Trinidad and Tobago dry forests
Trinidad and Tobago dry forests | |
---|---|
Ecology | |
Realm | Neotropical |
Biome | tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests |
Borders | |
Geography | |
Country | Trinidad and Tobago |
Conservation | |
Conservation status | Critical/Endangered[1] |
Trinidad and Tobago dry forests are
smaller offshore islands including Chacachacare, Monos, Huevos, Gaspar Grande, Little Tobago and Saint Giles Island
.
Tropical dry forests in
Chaguaramas peninsula in the northwest, areas along the south coast of the island, from Cedros to Morne Diablo, and areas along the east coast including parts of the Guayaguayare, Mayaro and Manzanilla coastline. In addition, areas along the west coast including San Fernando Hill and much of the former Sugar
Belt also would have originally supported dry forest. In Tobago much of the southwest of the island originally supported dry forests.
The dominant paradigm in phytosociology in Trinidad and Tobago has been the work of John Stanley Beard carried out in the 1940s. His description of forest associations was physiognomically based. Many of his forest associations overlap modern ideas of dry and moist forests. Most work which seeks to classify dry forest in this country, e.g., WWF classification,[1] underestimate the extent of dry forest in Trinidad and Tobago by restricting it to the driest category of forests that Beard came up with for Trinidad.
References
- ^ a b "Islands of Trinidad and Tobago in the Caribbean | Ecoregions | WWF". World Wildlife Fund. Retrieved 2019-01-04.
- Beard, J. S. (1944) The natural vegetation of Tobago, British West Indies. Ecological Monographs 14:135-163.
- Beard, J. S. (1946) The natural vegetation of Trinidad. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
- Nelson, Howard P. (2004) Tropical forest ecosystems of Trinidad: Ecological patterns and public perceptions. Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Wisconsin, Madison.