The USGS EROS Data Center and the U.S. EPA NHEERL-WED initiated this project to develop an ecological classification and ecoregion map for the Western Hemisphere (North and South America) that is consistent with recent U.S. EPA and North American ecoregion frameworks (CEC 1997; U.S. EPA 1998; Gallant et al. 1995). This coverage includes a first approximation of ecological regions of Central and South America that is relatively consistent with the purpose and methods of those already completed frameworks for North America. Designed to serve as a spatial framework for environmental resource assessment and management, ecoregions denote areas of general similarity in ecosystems and in the type, quality, and quantity of environmental resources. This initial delineation of ecoregions was based on analysis of multiple types and scales of thematic maps including geology, physiography, soils, potential and existing vegetation, climate, landcover and agricultural uses, other ecological frameworks, and from other regional descriptive documents. Maps and information of environmental characteristics of Central and South America and the Caribbean were collected from several U.S. university libraries, the EROS Data Center, the Library of Congress, the USGS Cartographic Information Center in Reston, and the U.S. State Department map library. In addition to the variety of information from these thematic maps and descriptive texts, regional patterns were also assessed from the global land cover characteristics database obtained from 1-km Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) data (Loveland and Belward 1997; Loveland et al. 1998). More detail on the philosophy, methodology, and references used in the compilation of these ecoregions can be found in Omernik (1995) and Griffith et al. (1998). Literature cited: Commission for Environmental Cooperation. 1997. Ecological regions of North America: Towards a common perspective. Commission for Environmental Cooperation. Montreal, Quebec, Canada. 71p. Gallant, A.L., E.F. Binnian, J.M. Omernik, and M.B. Shasby. 1995. Ecoregions of Alaska. U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1567. 73p. Griffith, G.E., J.M. Omernik, and S.H. Azevedo. 1998. Ecological classification of the Western Hemisphere. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, Corvallis, Oregon. 47p. Loveland, T.R. and Belward, A.S., 1997. The IGBP-DIS Global 1 km Land Cover Data Set, DISCover First Results. International Journal of Remote Sensing 18(15): 3289-3295. Loveland, T.R., D.O. Ohlen, J.F. Brown, B.C. Reed, Z. Zhu, J.W. Merchant, and L. Yang. 1998. Western hemisphere land cover - progress toward a global land cover characteristics database. In: Proceedings, Pecora 13, Human Interactions with the Environment: Perspectives From Space. Omernik, J.M. 1995. Ecoregions: A spatial framework for environmental management. In: Biological Assessment and Criteria: Tools for Water Resource Planning and Decision Making. W.S. Davis and T.P. Simon (eds.). Lewis Publishers, Boca Raton, FL. pp. 49-62. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 1998. Level III Ecoregions of the Continental United States, Map M-1 (revision of Omernik, 1987). National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, Corvallis, Oregon.
Ecoregion maps assist managers of aquatic and terrestrial resources to understand the regional patterns of the realistically attainable quality of these resources.
Comments and questions regarding the Ecoregions of Central and South America should be addressed to Glenn Griffith, USGS, c/o US EPA., 200 SW 35th Street, Corvallis, OR 97333, (541)-754-4465, email:[email protected] Alternate: James Omernik, USGS, c/o US EPA, 200 SW 35th Street, Corvallis, OR 97333, (541)-754-4458, email:[email protected]. Electronic versions of ecoregion maps and posters, as well as other ecoregion resources are available at: http://www.epa.gov/wed/pages/ecoregions.htm. Ecoregions were digitized at 1:5,000,000 or smaller scales and are intended for large geographic extents (i.e. states/provinces, multiple counties, or river basins). Use for smaller areas, is not recommended.
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Publication date
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None. Please check sources, scale, accuracy, currentness and other available information. Please confirm that you are using the most recent copy of both data and metadata. Acknowledgement of the EPA would be appreciated.
| Boundary | Coordinate |
|---|---|
| West | -112.324122 (longitude) |
| East | -23.246651 (longitude) |
| North | 30.311777 (latitude) |
| South | -56.114264 (latitude) |
Ecoregions for Central and South America are designed to be relatively consistent with the North America and United States frameworks. They are hierarchical with Level I being the broadest classification and Level III being the most detailed. Because of this hierarchy, Level III features include appropriate codes and names for Levels II and I and Level II retains Level I information.
