The Xingu–Tocantins–Araguaia moist forests (NT0180) is an ecoregion in the eastern Amazon basin. It is part of the Amazon biome.
The ecoregion is one of the most severely degraded of the Amazon region, suffering from large-scale deforestation and selective extraction of timber, particularly along the Trans-Amazonian Highway and in the higher and more populated southern portions.
Location
The Xingu–Tocantins–Araguaia moist forests ecoregion has an area of 26,625,077 hectares (65,792,000 acres).
It lies to the south of the Amazon River in eastern Brazil.[1]
The Xingu River defines the western boundary and the Tocantins River defines the eastern boundary.
To the south the ecoregion rises into the Carajás Mountains, where it becomes interspersed with areas of seasonal forest and cerrado.
Population centers include São Félix do Xingu on the Xingu, Porto de Moz, Oeiras do Pará and Gurupá on the Amazon, and Marabá on the Tocantins.[2]
The terrain is undulating.
In many areas the soils are rich, but in some parts they are low in nutrients.
The north of the ecoregion is on the lowland Amazon basin, while in the south it rises into the higher ground of the Brazilian Shield.[2]
Elevations range from sea level at the Amazon to 396 metres (1,299 ft) in the Carajás Mountains in the south.[1]
The forest contains a network of blackwater rivers, stained dark with tannins and holding little suspended sediment.[1]
It contains the middle and lower basin of the Araguaia River, a tributary of the Tocantins.
There are many smaller blackwater rivers including the Pacajá and Anapu tributaries of the Amazon River, the Bacajá and Fresco tributaries of the Xingu, and the Parauapebas and Catete tributaries of the Tocantins.[2]
The Köppen climate classification is "Am": equatorial, monsoonal.[4]
Temperatures are fairly steady throughout the year, slightly higher in April and slightly lower in July.
Average temperatures range from 21 to 32 °C (70 to 90 °F), with a mean of 26.5 °C (79.7 °F).[4]
The region is drier than the ecoregions further to the west.
In the middle Xingu annual rainfall is 1,500 to 2,000 millimetres (59 to 79 in).[2]
Elsewhere average annual precipitation is about 2,100 millimetres (83 in)
Monthly precipitation ranges from 19.4 millimetres (0.76 in) in July to 335.4 millimetres (13.20 in) in March.[4]
Flora
The diverse terrain results in diverse flora and fauna, particularly on the richer soils, with many endemic species.
Most of the original vegetation is evergreen tropical rainforest on terra firme.
In the north there is lowland Amazon forest up to 40 metres (130 ft) high, graduating to dense submontane forest and then open submontane forest further south.
There are fewer epiphytes and orchids in these forests than in the ecoregions further west.
There are areas of liana forests on higher ground in the south and southeast and of forests dominated by babaçu palm (Attalea genus) and/or Brazil nut (Bertholletia excelsa).
The stands of babaçu palms are thought to be originally planted by humans.[2]
The blackwater river banks are lined with white-sand igapó flooded forests.[1]
In the south the ecoregion is broken up by areas of savanna woodlands from the cerrado biome of the Central Brazilian Plateau.[2]
The World Wildlife Fund classes the ecoregion "Vulnerable".[2]
The Tapajós-Xingu, Xingu-Tocantins-Araguaia and Tocantins/Pindare moist forests ecoregions on the eastern edge of the Amazon basin have all been badly affected by human settlement and deforestation.[6]
The Xingu-Tocantins-Araguaia region is the most deforested and degraded part of the Amazon region after the adjoining Tocantins/Pindare moist forests to the east.
It is crossed by the Trans-Amazonian Highway (BR-230) from east to west, and by the BR-422 highway along the Tocantins.
Most of the land along these roads has been deforested and replaced by pasture or farm fields.
The remaining forest has been stripped of its valuable trees, and many native fauna and flora have become locally extinct.
Large-scale mining near Marabá and elsewhere have directly affected the environment, and demand large quantities of wood to run the smelters.[2]
During the period from 2004 to 2011 the ecoregion experienced an annual rate of habitat loss of 0.94%.[7]
Global warming will force tropical species to migrate uphill to find areas with suitable temperature and rainfall.
Low, flat, deforested ecoregions such as the Xingu-Tocantins-Araguaia moist forests are extremely vulnerable.[8]
Coca-Castro, Alejandro; Reymondin, Louis; Bellfield, Helen; Hyman, Glenn (January 2013), Land use Status and Trends in Amazonia(PDF), Amazonia Security Agenda Project, retrieved 2017-03-24