The Solimões-Japurá moist forests (NT0163) is an ecoregion in northwest Brazil and eastern Peru and Colombia in the Amazon biome.
It has a hot climate with high rainfall throughout the year, and holds one of the most diverse collections of fauna and flora in the world.
The ecoregion is relatively intact.
Location
The Solimões-Japurá moist forests has an area of 16,757,223 hectares (41,408,000 acres) divided among Colombia, Brazil and Peru.
The northern boundary of the western portion in Colombia is defined by the Caqueta River.[1]
The Caqueta separates the ecoregion from the Caquetá moist forests to the north.[2]
The Caqueta becomes the Japurá River when it crosses Colombia's border with Brazil, and the Japurá (or the Purus várzea along the Japurá) defines the northern boundary in Brazil to the point where the Japurá meets the Solimões River.[1]
The Japurá-Solimões-Negro moist forests lies to the north of the Japurá.[2]
The Purus várzea and then the Iquitos várzea along the Solimões define the southern boundary in Brazil and Peru.
The Purus várzea forms the south east border, and elements of the Purus várzea are found along rivers throughout the Solimões-Japurá ecoregion.
The Iquitos várzea forms the southwest border, separating the Solimões-Japurá ecoregion from the Southwest Amazon moist forests further south.[2]
The Solimões-Japurá moist forests adjoins the Napo moist forests to the west.[2]
The Napo River separates the Solimões-Japurá moist forest from the Napo moist forests.[1]
Physical
The ecoregion covers upland alluvial plains formed in the Tertiary period.[3]
The terrain includes floodplains, rolling hills, steep banks and plateaus.[1]
Elevations are typically from 100 to 220 metres (330 to 720 ft), but in Colombia the sandstone plateaus rise to 500 metres (1,600 ft).
The Putumayo River, which defines the border between Peru and Colombia, runs through the region, which is also drained by the Caquetá, Napo and Solimões.
There is a variety of soil types, but most are oxisols and ultisols poor in nutrients and high in aluminum and iron.[3]
The climate is hot and humid, with high rainfall.[1]
The Köppen climate classification is "Af": equatorial, fully humid.[4]
Temperatures vary little throughout the year, with mean temperatures from 25.3 to 26.5 °C (77.5 to 79.7 °F), minimum temperatures from 20.5 to 21.6 °C (68.9 to 70.9 °F) and maximum temperatures from 30.1 to 31.5 °C (86.2 to 88.7 °F).
There is heavy precipitation throughout the year, ranging from an average of 187.2 millimetres (7.37 in) in August to 324.1 millimetres (12.76 in) in April. Rain falls almost every day of the year.
Total annual precipitation is around 3,100 millimetres (120 in).[4]
Flora
15 types of vegetation have been defined in just one part of the ecoregion in Colombia.
Most of the vegetation is tall, dense evergreen tropical rainforest, rich in plant species.
It includes well-drained terra firme upland forest, well-drained floodplain forest, poorly drained floodplain forest and swamp forest.
The whitewater rivers carry organic and mineral sediments washed down from the Andes, which they deposit during the annual floods, so the soils in the floodplains are richer in nutrients than in the terra firme areas. The floodplain forests belong to the Purus várzea ecoregion.[3]
The Peruvian part of the ecoregion contains areas of nutrient-poor white sand similar to the Brazilian campinarana ecoregion.
The vegetation is sclerophyllous low scrub or open-canopy low forest with distinctive flora and fauna and high levels of endemism.
The sandstone plateaus in Colombia have shrub and savanna vegetation related to the Guiana region.[3]
The World Wildlife Fund class the ecoregion as "Relatively Stable/Intact".[3]
There are only two short roads in the whole region.
The original habitat is mostly intact, but large areas along the Caquetá and Putumayo rivers have been deforested for production of coca (Erythroxylum coca), logging, mining and cattle ranching.
These activities threaten the remaining forest.
Colombia has strong laws regulating logging but they are poorly enforced.
Almost all the mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla) has been logged, and most of the tropical cedar (Cedrela odorata) has been logged along the main rivers.[3]
About one third of the ecoregion, between the Putumayo and Caquetá rivers in Colombia, is the territory of indigenous people.
They practice extraction and small-scale farming in shifting locations.
The Cahuinari and Amacayacu national parks in Colombia protect 8,690 square kilometres (3,360 sq mi) of rainforest.[3]
The Mamirauá Sustainable Development Reserve in Brazil protects part of the ecoregion.[1]