Ecoregion Codes and Names:
13. Temperate Sierras
13.6 Central American Sierra Madre and Chiapas Highlands
13.6.1 Northern Central American Highlands
13.6.2 Central American Sierra Madre
13.6.4 Altos de Chiapas con bosque mesoófilo
14. Mexican Tropical Dry Forests
14.4 Interior Depressions
14.4.2 Chiapas Depression
14.4.3 Motagua Valley
15. Middle American Tropical Wet Forests
15.1 Humid Gulf of Mexico Coastal Plains and Hills
15.1.4 Humid Gulf of Mexico and Southern Petén Hills
15.1.5 Maya Mountains
15.2 Yucatan Peninsula Plains and Hills
15.2.1 Quintana Roo / Belizean Wet Coastal Lowland
15.2.2 Yucatán Karst Plains
15.2.3 Central Yucatán / Petén Hills and Karst Plains
15.6 Soconusco / Guatemalan Coastal Plain and Hills
15.6.2 Soconusco / Guatemalan Coastal Plain
15.6.3 Soconusco Hills / Guatemalan Piedmont
15.7 Central American Isthmus
15.7.1 Pacific Volcanic Lowlands
15.7.2 Caribbean Coastal Plains and Hills
15.7.3 Miskito Lowland Pine Savanna
15.7.4 Guanacaste / Central Volcanic Uplands
15.7.5 Talamanca and Panama Central Cordilleras
15.7.6 Costa Rica-Panama Pacific Plains and Hills
16. West Indies
16.1 Bahamas
16.1.1 Bahamas
16.2 Greater Antilles
16.2.1 Cuba
16.2.2 Mountainous Greater Antilles
16.3 Lesser Antilles
16.3.1 Limestone Low Islands
1 6.3.2 Volcanic High Islands
17. Northern Andes
17.1 Caribe / Pacific Lowland Plains and Hills
17.1.1 Sinú / Magdalena Dry Plains
17.1.2 Magdalena Wet Plains
17.1.3 Maracaibo Lowlands
17.1.4 Guajira/Paraguaná Peninsulas
17.1.5 Chichiriviche Coastal Plain
17.1.6 Unare Plains
17.1.7 Pacific Plains and Hills
17.1.8 Guayas-Tumbes-Piura Dry Hills
17.2 Venezuelan Coastal Andes
17.2.1 Segovia Highlands
17.2.2 Central Coastal Cordillera
17.2.3 Eastern Coastal Cordillera
17.3 Northern Andean Highlands
17.3.1 Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta
17.3.2 Colombian / Venezuelan High Cordilleras
17.3.3 Paramo / Alto Andina
17.3.4 Upper Magdalena Valley
17.3.5 Upper Cauca Valley
17.3.6 Pacific Western Cordillera Montane Forest
17.3.7 Eastern Cordillera Montane Forest
17.3.8 S. Ecuador / N. Peru Transitional High Andes
18. Central Andes
18.1 Central High Andes/Puna
18.1.1 High Andes / Humid Puna
18.1.2 Dry Puna / Puna de Atacama
18.1.3 Southern Central Andes
18.2 Altiplano
18.2.1 Titicaca / Northern Altiplano
18.2.2 Southern Arid Altiplano
18.3 Yungas
18.3.1 Northern Yungas
18.3.2 Southern Yungas
18.4 Peruvian/Atacaman Deserts
18.4.1 Northern Peruvian Desert
18.4.2 Garua-Loma Desert
18.4.3 Northern Chilean Desert
1 8.4.4 Transitional Subdesert Matoral
19. Southern Andes
1 9.1 Mediterranean Chile
19.1.1 Coastal Ranges
19.1.2 Llano Central
19.2 Valdivian Forested Hills and Mountains
19.2.1 Valdivian Coastal Range
19.2.2 Central Depression
19.2.3 Valdivian High Andes
19.3 Fuegian Fiords and Forests
19.3.1 Magellanic Moorland and Rainforest
19.3.2 Fuegian High Andes / Ice Caps
19.4 Subantarctic Islands
19.4.1 Falklands / Islas Malvinas
20. Amazonian-Orinocan Lowland
20.1 Orinoco Llanos
20.1.1 Piedmont
20.1.2 High Plains or Dissected Plains
20.1.3 Alluvial Overflow Plains / Wet Plains
20.2 Amazon Irregular Plains and Piedmont
20.2.1 Colombia Rock Mesa Amazon
20.2.2 Napo / Putamayo Moist Forests
20.2.3 Ucayali / Marañon Lowland
20.2.4 Southwestern Amazonian Irregular Plains
20.2.5 Llanos de Mojos / Beni Savanna
20.3 Guianan Shield Moist Forests
20.3.1 Upper Rio Negro / Campinas area
20.3.2 Boa Vista Depression / Rupununi Savanna
20.3.3 Guianan Forested Plains and Hills
20.3.4 Amapá / Roraima Plains and Tablelands
20.4 Amazon and Coastal Lowlands
20.4.1 Amazon Flat Plains
20.4.2 Várzea / Igapó
20.4.3 Amazon Estuary and Coastal Savannas
20.4.4 Guianan Coastal Lowland
20.5 Brazilian Shield Moist Forests
20.5.1 Gurupi Plains and Low Tablelands
20.5.2 Amazon Upland Irregular Plains
20.5.3 Mixed Forest Plains and Tablelands
