The Global 200 is the list of ecoregions identified by the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), the global conservation organization, as priorities for conservation. According to WWF, an ecoregion is defined as a "relatively large unit of land or water containing a characteristic set of natural communities that share a large majority of their species dynamics, and environmental conditions".[1][2][3] For example, based on their levels of endemism, Madagascar gets multiple listings, ancient Lake Baikal gets one, and the North American Great Lakes get none.
The WWF assigns a conservation status to each ecoregion in the Global 200: critical or endangered; vulnerable; and relatively stable or intact. Over half of the ecoregions in the Global 200 are rated endangered.
Background
editThe WWF has identified 867 terrestrial ecoregions across the Earth's land surface, as well as freshwater and marine ecoregions. The goal of this classification system is to ensure that the full range of ecosystems will be represented in regional conservation and development strategies. Of these ecoregions, the WWF selected the Global 200 as the ecoregions most crucial to the conservation of global biodiversity. The Global 200 list actually contains 238 ecoregions, made up of 142 terrestrial, 53 freshwater, and 43 marine ecoregions.
Conservationists interested in preserving biodiversity have generally focused on the preservation of tropical moist broadleaf forests (commonly known as tropical rainforests) because it is estimated that they harbor one half of Earth's species. On the other hand, the WWF determined that a more comprehensive strategy for conserving global biodiversity should also consider the other half of species, as well as the ecosystems that support them.
Several habitats, such as Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub biome, were determined to be more threatened than tropical rain forests, and therefore require concerted conservation action. WWF maintains that "although conservation action typically takes place at the country level, patterns of biodiversity and ecological processes (e.g., migration) do not conform to political boundaries", which is why ecoregion-based conservation strategies are deemed essential.
Classification
editHistorically, zoologists and botanists have developed various classification systems that take into account the world's plant and animal communities. Two of the worldwide classification systems most commonly used today were summarized by Miklos Udvardy in 1975.
The Earth's land surface can be divided into eight biogeographic realms (formerly called kingdoms, and which the BBC calls ecozones) that represent the major terrestrial communities of animals and plants, and are a synthesis of previous systems of floristic provinces and faunal regions. The biome system classifies the world into ecosystem types (i.e. forests, grasslands, etc.) based on climate and vegetation. Each biogeographical realm contains multiple biomes, and biomes occur across several biogeographical realms. A system of biogeographical provinces was developed to identify specific geographic areas in each biogeographical realm that were of a consistent biome type, and shared distinct plant and animal communities. The WWF system represents a further refinement of the system of biomes (which the WWF calls "major habitat types"), biogeographical realms, and biogeographical provinces (the WWF scheme divides most biogeographical provinces into multiple smaller ecoregions).
Selection process
editBased on a comprehensive list of ecoregions, The Global 200 includes all major habitat types (biomes), all ecosystem types, and species from every major habitat type. It focuses on each major habitat type of every continent (such as tropical forests or coral reefs). It uses ecoregions as the unit of scale for comparison. WWF say ecoregions could be considered as conservation units at regional scale because they meet similar biological communities.
Some ecoregions were selected over other ecoregions of the same major habitat type (biome) or realm. Selection of the Global 200 relied on extensive studies of 19 terrestrial, freshwater, and marine major habitat types. Selection of the ecoregions was based on analyses of species richness, species endemism, unique higher taxa, unusual ecological or evolutionary phenomena, and global rarity of major habitat type.
Global 200 ecoregion list is most helpful to conservation efforts at a regional scale: local deforestation, destruction of swamp habitats, degradation of soils, etc. However, certain phenomena, such as bird or whale migration, depend on more complex parameters not used to define the current database, such as atmospheric currents and dynamic pelagic ecosystems. These would require gathering more information, and co-ordination of efforts between multiple ecoregions. However, the Global 200 ecoregions can help these efforts by identifying habitat sites and resting sites for migratory animals. It may also help identify the origin of invasive species, and offer insights for slowing down or stopping their intrusion.
