The Guianan savanna (NT0707) is an ecoregion in the south of Venezuela, Guyana and Suriname and the north of Brazil. It is in the Amazon biome.
The savanna covers an area of rolling upland plains on the Guiana Shield between the Amazon and Orinoco basins.
It includes forested areas, but these are shrinking steadily due to the effect of frequent fires, either accidental or deliberate.[citation needed]
The ecoregion includes the Gran Sabana region of Venezuela.
Location
The ecoregion includes three large unconnected areas totaling 10,437,652 hectares (25,792,000 acres).
The main section is in southeast Venezuela, the Brazilian state of Roraima and western Guyana.
To the southeast a smaller section is in the north of the Brazilian state of Pará extending into the south of Suriname.
The most eastern and smallest section is in the Brazilian state of Amapá, stretching north from Macapá.[2]
There are small isolated fragments to the north of the main section in the Pakarima foothills in Guyana.
The main section includes the Gran Sabana region of Venezuela.[3]
The grasslands are between the basins of the Amazon and Orinoco rivers.[2]
This ecoregion covers gently rolling upland plains of the Roraima formation, sediments that overlay the ancient Guiana Shield basement from the Precambrian era.
Soils are typically highly weathered oxisols that are low in organic matter and nutrients and often high in toxic compounds of aluminum.[3]
The north part of the main section of the ecoregion is in the eastern Orinoco basin, and is drained by the upper Caroní River, known as the Kuquenán, the Yuruaní River and the Arabopó River. The south and east parts of the main section are in the Branco River basin.
The rivers are blackwater rivers, acidic and very low in nutrients.[3]
Climate
The Köppen climate classification is "Am": equatorial, monsoonal.[5]
Temperatures are relatively stable throughout the year, slightly cooler in July and slightly warmer in November.
Average temperatures range from a minimum of 21.5 °C (70.7 °F) to a maximum of 31 °C (88 °F) with a mean temperature of 26 °C (79 °F).
Annual rainfall averages about 2,000 millimetres (79 in).
Average monthly rainfall varies from 55.3 millimetres (2.18 in) in November to 376.2 millimetres (14.81 in) in June.[5]
There are NE and SE trade winds during most of the year.
Relative air humidity is generally high, with mean annual levels of 75–85%.[3]
The Guianan savanna ecoregion contains relatively intact grasslands within an area of tropical rainforest and sandstone tepuis.[2]
The Guianan savanna contains the Gran Sabana mosaic of grasslands and tree patches.
There are continuous forests at the base of the tepuis, and patches of forest or of shrubs in other places surrounded by broad areas of grassland that are usually free of shrubs or trees.
Some areas have shrubby meadows.
The streams that cross the region run through gallery forests.[3]
There is a low level of endemism compared to the Guianan Tepuis.
However, the ecoregion is important as a plant refuge and center for plant dispersal.
204 species have been recorded in the Venezuelan Sierra de Lema and Cerro Venamo, including endemic species in swamps in the open savanna, on dry rocky land and in the forests at different levels.[3]
Most of the endemic birds of the Guianan highland or found on the Gran Sabana.
These are mostly found in the humid forest on the foothills above 600 metres (2,000 ft).
They include the tepui swift (Streptoprocne phelpsi), tepui goldenthroat (Polytmus milleri) and tepui wren (Troglodytes rufulus).[3]
Endangered birds include the sun parakeet (Aratinga solstitialis), Rio Branco antbird (Cercomacra carbonaria), yellow-bellied seedeater (Sporophila nigricollis) and hoary-throated spinetail (Synallaxis kollari).[6]
The World Wildlife Fund gives the ecoregion the status of "Vulnerable".
The savanna is replacing the forests as a result of frequent fires and the poor soils.[3]
This is causing some of the small streams to become intermittent in the dry season, affecting the amphibians.
The smoke from the fires may be creating a greenhouse effect, intensifying the heat and damage caused by the fires.
Gold and diamond mining cause mercury pollution.[3]
50.35% of the ecoregion is in protected areas.[1] The Venezuelan Gran Sabana is contained in the 30,000 square kilometres (12,000 sq mi) Canaima National Park.
Other parts of the ecoregion are protected by the 1,160 square kilometres (450 sq mi) Monte Roraima National Park in Brazil and the Tumucumaque Mountains National Park.[3]
The Sipaliwini Savanna in Suriname borders and is an extension of the Tumucumaque National Park. It is a 1,000 square kilometres (390 sq mi) protected area since 1972.[7] The 13,000 square kilometres (5,000 sq mi) Rupununi savannah in Guyana does not have an official protected area status as of 2020.[8]
Notes
^ ab"Guianan savanna". DOPA Explorer. Accessed 7 March 2022. [1]