The Catatumbo moist forests (NT0108) is an ecoregion in Venezuela and Colombia to the west and east of Lake Maracaibo.
It includes four regions of moist forest on slightly higher ground than the dry forest and mangroves that surround the lake.
The forest has unique flora related to the flora of the Amazon basin.
It is badly degraded due to farming, livestock grazing and oil exploration.
Geography
Location
The Catatumbo moist forests ecoregion is in western Venezuela and northeastern Colombia found on both sides of Lake Maracaibo.
To the west it extends to the foothills of the Cordillera Oriental of the Colombian Andes, and in the south reaches the foothills of the Venezuelan Andes.
It has an area of 802,896 hectares (1,984,000 acres).[1]
In Venezuela the forest is in the states of Zulia and Lara. In Colombia it is in the Norte de Santander Department.[2]
The moist forest is found on higher land among the dry forests of the southern Maracaibo basin, and on the foothills of the mountains to the west and south.[1]
The largest block has a V shape, covering the foothills and lower valleys of the Eastern Ranges and the Mérida Andes, which extend to the north and east respectively.
Between this block and Lake Maracaibo there is another block on land with elevations of 100–300 metres (330–980 ft).
On the east side of the lake there are blocks of moist forest on the 1,900 metres (6,200 ft) Cerro Cerrón and on a hill reaching 1,578 metres (5,177 ft) in the northern foothills of the Cordillera de Mérida.
Rivers crossing the south and west of the ecoregion include the Catatumbo, Bravo and Onia.
The Palmar, Apón and Santa Ana rivers have their sources in the Serranía del Perijá.[2]
Climate
The Köppen climate classification is "Aw": equatorial, winter dry.[4]
At a sample location at coordinates 9°15′N72°15′W / 9.25°N 72.25°W / 9.25; -72.25 mean temperatures are fairly constant throughout the year at 82–84 °C (180–183 °F).
Annual rainfall at this location averages about 1,650 millimetres (65 in).
It rains throughout the year, with peaks in March and July.[4]
The highest rainfall is in the southwest of the Maracaibo basin, where the prevailing winds meet the cordilleras and release their moisture.
Annual rainfall in this area is up to 4,300 millimetres (170 in).[2]
Ecology
The ecoregion is in the neotropical realm, in the tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests biome.[1]
The portion of the ecoregion to the south and west of Lake Maracaibo is viewed as a Pleistocenerefugium for woody plant families, and is the only area north of the Andes still holding remnants of Brazil and Colombia's Amazonian flora.
The forested lower slopes of the Onia River basin south of the lake have a number of relict plant species.[2]
The World Wildlife Fund gives the ecoregion the status "Critical/Endangered".
Large areas of moist and dry forests have been destroyed around Lake Maracaibo, and the area is fragmented by the many roads in the region.
Grazing animals, farms and oil exploration have drastically changed large areas.[2]
As of 2002 of the total 23,359 square kilometres (9,019 sq mi) in the ecoregion 16,447.5 square kilometres (6,350.4 sq mi) was agricultural land, while 6,511.5 square kilometres (2,514.1 sq mi) (27.9%) had natural cover or extractive land uses.[6]
Colonization is increasing, and oil exploration continues.
On the mountain slopes areas have been deforested for shifting cultivation.
The southwestern part of the region, considered to be a forest refuge, is the most degraded.[2]