Global 200: Terrestrial
edit- Guinean moist forests
- AT0111 Eastern Guinean forests
- AT0114 Guinean montane forests
- AT0130 Western Guinean lowland forests
- Congolian coastal forests[4]
- Cameroon Highlands forests
- Northeastern Congolian lowland forests
- Central Congo Basin Moist Forests
- Western Congo Basin Moist Forests
- Albertine Rift montane forests
- East African Coastal Forests
- Eastern Arc Montane Forests (Kenya, Tanzania)
- AT0109 Eastern Arc forests
- Madagascar lowlands and subhumid forests
- AT0117 Madagascar lowland forests
- AT0118 Madagascar subhumid forests
- Seychelles and Mascarene Islands moist forests
- AT0113 Granitic Seychelles forests
- AT0120 Mascarene forests
- Sulawesi moist forests
- AA0123 Sulawesi lowland rain forests
- AA0124 Sulawesi montane rain forests
- Moluccas moist forests (Indonesia)
- AA0106 Halmahera rain forests
- AA0118 Seram rain forests
- Southern New Guinea lowland forests
- New Guinea montane forests
- Solomons–Vanuatu–Bismarck moist forests
- Queensland tropical rain forests
- New Caledonia moist forests
- AA0113 New Caledonia rain forests
- Lord Howe–Norfolk Islands forests
- South Western Ghats montane rain forests and moist deciduous forests
- Sri Lanka moist forests
- IM0154 Sri Lanka lowland rain forests
- IM0155 Sri Lanka montane rain forests
- Northern Indochina Subtropical moist forests
- Southeast China-Hainan moist forests
- Taiwan montane forests
- Annamite Range moist forests (Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam)
- Sumatran Islands lowland and montane forests
- IM0157 Sumatran freshwater swamp forests
- IM0158 Sumatran lowland rain forests
- IM0159 Sumatran montane rain forests
- IM0160 Sumatran peat swamp forests
- Philippines moist forests
- IM0114 Greater Negros–Panay rain forests
- IM0122 Luzon montane rain forests
- IM0123 Luzon rain forests
- IM0128 Mindanao montane rain forests
- IM0129 Mindanao–Eastern Visayas rain forests
- IM0130 Mindoro rain forests
- IM0156 Sulu Archipelago rain forests
- Palawan moist forests
- IM0143 Palawan rain forests
- Kayah-Karen/Tenasserim moist forests
- Peninsular Malaysian lowland and montane forests
- Borneo lowland and montane forests
- IM0102 Borneo lowland rain forests
- IM0103 Borneo montane rain forests
- IM0104 Borneo peat swamp forests
- Nansei Shoto Archipelago forests (Japan)
- Eastern Deccan Plateau moist forests (India)
- Naga-Manupuri-Chin hills moist forests (Bangladesh, India, Myanmar)
- Cardamom Mountains moist forests
- Western Java montane forests
- Maldives–Lakshadweep–Chagos Archipelago tropical moist forests
- Greater Antillean moist forests
- NT0120 Cuban moist forests
- NT0127 Hispaniolan moist forests
- NT0131 Jamaican moist forests
- NT0155 Puerto Rican moist forests
- Talamancan-Isthmian Pacific forests
- NT0167 Talamancan montane forests
- Choco–Darien moist forests
- NT0115 Chocó–Darién moist forests
- Northern Andean montane forests
- Coastal Venezuela montane forests
- NT0147 Orinoco Delta swamp forests
- NT0169 Tepuis
- NT0171 Trinidad and Tobago moist forests
- Guianan moist forests
- NT0125 Guianan moist forests
- Napo moist forests
- NT0142 Napo moist forests
- Rio Negro - Juruá moist forests
- NT0132 Japurá–Solimões–Negro moist forests
- NT0133 Juruá–Purus moist forests
- NT0158 Rio Negro campinarana
- Guayana Highlands moist forests
- Central Andean yungas
- NT0105 Bolivian Yungas
- NT0153 Peruvian Yungas
- Southwestern Amazonian moist forests
- Atlantic forests
- NT0103 Bahia coastal forests
- NT0151 Pernambuco coastal forests
- NT0160 Serra do Mar coastal forests
