The Tumbes–Piura dry forests (NT0232) is an arid tropical ecoregion along the Pacific coasts of southern Ecuador and northern Peru.
The ecoregion contains many endemic species of flora and birds adapted to the short wet season followed by a long dry season.
Threats include extraction of wood for fuel or furniture, and capture of wild birds for sale.
Location
The Tumbes–Piura dry forests ecoregion has an area of 4,118,081 hectares (10,176,000 acres).[1]
The northern tip is in the southern coastal plain of Ecuador, while most of the ecoregion is in the northwestern coastal plain of Peru.
It covers all or part of the regions of Tumbes, Piura, Lambayeque and Cajamarca in northern Peru.[2]
Further north the similar Ecuadorian dry forests extend along the coast of central Ecuador.[3]
The Andes rise to the east.[1]
The terrain includes coastal lowlands, low undulating hills and the foothills of the Andes.[1]
The soils in the lower regions are mostly sand and clay formed during the recent Holocene epoch.
Higher up the soils are made of Precambrian amphibolites, Paleozoic granites, Devonian quartzites and black slate, and Carboniferous dark limestone, sandstone and lutites.
The main rivers, which mostly rise in Ecuador and flow throughout the year, are the Guayas, Zarumilla, Tumbes, Piura and Chira rivers.
Other streams are seasonal, flowing only in the rainy season.[2]
Climate
The climate is dry.[1]
The Köppen climate classification is "BWh": arid; desert; hot arid.[5]
Average annual temperature is 24 to 27 °C (75 to 81 °F).[2]
At a sample location at coordinates 5°15′S80°15′W / 5.25°S 80.25°W / -5.25; -80.25 mean annual temperature is just under 24 °C (75 °F), with average maximum of 30 °C (86 °F) and minimum of 18 °C (64 °F).
Mean monthly temperatures range from 21.6 °C (70.9 °F) in July–August to 26.9 °C (80.4 °F) in February–March.[5]
There is a rainy season from January to March and a marked dry season.
Typical annual rainfall is 100 to 500 millimetres (3.9 to 19.7 in).[2]
The El Niño–Southern Oscillation is a major event in the region, when rainfall increases and thousands of plants species germinate, providing food for many animal species.[2]
The ceibal forest mainly holds the endemic Ceiba trischistandra.
The chaparral is mainly made up of shrubs such as papelillo (Bouganvillea species), cacti and the overo (Cordia lutea).
The area is rich in mesquite (Prosopis genus), which capture and fix nitrogen in their roots, enriching the soil and assisting other species.
The algarrobal is mainly composed of algarrobo (Prosopis genus).[2]
The World Wildlife Foundation gives the ecoregion a status of "Critical/Endangered".[2]
In the past, the ecoregion suffered from extract of selected fauna and flora.
This included capture of parrots and parakeets for sale as pets, hunting some mammals and reptiles for food, and extraction of wood for firewood, charcoal and timber.
As of 2000 some recent improvements had been observed, in part due to El Niño effects and in part to establishment of the Cerros de Amotape National Park.
The park management and other groups were working with communities to find ways to maintain biodiversity.[2]
Protected areas also include the Reserva del Noroeste biosphere reserve.[1]