email a friend
printable version
s006
South Mexican karst forests (secondary area)
Country/Territory Mexico
Area
Altitude  
Priority
Habitat loss
Knowledge


General characteristics 

This Mexican Secondary Area is found between Crdoba town in Veracruz state and Cerro Oro in northern Oaxaca, and is characterized by steep hill country of karst limestone outcrops, which are covered in semi-deciduous and evergreen forest (see map, p.112). The area embraces the range of Sumichrast's Wren Hylorchilus sumichrasti, a cryptic species that espends the majority of its time at or near ground-level, always in closed-canopy forest, foraging in and around cracks and crevices of rocks and vegetation on the limestone outcrops. It is closely related to Navas Wren H. navai (see EBA 013 for discussion of taxonomy). H. sumichrasti, is considered threatened (classified as Vulnerable) owing to its tiny range and vulnerability to habitat destruction. Although these forested limestone outcrops are poor for cultivation compared with the surrounding flatter land, and thus have been spared from complete conversion to agriculture, they are threatened by expansion of limestone-quarrying, and in many areas the forest has an understorey of coffee plants. It appears that it is the limestone outcrops rather than the primary forest understorey that are essential for the wren, as it has been found in good numbers in shaded coffee plantations on limestone around Crdoba. Some of the species' habitat has undoubtedly been lost to the extensive Presa Miguel Alemn reservoir in northern Oaxaca, as birds have been recorded on some of the small islands created by the dam (Collar et al. 1992). There are currently no protected areas within this Secondary Area.

Species IUCN Category
Sumichrast's Wren (Hylorchilus sumichrasti)  NT 

Important Bird Areas (IBAs)

IBA Code Site Name Country
MX011  Mountain Nort  Mexico 
MX015  mountain of Zongolica  Mexico 
MX192  Hill of Gold  Mexico 
MX202  Prey Temascal  Mexico 

Recommended citation  BirdLife International (2013) Endemic Bird Area factsheet: South Mexican karst forests. Downloaded from http://www.birdlife.org on 21/05/2013

To provide new information to update this factsheet or to correct any errors, please email BirdLife