- South Pacific Islands forests (American Samoa - United States, Cook Islands - New Zealand, Fiji, French Polynesia - France, Niue - New Zealand, Samoa, Tonga, Wallis and Futuna Islands - France)
- Hawaii moist forests
Afrotropic
edit- Madagascar dry deciduous forests
Australasia
edit- Nusa Tenggara Dry Forests (Indonesia)
- AA0201 Lesser Sundas deciduous forests
- AA0203 Sumba deciduous forests
- AA0204 Timor and Wetar deciduous forests
- New Caledonia dry forests
- AA0202 New Caledonia dry forests
Indomalaya
edit- Indochina dry forests
- Chhota - Nagpur dry forests
Neotropic
edit- Mexican dry forests
- NT0204 Bajio dry forests
- NT0205 Balsas dry forests
- NT0227 Sierra de la Laguna dry forests
- Tumbesian - Andean valleys dry forests (Colombia, Ecuador, Peru)
- NT0201 Apure–Villavicencio dry forests
- NT0214 Ecuadorian dry forests
- NT0221 Magdalena Valley dry forests
- NT0223 Marañón dry forests
- NT0232 Tumbes–Piura dry forests
- Chiquitano dry forests
- NT0212 Chiquitano dry forests
- Atlantic dry forests
- NT0202 Atlantic dry forests
Oceania
edit- Hawaii dry forests
- Sierra Madre Oriental and Occidental pine-oak forests
Neotropic
edit- Greater Antillean pine forests
- NT0304 Cuban pine forests
- NT0305 Hispaniolan pine forests
- Mesoamerican pine–oak forests (El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua)
Australasia
edit- Eastern Australia temperate forests
- Tasmanian temperate rain forests
- New Zealand temperate forests
- AA0403 Fiordland temperate forests
- AA0404 Nelson Coast temperate forests
- AA0405 Northland temperate forests
- AA0406 Northland temperate kauri forests
- AA0407 Rakiura Island temperate forests
- AA0410 Southland temperate forests
- AA0414 Westland temperate forests
Indomalaya
edit- Eastern Himalayan broadleaf and conifer forests
- Western Himalayan temperate forests
Nearctic
edit- Appalachian and mixed mesophytic forests
Neotropic
edit- Southwest China temperate forests
- Russian Far East temperate forests
- PA0426 Manchurian mixed forests
- PA0443 Ussuri broadleaf and mixed forests
Nearctic
edit- Pacific temperate rain forests
- NA0510 Central Pacific coastal forests
- NA0512 Eastern Cascades forests
- NA0520 Northern Pacific coastal forests
- Klamath - Siskiyou forests
- NA0516 Klamath-Siskiyou forests
- Sierra Nevada forests
- NA0527 Sierra Nevada forests
- Southeastern coniferous and broadleaf forests
- NA0529 Southeastern conifer forests
Palearctic
edit- European - Mediterranean montane mixed forests
- Caucasus-Anatolian-Hyrcanian temperate forest (Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Georgia, Iran, Russia, Turkey, Turkmenistan)
- Altai - Sayan montane forests
- Hengduan Shan coniferous forests
Nearctic
edit- Muskwa / Slave Lake boreal forests
- NA0610 Muskwa–Slave Lake forests
- Canadian Boreal Forests
Palearctic
edit- Ural Mountains taiga
- East Siberian taiga
- PA0601 East Siberian taiga
- Kamchatka taiga and grasslands
Afrotropic
edit- Horn of Africa acacia savannas
- East African acacia savannas
- Central and Eastern miombo woodlands
- AT0704 Central Zambezian miombo woodlands
- AT0706 Eastern miombo woodlands
- Sudanian savannas
- AT0705 East Sudanian savanna
- AT0722 West Sudanian savanna
Australasia
edit- Northern Australia and Trans-Fly savannas
- AA0701 Arnhem Land tropical savanna
- AA0702 Brigalow tropical savanna
- AA0703 Cape York tropical savanna
- AA0704 Carpentaria tropical savanna
- AA0705 Einasleigh upland savanna
- AA0706 Kimberley tropical savanna
- AA0708 Trans-Fly savanna and grasslands
Indomalaya
edit- Terai-Duar savannas and grasslands
Neotropic
editNearctic
edit- Northern prairie
- NA0810 Northern mixed grasslands
- NA0811 Northern short grasslands
- NA0812 Northern tall grasslands
Neotropic
