The Sichuan Basin evergreen broadleaf forests are a critically endangered WWF ecoregion.[1] The ecoregion occupies the Sichuan Basin in China and covers an area of 9,816,054 ha (24,256,000 acres).[2] The broadleaf forest habitat once covered the Sichuan Basin, but today is limited to mountains and preserved temple grounds in the basin and around the basin's rim. An especially well-preserved example of remaining forest exists on Mount Emei at the western edge of the Sichuan Basin. The original forests are thought to have been made up of subtropical oaks, laurels, and Schima. Much of the remaining Sichuan Basin has been converted to anthropogenic agricultural use in the last 5,000 years.[1]
Sichuan Basin evergreen broadleaf forests | |
---|---|
Ecology | |
Realm | Palearctic |
Biome | Temperate broadleaf and mixed forests |
Geography | |
Country | China |
Fauna
editEndangered and critically endangered animal species that have traditionally inhabited the Sichuan Basin evergreen broadleaf forests include:[3]
Amphibians
Birds
- Baer's pochard
- Far Eastern curlew
- Oriental stork
- Scaly-sided merganser
- Sichuan partridge
- Silver oriole
- Yellow-breasted bunting
Mammals
References
edit- ^ a b "Eastern Asia: Southern China". World Wide Fund for Nature. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
- ^ "Sichuan Basin evergreen broadleaf forests". Global Species. Myers Enterprises II. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
- ^ "Sichuan Basin evergreen broadleaf forests All Endangered". Global Species. Myers Enterprises II. Retrieved 18 July 2017.