The Uatuma–Trombetas moist forests (NT0173) is an ecoregion in northwest Brazil in the Amazon biome.
It covers the Amazon basin north of the Amazon River from close to the Atlantic Ocean to the Rio Negro west of Manaus.
The ecoregion is relatively intact, although it has been damaged along the main rivers and around population centers.
Location
The Uatuma–Trombetas moist forests ecoregion is in the north of Brazil in parts of the states of Roraima, Amazonas and Amapá to the north of the Amazon River.
Small areas of the ecoregion cross the Brazilian border into Guyana and Suriname.
It has an area of 47,319,082 hectares (116,928,000 acres).[1]
The ecoregion covers the area to the north of the Amazon River from close to the Atlantic coast to the Rio Negro and the Branco River.
In the north to extends to the mountains along the border between Brazil and the Guianas and Suriname.
On the 1993 Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics map the Brazilian part is shown as "lowland ombrophilous dense forests", "submontane ombrophilous dense forests" and "ombrophilous forest – savanna transition".[2]
The north of the ecoregion reaches into the quartzite or sandstone upland terraces and mountains of the ancient Guiana Shield, while the south is in the much newer sedimentary basin of the Amazon River, formed during the recent Tertiary period.
It contains high plains, rolling hills and lowlands, with diverse fauna and flora in the different habitats.
Soils are mostly kaolinite, or sandy podzols on the slopes, and are low in nutrients, but some areas have very fertile clay loam soils.
The ecoregion is crossed by various blackwater or clearwater rivers, including the Trombetas, Jari, Uatumã, Curuapanema, Paru and Araguari.[2]
Climate
The Köppen climate classification is "Am": equatorial, monsoonal.[4]
Mean monthly temperatures are 26 to 27 °C (79 to 81 °F).
Rainfall is seasonal.
Average annual rainfall ranges from 1,700 millimetres (67 in) in the east to 3,000 millimetres (120 in) in the west.[2]
The ecoregion contains lowland flooded forests along tributaries of the Amazon, and seasonally dry forests and meadows on the Guiana Shield.[1]
The larger part of the ecoregion is covered by humid rainforest with a canopy 30 to 40 metres (98 to 131 ft) high and emergent trees reaching 50 metres (160 ft).
There are areas of seasonal forest east of Óbidos that is dry in the summer and has a canopy under 20 metres (66 ft), with mesophyllous, semideciduous and xeromorphic flora. There are also some open meadows.[2]
482 species of birds have been reported including tinamous (genus Crypturellus), parrots (genus Amazona), macaws (genus Ara), cookoos (genus Coccyzus), potoos (family Nyctibiidae) and tanagers (genus Tachyphonus).[2]
Endangered birds include the sun parakeet (Aratinga solstitialis).[5]
Status
The World Wildlife Fund classes the ecoregion as "Relatively Stable/Intact".[2]
The habitat is fairly intact in the interior, but continues to suffer from deforestation along the main roads and rivers, around and to the north of Manaus, and in the region from Óbidos to Monte Alegre along the Amazon.
Cattle ranchers have cleared large areas of forest, as have commercial plantations around the Jari River and forestry in the east of the region.
Some species are threatened by the trade in wildlife, by hunting and by selective logging.
Upland areas have been destroyed by mining, which has polluted the rivers.
Huge areas of upland forest were submerged by the Balbina Dam in the southwest.[2]