edit- Patagonian steppe
- NT0805 Patagonian steppe
Palearctic
edit- Daurian steppe
- PA0804 Daurian forest steppe
Afrotropic
edit- Sudd - Sahelian flooded grasslands and savannas (Cameroon, Chad, Ethiopia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Sudan, Uganda)
- AT0903 Inner Niger Delta flooded savanna
- AT0904 Lake Chad flooded savanna
- AT0905 Saharan flooded grasslands
- Zambezian flooded savannas
- AT0907 Zambezian flooded grasslands
Indomalaya
edit- Rann of Kutch flooded grasslands
Neotropic
edit- Everglades flooded grasslands
- NT0904 Everglades
- Pantanal flooded savannas
- NT0907 Pantanal
Afrotropic
edit- Ethiopian Highlands
- Southern Rift montane woodlands
- East African moorlands
- Drakensberg montane shrublands and woodlands
Australasian
edit- New Guinea Central Range subalpine grasslands
Indomalaya
edit- Kinabalu montane shrublands
Neotropic
edit- Northern Andean páramo
- NT1006 Northern Andean páramo
- Central Andean dry puna
- NT1001 Central Andean dry puna
Palearctic
edit- Tibetan Plateau steppe
- Middle Asian montane steppe and woodlands (Afghanistan, China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan)
- Eastern Himalayan alpine meadows
- Alaskan North Slope coastal tundra (Canada, United States)
- NA1103 Arctic coastal tundra
- NA1104 Arctic foothills tundra
- NA1108 Brooks–British Range tundra
- Canadian low arctic tundra (Canada)
- NA1114 Low Arctic tundra
- NA1116 Ogilvie–MacKenzie alpine tundra
- NA1118 Torngat Mountain tundra
- Fenno - Scandia alpine tundra and taiga (Finland, Norway, Russia, Sweden)
- Taimyr and Siberian coastal tundra
- Chukote coastal tundra (Russia)
- PA1104 Chukchi Peninsula tundra
Afrotropic
editAustralasia
edit- Southwestern Australia forests and scrub
- AA1201 Coolgardie woodlands
- AA1202 Esperance mallee
- AA1209 Southwest Australia savanna
- AA1210 Southwest Australia woodlands
- Southern Australia mallee and woodlands
- AA1203 Eyre and York mallee
- AA1206 Mount Lofty woodlands
- AA1208 Naracoorte woodlands
Nearctic
editNeotropic
edit- Chilean Matorral
- NT1201 Chilean Matorral
Palearctic
editAfrotropic
edit- Namib - Karoo - Kaokoveld deserts (Angola, Namibia, South Africa)
- AT1310 Kaokoveld desert
- AT1314 Nama Karoo
- AT1315 Namib desert
- AT1322 Succulent Karoo
- Madagascar spiny thicket
- AT1311 Madagascar spiny thickets
- Socotra Island desert (Yemen)
- Arabian Highland woodlands and shrublands (Oman, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Yemen)
Australasia
edit- Carnavon xeric scrub
- AA1301 Carnarvon xeric shrublands
- Great Sandy - Tanami deserts
- AA1304 Great Sandy-Tanami desert
Nearctic
edit- Sonoran - Baja deserts
- NA1301 Baja California desert
- NA1310 Sonoran Desert
- Chihuahuan - Tehuacan deserts
- NA1303 Chihuahuan Desert
Neotropic
edit- Galápagos Islands scrub
- Atacama - Sechura deserts
- NT1303 Atacama Desert
- NT1315 Sechura Desert
- Brazilian Atlantic Dry Forests
- NT1304 Caatinga
Palearctic
edit- Central Asian deserts (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan)
- PA1310 Central Asian northern desert
- PA1312 Central Asian southern desert
Afrotropic
edit- East African mangroves
- AT1402 East African mangroves
- Gulf of Guinea mangroves
- AT1403 Guinean mangroves
- Madagascar mangroves
- AT1404 Madagascar mangroves
Australasia
edit- New Guinea mangroves
- AA1401 New Guinea mangroves
Indomalaya
edit- Greater Sundas mangroves
- IM1405 Sunda Shelf mangroves
- Sundarbans mangroves
- IM1406 Sundarbans mangroves
Nearctic
edit- Northwest Mexican coast mangroves
Neotropic
edit- Guianan - Amazon mangroves
- NT1401 Alvarado mangroves
- NT1402 Amapá mangroves
- NT1406 Belizean reef mangroves
- NT1411 Guianan mangroves
