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WORLDWIDE FOREST/BIODIVERSITY CAMPAIGN NEWS

Brazil's Atlantic Forests: New World Record for Tree Diversity

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Forest Networking a Project of Ecological Enterprises

11/25/96

 

OVERVIEW & SOURCE by EE

Conservation International reports on the recent significant finding

of 476 tree species in a one hectare plot in Santa Teresa, Brazil. 

This amazing level of tree diversity is a testament to the need to

protect and study remaining rainforests.  It is terrible policy

ecologically, economically and socially to continue indiscrimately

industrially clearing virgin forests without even knowing what is

there.

Glen Barry

 

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October 23, 1996

Contact: Lisa S. Bowen

Email: L.Bowen@conservation.org

(202) 973-2204

 

New World Record For Tree Diversity

 

ESPIRITO SANTO, BRAZIL - Brazilian scientists from the state of

Espirito Santo announced this week a new world record for tree

diversity. Dr. Sergio Lucena Mendes, Director of the Museu de Biologia

Professor Mello Leitao in Santa Teresa, Espirito Santo, reported the

results of a study by Luciana Dias Thomaz of the Universidade Estadual

Paulista (UNESP) that found 476 tree species in a one hectare (2.5

acre) plot in Santa Teresa. This astounding discovery breaks the

previous records of 458 found in the southern part of the state of

Bahia immediately to the north of Espirito Santo along the Brazilian

coast in March 1993 and 473 found in Cuyabeno, northeast Amazonian

Ecuador in June 1993. Prior to the Bahian study, no one had ever found

more than 400 species per hectare.

 

Not only did Ms. Thomaz discover this incredibly high number of

species, she also found 104 species that had never before been found

in the Atlantic forest region of Brazil, five species entirely

new to science and possibly a genus new to science as well. By

comparison, the average hectare plot of temperate forest may have

between two and 20 tree species.

 

The criteria used in the Espirito Santo study were more rigourous than

those used in Bahia and Cuyabeno. In the Bahia and Cuyabeno study, the

cutoff criterion for inclusion in the count was 5 centimeters diameter

breast height, a standard measure used in botanical studies. In the

Espirito Santo study, the criterion was 20 centimeter circumference at

breast height, or 6.4 centimeter diameter breast height.

 

The Espirito Santo site is located in the municipality of Santa Teresa

at an altitude of 600-800 meters, compared to 100-200 meters at the

Bahian site and 260 meters at the Cuyabeno site. The site is within

the Atlantic forest region of eastern Brazil, one of the world's top

threatened hotspots for terrestrial biodiversity. The Atlantic forest

once occupied about 1.2 million square kilometers, or an area about

three times the size of the state of California, but is now down to 2-

5% of its original extent. Estimates of total plant diversity for the

Atlantic forest as a whole run as high as 20,000 species, half of

which are endemic to Brazil. The area is also rich in fauna as well,

with 261 species of mammals, 620 species of birds, and 260 amphibians,

of which 73 mammals, 160 birds and 128 amphibians are endemic.

 

The Espirito Santo findings were announced at a meeting in Porto

Seguro, Bahia, where scientists are developing a plan for major

corridors between protected areas in the Atlantic forest. This

innovative program is funded by the Pilot Program of the G7,

currently being designed by scientists from Conservation

International, the Wildlife Conservation Society, and the Brazilian

Institute of the Environment (IBAMA), in collaboration with many local

partners.

 

Dr. Russell Mittermeier, President of Conservation International,

which has a large program in Brazil, said that this finding once again

shows how incredible the biodiversity of a megadiversity country like

Brazil actually is, and how little we still know about its diversity.

Fortunately, Brazil has become one the world's leaders in biodiversity

research and conservation at both the governmental and non-

governmental levels.

 

Dr. Sergio Lucena Mendes, who supervised the plant diversity project,

said that this discovery stimulated his institution to develop a more

detailed action plan for biodiversity inventory of other groups in

addition to plants. An excellent example of one of the most active

scientifically-based conservation NGO's in Brazil, the Museu de

Biologia Professosr Mello Leitao gives much reason for optimism for

the future of biodiversity conservation in

Brazil.

 

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Email (best way to contact)-> gbarry@forests.org