvuS57-GNRmXilXqO58yY0oR8vXJW3XoVzdGJVGczFVx6j9fxuPVvEy9X9w-xmGWtCsIh5QpTQnGhsFGM2I0QQhRlWVFmeaZzkgoskZ9RobtM00xQg5xlLSMYTPaVjNBlkgy5M6eTOtb7q9slPa-QfazrC1UCovXtru6vlvgjalN1DxrVBEqCUEeiV-QDU3oXgjZW1L_bKHyQG2bv_74oPHDR1MQ</recordid><startdate>2007</startdate><enddate>2007</enddate><creator>Wilson, Larry David</creator><creator>Townsend, Josiah Harold</creator><general>Instituto Virtual da Biodiversidade | BIOTA - FAPESP</general><scope>AAYXX</scope><scope>CITATION</scope><scope>7SN</scope><scope>7ST</scope><scope>7U6</scope><scope>C1K</scope><scope>GPN</scope></search><sort><creationdate>2007</creationdate><title>Biogeography and conservation of the herpetofauna of the Upland Pine-Oak Forests of Honduras</title><author>Wilson, Larry David ; Townsend, Josiah Harold</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c2218-752a8c72c1ea66fb2282a161a3af7bc15d8785d63ec7f99bc300d7b652b75c43</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>articles</rsrctype><prefilter>articles</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2007</creationdate><topic>Anura</topic><topic>BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION</topic><topic>Caudata</topic><topic>Lacertilia</topic><toplevel>peer_reviewed</toplevel><toplevel>online_resources</toplevel><creatorcontrib>Wilson, Larry David</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Townsend, Josiah Harold</creatorcontrib><collection>CrossRef</collection><collection>Ecology Abstracts</collection><collection>Environment Abstracts</collection><collection>Sustainability Science Abstracts</collection><collection>Environmental Sciences and Pollution Management</collection><collection>SciELO</collection><jtitle>Biota Neotropica</jtitle></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Wilson, Larry David</au><au>Townsend, Josiah Harold</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Biogeography and conservation of the herpetofauna of the Upland Pine-Oak Forests of Honduras</atitle><jtitle>Biota Neotropica</jtitle><addtitle>Biota Neotrop</addtitle><date>2007</date><risdate>2007</risdate><volume>7</volume><issue>1</issue><spage>131</spage><epage>142</epage><pages>131-142</pages><issn>1676-0603</issn><issn>1676-0611</issn><eissn>1676-0603</eissn><eissn>1676-0611</eissn><abstract>The upland pine-oak forest herpetofauna constitutes the smallest segment distributed in the major habitat types in Honduras, due to its occurrence at moderate elevations in relatively inhospitable environments, compared to more mesic habitats in the country. This segment, however, is subject to considerable environmental threat as a consequence of annual burning and logging. Of the 356 herpetofaunal species known from Honduras, 105 are known from these habitats. These forests occur throughout much of the mountainous interior of Honduras. They are subject to the Intermediate Dry climate. Four salamanders, 27 anurans, four turtles, 29 lizards, and 41 snakes comprise the herpetofauna. These species are partitioned into restricted, widespread, and peripheral distributional categories. They can be allocated to eleven broad distributional categories, with most belonging to the category containing species whose ranges extend from somewhere in Mexico north of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec to somewhere in South America. The large majority are terrestrial forest inhabitants, arboreal forest inhabitants, terrestrial pondside species, or terrestrial forest pondside species. Most species are judged common, with the next largest group considered to be of infrequent occurrence, and the smallest group of rare occurrence. Upland pine-oak forest species are distributed among four ecophysiographic areas, with the greatest number of species being found in the Southeastern Uplands. Construction of a CBR diagram illustrates that the herpetofaunas of the Northwestern and Northeastern Uplands, the Northeastern Uplands and Southeastern Uplands, and the Southeastern Uplands and Southwestern Uplands are about equally related to one another. The greatest significance of the upland pine-oak forest herpetofauna lies in the relatively high percentage of members presently possessing stable populations, indicating their apparent greater ability to resist anthropogenic habitat disturbance. Few species currently have populations in decline, but about a third lack sufficient data to characterize their population status, indicating the need for considerable additional fieldwork before their conservation issues can be properly addressed.
La herpetofauna de los bosques de pino-roble del altiplano constituye el segmento más pequeño distribuido en los habitats principales de Honduras, debido a su ocurrencia a elevaciones moderadas en ambientes relativamente inhóspitos, especialmente comparados a los ambientes más húmedos de país. Este segmento, sin embargo, está sujeto a una amenaza ambiental considerable, debido a las quemas anuales y a la tala de árboles. De las 356 especies de herpetofauna conocidas en Honduras, 105 son de estos habitats. Esta clase de bosques es prevalente en gran parte del interior montañoso de Honduras. Están sujetos al clima Seco Intermedio. La herpetofauna consiste de 4 salamandras, 27 anuros, cuatro tortugas, 29 lagartijas, y 41 serpientes. Estas especies se clasifican en categorías de distribución restrictas, extensas, y periféricas. Es posible colocar estas especies en once categorías de distribución, con la mayoría encontrándose en la categoría que contiene las especies cuyos rangos se extienden desde alguna parte de México al norte del Istmo de Tehuantepec hasta alguna parte de Suramérica. La gran mayoría son habitantes terrestres del bosque, habitantes arbóreos del bosque, especies terrestres de la orilla de estanques de agua, o especies terrestres del bosque encontradas a la orilla de estanques de agua. La mayoría de las especies se consideran comunes, con el próximo grupo más grande considerado como de ocurrencia poco frecuente, y el grupo más pequeño de rara ocurrencia. Las especies de bosques de pino y roble del altiplano están distribuidas en cuatro áreas ecofisiográficas, con el mayor número de especies encontradas en los altiplanos del sureste. La creación de un diagrama de Coeficientes de Semejanza Biogeográfica (CBR por sus siglas en inglés) ilustra que la herpetofauna de los altiplanos del noroeste y del nordeste, la de los altiplanos del nordeste y del sureste, y la de los altiplanos del sureste y del suroeste, están relacionadas entre sí en forma equitativa. Lo más importante sobre la herpetofauna del bosque de pino-roble del altiplano yace en su porcentaje relativamente alto de los miembros que actualmente poseen poblaciones estables, indicando, aparentemente, una mayor capacidad para resistir disturbios antropogénicos del ambiente. Actualmente hay pocas especies que tienen poblaciones en declive, pero alrededor de un tercio carecen de suficiente información para caracterizar su estado de población, indicando la necesidad del trabajo del campo adicional significativo antes de poder tratar los asuntos de su conservación correctamente.</abstract><pub>Instituto Virtual da Biodiversidade | BIOTA - FAPESP</pub><doi>10.1590/S1676-06032007000100018</doi><tpages>12</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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title | Biogeography and conservation of the herpetofauna of the Upland Pine-Oak Forests of Honduras |
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