- NT1427 Pará mangroves
- Panama Bight mangroves
- NT1414 Gulf of Panama mangroves
- NT1409 Esmeraldas–Pacific Colombia mangroves
- NT1418 Manabí mangroves
- NT1413 Gulf of Guayaquil–Tumbes mangroves
Global 200: Freshwater ecoregions
editLarge rivers
editAfrotropic
edit- Congo River and flooded forests (Angola, Democratic Republic of Congo, Republic of Congo)
Indomalaya
edit- Mekong River (Cambodia, China, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam)
Nearctic
edit- Colorado River (Mexico, United States)
- Lower Mississippi River (United States)
Neotropic
edit- Amazon River and flooded forests (Brazil, Colombia, Peru)
- Orinoco River and flooded forests (Brazil, Colombia, Venezuela)
Palearctic
edit- Yangtze River and lakes (China)
Large river headwaters
editAfrotropic
edit- Congo basin piedmont rivers and streams (Angola, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Republic of Congo, Sudan)
Nearctic
edit- Mississippi piedmont rivers and streams (United States)
Neotropic
edit- Upper Amazon rivers and streams (Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana (France), Guyana, Peru, Suriname, Venezuela)
- Upper Paraná rivers and streams (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay)
- Brazilian Shield Amazonian rivers and streams (Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay)
Large river deltas
editAfrotropic
editIndomalaya
edit- Indus River Delta (India, Pakistan)
Palearctic
edit- Volga River Delta (Kazakhstan, Russia)
- Mesopotamian delta and marshes (Iran, Iraq, Kuwait)
- Danube River delta (Bulgaria, Moldova, Romania, Ukraine, Yugoslavia)
- Lena River delta (Russia)
Small rivers
editAfrotropic
edit- Upper Guinea rivers and streams (Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone)
- Madagascar freshwater (Madagascar)
- Gulf of Guinea rivers and streams (Angola, Cameroon, Democratic Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Nigeria, Republic of Congo)
- Cape rivers and streams (South Africa)
Australasia
edit- New Guinea rivers and streams (Indonesia, Papua New Guinea)
- New Caledonia rivers and streams (New Caledonia)
- Kimberley rivers and streams (Australia)
- Southwest Australia rivers and streams (Australia)
- Eastern Australia rivers and streams (Australia)
Indomalaya
edit- Xi Jiang rivers and streams (China, Vietnam)
- Western Ghats Rivers and Streams (India)
- Southwestern Sri Lanka rivers and streams (Sri Lanka)
- Salween River (China, Myanmar, Thailand)
- Sundaland rivers and swamps (Brunei, Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore)
Nearctic
edit- Southeastern rivers and streams (United States)
- Pacific Northwest coastal rivers and streams (United States)
- Gulf of Alaska coastal rivers and streams (Canada, United States)
Neotropic
edit- Guianan freshwater (Brazil, French Guiana, Guyana, Suriname, Venezuela)
- Greater Antillean freshwater (Cuba, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Puerto Rico)
Palearctic
edit- Balkan rivers and streams (Albania, Bosnia and Herzogovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Macedonia, Turkey, Yugoslavia)
- Russian Far East rivers and wetlands (China, Mongolia, Russia)
Large lakes
editAfrotropic
edit- Rift Valley lakes (Burundi, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia)
Neotropic
edit- High Andean lakes (Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Peru)
Palearctic
edit- Lake Baikal (Russia)
- Lake Biwa (Japan)
Small lakes
editAfrotropic
edit- Cameroon crater lakes (Cameroon)
Australasia
editIndomalaya
editNeotropic
edit- Mexican highland lakes (Mexico)
Xeric basins
editAustralasia
edit- Central Australian freshwater (Australia)
