The information contained in this database, as well as the peculiar geography of the region, prompted BB-94 in vitro questions about the patterns of distribution of species richness and endemism. The aim of this paper is to analyse the diversity and distribution of
the woody flora of the Equatorial Pacific dry forest ecoregion to answer the following questions: How does the floristic composition and diversity of the SDF in the Equatorial Pacific region compare to other vegetation in the Neotropics? How is the diversity of woody plants distributed amongst areas and elevational bands? Are the species adequately protected within the protected area networks in the region? These questions will also be addressed for endemic species. In addition, we used the checklist to assess the conservation status of the woody component of the Ecuadorean
Necrostatin-1 cell line and Peruvian SDFs. Methods Study area We used the term SDF in a very broad sense, including a complex mosaic of vegetation formations raging from wide-open savannah-like forests, to closed canopy semi-deciduous variants. Our study area included both the Tumbes-Piura and Ecuadorian dry forests ecoregions as defined by Olson et al. (2001) and also adjacent SDFs from the Loja province in Ecuador and the Cajamarca department in Peru (Fig. 1). The centre of our study area, in the provinces of El Oro and Loja (Ecuador) and the departments
of Tumbes and Piura (Peru), constitutes the most extensive and continuous area of SDF west of the Andes. Fragmented Selleckchem VX-680 and isolated forest patches along the coast and the lower western Andean slopes constitute the remaining SDF vegetation north (provinces of Los Rios, Manabí and Esmeraldas in Ecuador) and south (departaments of Lambayeque, La Libertad and Cajamarca in Peru) Florfenicol of this centre. Defined this way, SDFs cover around 55,000 km2 (Aguirre and Kvist 2005). Annual rainfall values are highly variable in this extensive area (from below 250 mm in the areas adjoining the Sechura desert in Piura, Peru to 2,000 mm in northern Esmeraldas, Ecuador), not least because of the influence of El Niño-Southern Oscillation events (Ortlieb and Macharé 1993). Rainfall seasonality is another important factor influencing the vegetation, varying from 3 to 8 months in which no rain occurs. Much of the studied region covers areas below 400 m.a.s.l., including extensive plains and low hills in the west. The topography becomes more dissected and increases in altitude towards the interior of the continent where the foothills of the Andes begin. SDF vegetation is present all along this altitudinal range, from sea level to 1,600–1,800 m.a.s.l. in the montane SDFs of Loja (Lozano 2002) and to 1,800 m.a.s.l. in the montane SDFs of the western Andes in Peru (Weberbauer 1945). Fig.