20.5.4 Upper Xingu Depression
21. Eastern Highlands
21.1 Guianan Highlands
21.1.1 Guianan Uplands and Tepuis
21.1.2 Roraima and Grand Savannas
21.1.3 Suriname / Guyana Low Mountains
21.2 Cerrados
21.2.1 Northern Maranhão Plains
21.2.2 Northern Piauà Plains
21.2.3 Northeastern Cerrado
21.2.4 Araguaia Depression
21.2.5 Tocantins Hills and Tablelands
21.2.6 Espinhaço / Diamantina Hills and Low Mountains
21.2.7 Mato Grosso Savanna Tablelands
21.2.8 Upper Paraguai / Guapore Plains and Hills
21.2.9 Pantanal
21.2.10 Chiquitos-Velasco Forested Hills and Plains
21.2.11 Southern Cerrado Tablelands
21.3 Caatinga
21.3.1 Northeastern Caatinga
21.3.2 Western Caatinga
21.4 Atlantic Forests
21.4.1 Agreste / Caatinga Transition
21.4.2 Brazilian Atlantic Coastal Forests
21.4.3 Eastern Inland Atlantic Mixed Forests
21.4.4 Western Inland Atlantic Mixed Forests
21.4.5 Araucaria Tablelands
22. Gran Chaco
22.1 Western Dry Chaco
22.1.1 Northern Dry Chaco
22.1.2 Southern Dry Chaco
22.1.3 Sierras of Cordoba and San Luis
22.1.4 Pampa Seca / Espinal
22.2 Humid Chaco
22.2.1 Northern Humid Chaco
22.2.2 Southern Humid Chaco
23. Pampas
23.1 Northern Rolling Pampas
23.1.1 Campos / Northern Pampas
23.1.2 Brazil / Uruguay Coastal Pampa
23.1.3 Southern Uruguay Lowland
23.2 Southern Flat Pampas
23.2.1 La Plata / Uruguay Lowland
23.2.2 Inland Pampa
23.2.3 Low Argentine Pampa
23.2.4 Southern Pampa
24. Monte-Patagonian
24.1 Monte
24.1.1 Monte
24.2 Patagonian Tablelands
24.2.1 Northern Patagonia
24.2.2 Southern Patagonia
24.2.3 Magellan Grasslands
25. Galapagos
Griffith, G.E., J.M. Omernik, and S.H. Azevedo. 1998. Ecological classification of the Western Hemisphere. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory, Corvallis, Oregon. 47p.
shapefile name
USEPA and USGS EROS Data Center
Internal feature number.
| Range | Value |
|---|---|
| Minimum | 0 |
| Maximum | 3545 |
ESRI
Feature geometry.
ESRI
remnant Area field from coverage
ESRI
Remnant perimeter field from coverage.
ESRI
remnant identifier from coverage
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remnant identifier from coverage
ESRI
Code for Level II Ecoregions of Central and South America
USEPA/USGS EROS Data Center
Code for Level II Ecoregions of Central and South America
USEPA/USGS EROS Data Center
Code for Level I Ecoregions of Central and South America
USEPA/USGS EROS Data Center
Length of feature
ESRI
Area of feature in internal units squared.
ESRI
Tests for integrity have not been performed.
Features represented have not been tested for completeness
Data were collected using methods that have unknown accuracy (EPA National Geospatial Data Policy [NGDP] Accuracy Tier 10). For more information, please see EPA's NGDP at http://epa.gov/geospatial/policies.html)
Ecoregions delineated on 1:5,000,000 base maps are digitized.
Topology established, errors checked and repaired as needed.
Attributes added.
QA.
Coverage projected from Bipolar Oblique to Albers.
Coverage converted to file geodatase and shapefile.
Metadata.
Downloadable Data
Although these data have been processed successfully on a computer system at the Environmental Protection Agency, no warranty expressed or implied is made regarding the accuracy or utility of the data on any other system or for general or scientific purposes, nor shall the act of distribution constitute any such warranty. It is also strongly recommended that careful attention be paid to the contents of the metadata file associated with these data to evaluate data set limitations, restrictions or intended use. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency shall not be held liable for improper or incorrect use of the data described and/or contained herein.
http://www.epa.gov/nheerl/
200 S.W. 35th Street
http://www.epa.gov/nheerl/
200 S.W. 35th Street