Nearctic
edit- Chihuahuan freshwater (Mexico, United States)
Palearctic
edit- Anatolian freshwater (Syria, Turkey)
Global 200 Marine ecoregions
editPolar
edit- Bering Sea (Canada, Russia, United States)
- Barents-Kara Sea (Norway, Russia)
Temperate shelves and seas
edit- Mediterranean (Albania, Algeria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Cyprus, Egypt, France, Greece, Israel, Italy, Lebanon, Libya, Malta, Monaco, Morocco, Serbia & Montenegro, Slovenia, Spain, Syria, Tunisia, Turkey)
- Northeast Atlantic Shelf Marine (Belgium, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Russia, Sweden, United Kingdom)
- Grand Banks (Canada, St. Pierre and Miquelon (France), United States)
- Chesapeake Bay (United States)
- Yellow Sea (China, North Korea, South Korea)
- Sea of Okhotsk (Japan, Russia)
- Patagonian Southwest Atlantic (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay)
- Southern Australian Marine (Australia)
- New Zealand Marine (New Zealand)
North Temperate Indo-Pacific
edit- California Current (Canada, Mexico, United States)
South Temperate Atlantic
edit- Benguela Current (Namibia, South Africa)
South Temperate Indo-Pacific
edit- Humboldt Current (Chile, Ecuador, Peru)
- Agulhas Current (Mozambique, South Africa)
Central Indo-Pacific
edit- Western Australian Marine (Australia)
Eastern Indo-Pacific
edit- Panama Bight (Colombia, Ecuador, Panama)
- Gulf of California (Mexico)
- Galápagos Marine (Ecuador)
Eastern Tropical Atlantic
edit- Canary Current (Canary Islands, Gambia, Guinea-Bissau, Mauritania, Morocco, Senegal, Western Sahara)
Central Indo-Pacific
edit- Nansei Shoto (Ryukyu Islands) (Japan)
- Sulu-Sulawesi Seas (Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines)
- Bismarck-Solomon Seas (Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands)
- Banda-Flores Sea (Indonesia)
- New Caledonia Barrier Reef (New Caledonia)
- Great Barrier Reef (Australia)
- Lord Howe-Norfolk Islands Marine (Australia)
- Palau Marine (Palau)
- Andaman Sea (Andaman and Nicobar Islands (India), Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand)
Eastern Indo-Pacific
edit- Tahitian Marine (Cook Islands, French Polynesia)
- Hawaiian Marine (Hawaii)
- Rapa Nui (Easter Island)
- Fiji Barrier Reef (Fiji)
Western Indo-Pacific
edit- Maldives, Chagos, and Lakshadweep atolls (Chagos Archipelago (United Kingdom), India, Maldives, Sri Lanka)
- Red Sea (Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Israel, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Yemen)
- Arabian Sea (Djibouti, Iran, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, United Arab Emirates, Yemen)
- East African Marine (Kenya, Mozambique, Somalia, Tanzania)
- West Madagascar Marine (Comoros, Madagascar, Mayotte and Iles Glorieuses (France), Seychelles)
Western Tropical Atlantic
edit- Mesoamerican Barrier Reef System (Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico)
- Greater Antillean Marine (Bahamas, Cayman Islands, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Turks and Caicos Islands, United States)
- Southern Caribbean Sea (Aruba, Colombia, Netherlands Antilles, Panama, Trinidad and Tobago, Venezuela)
- Northeast Brazil Shelf Marine (Brazil)
Global Priority Places
editWWF has identified 35 global priority places around the world (terrestrial, freshwater and marine) as either being home to irreplaceable and threatened biodiversity, or representing an opportunity to conserve the largest and most intact representative of their ecosystem.[5]
- African Rift Lakes Region - Include the 3 largest lakes in Africa: Victoria, Tanganyika and Malawi, as well as lakes Turkana, Albert, Edward, Kivu and others.
