TY - JOUR
T1 - Birds, Nangaritza River Valley, Zamora Chinchipe Province, Southeast Ecuador
T2 - Update and revision
AU - Freile, Juan F.
AU - Krabbe, Niels
AU - Piedrahita, Paolo
AU - Buitrón-Jurado, Galo
AU - Rodríguez-Saltos, Carlos A.
AU - Ahlman, Fredrik
AU - Brinkhuizen, Dušan M.
AU - Bonaccorso, Elisa
PY - 2014/2
Y1 - 2014/2
N2 - The remote Nangaritza Valley of southeast Ecuador has high bird diversity, combining Amazonian birds with species typical of eastern Andean slopes and foothills, a small number of taxa endemic to the Cordillera del Cóndor region of southern Ecuador and northern Peru, as well as a few forms from the dry Marañón valley region. Here, we update and review avifaunal records from the Nangaritza Valley, comparing them with the bird fauna of the Cordillera del Kutukú and making a brief assessment of bird conservation in the area. To date, 535 species are known to occur in the Nangaritza Valley, including eight species endemic or near endemic to the outer ridges and adjacent Andean slopes in southeast Ecuador and northeast Peru. Conservation perspectives in the area are not favorable owing to increasing deforestation, expansion of the agricultural frontier and mining concessions, which threaten eight regional endemic species.
AB - The remote Nangaritza Valley of southeast Ecuador has high bird diversity, combining Amazonian birds with species typical of eastern Andean slopes and foothills, a small number of taxa endemic to the Cordillera del Cóndor region of southern Ecuador and northern Peru, as well as a few forms from the dry Marañón valley region. Here, we update and review avifaunal records from the Nangaritza Valley, comparing them with the bird fauna of the Cordillera del Kutukú and making a brief assessment of bird conservation in the area. To date, 535 species are known to occur in the Nangaritza Valley, including eight species endemic or near endemic to the outer ridges and adjacent Andean slopes in southeast Ecuador and northeast Peru. Conservation perspectives in the area are not favorable owing to increasing deforestation, expansion of the agricultural frontier and mining concessions, which threaten eight regional endemic species.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84897656806&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.15560/10.1.54
DO - 10.15560/10.1.54
M3 - Artículo
AN - SCOPUS:84897656806
SN - 1809-127X
VL - 10
SP - 54
EP - 71
JO - Check List
JF - Check List
IS - 1
ER -