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Upper Amazon-Napo lowlands
Country/Territory Brazil,Colombia,Ecuador,Peru
Area 130,000 
Altitude 0 - 600m  
Priority urgent 
Habitat loss moderate 
Knowledge incomplete 


General characteristics 

The upper Amazon-Napo lowlands cover a vast area of eastern Ecuador (Napo and Pastaza states), northern Peru (Amazonas, Loreto and San Martn departments), westernmost Amazonas state of Brazil and the southern border area of Colombia. The area is centred on the lowland and foothill forests of the upper Putumayo river, the middle and upper Napo, the Maran (including the Pastaza and Huallaga rivers), the Ucayali (and possibly the Javar), and the Amazonas drainages, generally west of the confluence of the Putumayo and Amazonas, and primarily from the lowlands up to 600m. The area is characterized by high rainfall (which is relatively constant year-round), complex topography and soils, and vast meandering river systems that create habitat mosaics. This ecosystem is extraordinarily diverse and comprises primary humid forest, some of which is seasonally inundated (vrzea) forest, with other areas more characteristic of nutrient-poor white-sand forest.

Restricted-range species 

All the EBA's restricted-range species occur in the humid lowland forest (either terra firme or vrzea), or within more open areas of secondary vegetation and woodland. Within the EBA there are a number of interesting distributional patterns. Only two species are found on the Amazonas and Ucayali rivers: Myrmoborus melanurus occurs only on these two rivers, and Leucippus chlorocercus is present also on the Napo and Maran, but both are found exclusively along the river systems or on river islands, either in riverine or vrzea forest. Thamnophilus praecox is apparently confined to seasonally flooded (blackwater) vrzea forest (R.S. Ridgely in litt. 1991), and it has been suggested that Heterocercus aurantiivertex is restricted to areas of riverine white-sand forest (T.A. Parker in litt. 1991).

The species in this area are the most restricted of a larger suite of birds that are variously distributed throughout the river islands and riverine forest of the Amazon basin rivers. Many of the endemics appear to be confined to riverine situations (Meyer de Schauensee 1982, Hilty and Brown 1986, Ridgely and Tudor 1989), although bird distributions in this part of the Amazon basin are very poorly known. This is perhaps best demonstrated by Pithys castanea, which is still known only from the type-specimen collected in 1937 along the upper Pastaza (Collar et al. 1992); by Thamnophilus praecox, which until 1991 (when it was found to be quite common) was only known from the type-specimen taken in 1926 on the Napo in Ecuador (R.S. Ridgely in litt. 1991); and by Myrmoborus melanurus, which is known from just a few localities south of the Amazonas and east of the Ucayali (Ridgely and Tudor 1994). To help better define the EBA, further work is needed to determine the true distributions and ecology of the endemics in this area.

White-lored Antpitta Hylopezus fulviventris has recently been considered as distinct from H. dives by Ridgely and Tudor (1994), and is endemic to the northern portion of the EBA.

Species IUCN Category
Olive-spotted Hummingbird (Leucippus chlorocercus)  LC 
Brown Nunlet (Nonnula brunnea)  LC 
Orange-crested Manakin (Heterocercus aurantiivertex)  LC 
Olive-chested Flycatcher (Myiophobus cryptoxanthus)  LC 
Golden-winged Tody-flycatcher (Poecilotriccus calopterus)  LC 
Cocha Antshrike (Thamnophilus praecox)  NT 
Black-tailed Antbird (Myrmoborus melanurus)  VU 
White-masked Antbird (Pithys castaneus)  NT 
Ochre-striped Antpitta (Grallaria dignissima)  LC 
Ecuadorian Cacique (Cacicus sclateri)  LC 

Important Bird Areas (IBAs)

IBA Code Site Name Country
  Cuenca del Río Pucacuro  Peru 
  Cueva de los Tayos  Ecuador 
  La Selva Lodge  Ecuador 
  Montalvo  Ecuador 
  Ríos Tigre y Corrientes  Peru 
  Reserva Biológica Limoncocha  Ecuador 
  Sabalillo  Peru 
  UNIDA A CUENCA RÍO NANAY - Cuenca Alta Río Nanay  Peru 
  UNIDA A CUENCA RÍO NANAY - Zona Reservada Allpahuayo - Mishana  Peru 
  UNIDA A RÍO OROSA - Madreselva  Peru 
  UNIDA A RÍO OROSA - Paucarillo  Peru 
  Yarina Lodge  Ecuador 
  Zona Reservada Gueppí  Peru 
BR023  Mamirauá  Brazil 
BR026  Baixo Rio Javari  Brazil 
CO066  Serranía de los Churumbelos  Colombia 
CO083  Parque Nacional Natural Amacayacu  Colombia 
CO188  Riberas del Río Duda  Colombia 
CO199  Lagos de Yahuarcaca e Isla Ronda  Colombia 
EC048  Reserva Ecológica Cofán-Bermejo  Ecuador 
EC050  Parque Nacional Sumaco-Napo Galeras  Ecuador 
EC083  Cordillera del Cóndor  Ecuador 
EC084  Bosque Protector Alto Nangaritza  Ecuador 
EC091  Reserva de Producción Faunística Cuyabeno  Ecuador 
EC092  Bajo Napo  Ecuador 
EC093  Gran Yasuní  Ecuador 
EC094  Arajuno-Alto Napo  Ecuador 
EC095  Río Conambo-Bobonaza  Ecuador 
EC096  Territorio Achuar  Ecuador 
PE058  Abra Patricia - Alto Mayo  Peru 
PE104  Cordillera del Cóndor  Peru 
PE106  Morona  Peru 
PE107  Cuenca Río Nanay  Peru 
PE108  Reserva Nacional Pacaya Samiria  Peru 

Threats and conservation 

The forest in this region is reasonably intact (Forero 1989, Gentry 1989), although deforestation has been quite extensive in western Ecuador and parts of south-east Colombia, and the region is also under threat from oil exploration and extraction (L.M. Renjifo in litt. 1993), while associated road-building has caused degradation and fragmentation, and has accelerated these processes by facilitating further human colonization; virtually all of the Ecuadorian portion of the Napo is open for oil leasing. Border controversies between Ecuador and Peru have spurred further colonization in attempts to claim disputed territory (Dinerstein et al. 1995).

Due to the relatively good state of the forest in this region, none of the endemics is presently considered threatened solely from habitat destruction. Myrmoborus melanurus is threatened by virtue of its apparent rarity and small range within which it is poorly known, and it is particularly susceptible to any future habitat loss. Pithys castanea is considered Data Deficient due to an almost total lack of information (see above). Widespread threatened species in this region include the Wattled Curassow Crax globulosa (Vulnerable), which is suffering from the loss of its riverine habitat and from hunting pressure (Collar et al. 1992, 1994).

In Ecuador, typical lowland forest habitat is protected by the Yasun National Park, Limoncocha Biological Reserve and Cuyabeno Faunal Production Reserve (IUCN 1992a), with the private Zancudo Multiple-use Reserve also providing protection (R.S. Ridgely in litt. 1992). In Colombia, the only sizeable protected areas are Amacayacu and La Paya National Parks, with the Pacaya-Samiria National Reserve protecting a large area of forest between the Maran and Ucayali rivers in Peru (IUCN 1992a).

Recommended citation  BirdLife International (2013) Endemic Bird Area factsheet: Upper Amazon-Napo lowlands. Downloaded from http://www.birdlife.org on 23/05/2013

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