- Altai-Sayan Montane Forests - One of the last remaining untouched areas of the world
- Amazon Guianas - World's largest tropical rain forest and river basin with a mosaic of mountains, coniferous forests, steppe and alpine meadows.
- Amur-Heilong - Refuge for Amur leopard and tiger.
- Arctic Seas & Associated Boreal/Tundra - Protecting Arctic Environments
- Atlantic Forests - Forest stretches from the Atlantic coast of Brazil, south along the Brazilian Atlantic coastline and inland into northeast Argentina and eastern Paraguay.
- Borneo and Sumatra - Priceless forests harbor untold species
- Cerrado-Pantanal
- Chihuahuan Desert - Protecting the balance of a desert
- Chocó–Darién
- Coastal East Africa - Improving livelihoods by conserving nature
- Congo Basin - Protecting Africa's tropical forests
- Coral Triangle - Home to the world's most abundant variety of corals and sea life
- Eastern Himalayas - Empowering communities to protect sacred lands
- Fynbos
- The Galápagos - The world's most treasured islands
- Greater Black Sea Basin
- Lake Baikal
- Madagascar - Safeguarding one of Earth's most captivating islands
- Mediterranean Sea
- Mekong Complex - Protecting the river of life from source to sea
- Miombo woodlands
- Namib-Karoo-Kaokoveld
- New Guinea & Offshore Islands
- Northern Great Plains
- Orinoco River & Flooded Forests
- Southeastern Rivers and Streams
- Southern Chile - A land of ancient forests and abundant oceans
- Southern Ocean
- Southwest Australia
- Southwest Pacific
- Sumatra
- West Africa Marine
- Western Ghats
- Yangtze Basin - Sustaining a valley of life
Gallery
edit-
WWF Global 200 ecoregions.
-
WWF terrestrial ecoregions.
-
Map of the Amazon Basin. Urubamba - Ucayali River.
-
Lijiang City, Yunnan, China.
-
Hills of India.
-
Major endorheic basins of the world. Basins are shown in dark gray; major endorheic lakes are shown in black.
-
Terrestrial biomes classified by vegetation.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Olson, D. M. & E. Dinerstein. 1998. The Global 200: A representation approach to conserving the Earth's most biologically valuable ecoregions. Conservation Biol. 12:502–515.[1] Archived 2016-10-07 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ Olson, D. M., Dinerstein, E. 2002. The Global 200: Priority ecoregions for global conservation. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 89(2):199-224, [2] Archived 2016-05-13 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ The Nature Conservancy. 1997. Designing a geography of hope: guidelines for ecoregion-based conservation in The Nature Conservancy. The Nature Conservancy, Arlington, Virginia
- ^ "Congolian Coastal Forests - A Global Ecoregion". Archived from the original on 2017-01-11. Retrieved 2017-01-10.
- ^ "WWF's Strategic Plan for Conservation" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2020-08-05. Retrieved 2017-01-15.
External links
edit- Map of the Global 200
- Conservation status map of the global 200 Archived 2006-06-14 at the Wayback Machine
- List of the Global 200
- Map of Ecoregions
- Global Priority Places Archived 2018-05-04 at the Wayback Machine