The Purus várzea (NT0156) is an ecoregion of seasonally flooded várzea forest in the central Amazon basin. It is part of the Amazon biome.
The ecoregion is home to a vegetation adapted to floods of up to 12 metres (39 ft) that may last for eight months.
There is a great variety of fish and birds, but relatively fewer mammals.
Ground-dwelling mammals must migrate to higher ground during the flood season.
Threats include logging, cattle farming, over-fishing and mercury pollution from gold mining.
Location
The Purus várzea is a low-lying region of the central Amazon basin that is seasonally flooded.
It covers 17,741,418 hectares (43,840,000 acres) of eastern Colombia and western Brazil.
It extends along most of the Juruá, central Purus, and Caquetá (Japurá) rivers and their tributaries.
In the east it reaches the confluence of the Japurá and Solimões Rivers.[1]
Urban centers in or around the region are Tefé, Tabatinga and Carauarí.[2]
Altitudes range from 80 to 120 metres (260 to 390 ft).
The forests are seasonally flooded by whitewater rivers, which carry suspended sediment washed from the eastern slopes of the Andes and organic material.
Water levels rise by up to 12 metres (39 ft) in the flood period, which may last for eight months of the year.
The soil is fertile, composed of sediments that have accumulated in the present Holocene epoch and that are renewed by the annual floods.
The river course through the floodplain constantly shifts over time, creating oxbow lakes, levees, meander swales and bars.
These landscape elements support diverse vegetation adapted to flooding, which gradually merges into the surrounding terra firme forest.[2]
The Köppen climate classification is "Af": equatorial, fully humid.
Average temperatures range from 21 to 32 °C (70 to 90 °F), with a mean temperature of 26.5 °C (79.7 °F).
Average annual precipitation is about 2,550 millimetres (100 in).
Rain falls throughout the year, but is heaviest in January–March and lightest in July–August.[4]
199 species of mammals are found in the region, fewer than in the surrounding terra firme forests.
There are no ground-dwelling species in flooded várzea forests isolated from the mainland, but areas of várzea in contact with terra firme forests house ground-dwelling mammals that migrate to higher ground in the flood periods.[2]
There are two endemic primates in the Mamirauá Sustainable Development Reserve, the bald uakari (Cacajao calvus) and black squirrel monkey (Saimiri vanzolinii).[2]
The reserve is also home to white-footed saki (Pithecia albicans), emperor tamarin (Saguinus imperator), moustached tamarin (Saguinus mystax), Nancy Ma's night monkey (Aotus nancymaae) and Hershkovitz's titi (Callicebus dubius).[2]
According to the World Wildlife Fund the status of the ecoregion is Critical/Endangered.
Smallholders along the rivers undertake mixed agriculture, forest exploitation, small-scale logging and livestock raising.
In some areas the várzea forest is threatened by large-scale logging and cattle farming.
Fish populations are threatened by large-scale fishing operations and may be threatened by excessive collection of aquarium fish such as the red discus (Symphysodon discus).
Gold mining contaminates the Purus and Japurá with mercury.[2]