Botanical garden of the Soconusco region and Orchidarium Santo Domingo

Mexico is considered one of the five megadiverse countries of the world with 12% of global biodiversity (CONABIO, 2017), and the southeast of the country connecting with the Mesoamerican biodiversity hotspot (Mittermeier, 2011). Within that scenario, Soconusco, in the extreme southeast of Mexico, includes one of the national priority regions for terrestrial biodiversity, the Tacaná-Boquerón corridor, which is the second most important region for orchid species richness in Mexico (Solano et al. 2016; Arriaga, 2000). The Soconusco region also coincides with all, or part of three Biosphere Reserves: Volcán Tacaná, La Encrucijada and El Triunfo. The rare, endangered cloud forest ecosystem amounted to approximately 2% of total forest cover in Mexico, but 50% of that area has now been lost to agriculture and human settlements etc. (CONABIO 2010). In Soconusco, the renowned coffee growing region coincided with, and largely replaced the cloud forest that is the preferred ecosystem for a disproportionately high number of orchid species (Kohler et al., 2006). For well over a century, many of those orchids, including several endemic species, coexisted with the traditional, shaded, coffee plantations at middle elevations (800 – 1,600m) (Toledo-Aceves, 2013; Cruz-Angón et al., 2009; Hietz, 2005) but these are now threatened by recent changes that promote full sun coffee, using ‘modern’ dwarf varieties and a range of chemical inputs. These changes rapidly provoke soil erosion, biodiversity depletion and outbreaks of pests and diseases. In most areas, there are now very few or no mature orchid plants to produce seeds for recolonization, and very few trees available for orchids and other epiphytes to colonize. Traditional, shaded coffee plantations were, and could still be, important repositories of the original biodiversity of the cloud forest ecosystem (Moguel and Toledo, 1999), including epiphytic plants (Damon, 2017; Espejo et al., 2005; Solis-Montero et al., 2005). A total of 325 orchid species have been recorded historically for the Soconusco region, however, extensive research, starting in the year 2000, led to the finding of 249 species of which more than 200 are now under cultivation in the collection, some of which are still awaiting identification. Others are monitored in known locations and so far have not been established in the collection, for reasons of climate, habitat, or extreme rarity. For example, a few species grow at such high elevations that they cannot be maintained within either of the two sites currently available. These data suggest that over 80 species are now possibly extinct in the Soconusco region.

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Main Author: Damon, Anne Ashby Doctora autora 2085
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:El Colegio de la Frontera Sur (México) Jardín Botánico Regional El Soconusco, Orquídeas, Especies en peligro de extinción, Colecciones de plantas, Artfrosur,
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:61525
record_format koha
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic El Colegio de la Frontera Sur (México) Jardín Botánico Regional El Soconusco
Orquídeas
Especies en peligro de extinción
Colecciones de plantas
Artfrosur
El Colegio de la Frontera Sur (México) Jardín Botánico Regional El Soconusco
Orquídeas
Especies en peligro de extinción
Colecciones de plantas
Artfrosur
spellingShingle El Colegio de la Frontera Sur (México) Jardín Botánico Regional El Soconusco
Orquídeas
Especies en peligro de extinción
Colecciones de plantas
Artfrosur
El Colegio de la Frontera Sur (México) Jardín Botánico Regional El Soconusco
Orquídeas
Especies en peligro de extinción
Colecciones de plantas
Artfrosur
Damon, Anne Ashby Doctora autora 2085
Botanical garden of the Soconusco region and Orchidarium Santo Domingo
description Mexico is considered one of the five megadiverse countries of the world with 12% of global biodiversity (CONABIO, 2017), and the southeast of the country connecting with the Mesoamerican biodiversity hotspot (Mittermeier, 2011). Within that scenario, Soconusco, in the extreme southeast of Mexico, includes one of the national priority regions for terrestrial biodiversity, the Tacaná-Boquerón corridor, which is the second most important region for orchid species richness in Mexico (Solano et al. 2016; Arriaga, 2000). The Soconusco region also coincides with all, or part of three Biosphere Reserves: Volcán Tacaná, La Encrucijada and El Triunfo. The rare, endangered cloud forest ecosystem amounted to approximately 2% of total forest cover in Mexico, but 50% of that area has now been lost to agriculture and human settlements etc. (CONABIO 2010). In Soconusco, the renowned coffee growing region coincided with, and largely replaced the cloud forest that is the preferred ecosystem for a disproportionately high number of orchid species (Kohler et al., 2006). For well over a century, many of those orchids, including several endemic species, coexisted with the traditional, shaded, coffee plantations at middle elevations (800 – 1,600m) (Toledo-Aceves, 2013; Cruz-Angón et al., 2009; Hietz, 2005) but these are now threatened by recent changes that promote full sun coffee, using ‘modern’ dwarf varieties and a range of chemical inputs. These changes rapidly provoke soil erosion, biodiversity depletion and outbreaks of pests and diseases. In most areas, there are now very few or no mature orchid plants to produce seeds for recolonization, and very few trees available for orchids and other epiphytes to colonize. Traditional, shaded coffee plantations were, and could still be, important repositories of the original biodiversity of the cloud forest ecosystem (Moguel and Toledo, 1999), including epiphytic plants (Damon, 2017; Espejo et al., 2005; Solis-Montero et al., 2005). A total of 325 orchid species have been recorded historically for the Soconusco region, however, extensive research, starting in the year 2000, led to the finding of 249 species of which more than 200 are now under cultivation in the collection, some of which are still awaiting identification. Others are monitored in known locations and so far have not been established in the collection, for reasons of climate, habitat, or extreme rarity. For example, a few species grow at such high elevations that they cannot be maintained within either of the two sites currently available. These data suggest that over 80 species are now possibly extinct in the Soconusco region.
format Texto
topic_facet El Colegio de la Frontera Sur (México) Jardín Botánico Regional El Soconusco
Orquídeas
Especies en peligro de extinción
Colecciones de plantas
Artfrosur
author Damon, Anne Ashby Doctora autora 2085
author_facet Damon, Anne Ashby Doctora autora 2085
author_sort Damon, Anne Ashby Doctora autora 2085
title Botanical garden of the Soconusco region and Orchidarium Santo Domingo
title_short Botanical garden of the Soconusco region and Orchidarium Santo Domingo
title_full Botanical garden of the Soconusco region and Orchidarium Santo Domingo
title_fullStr Botanical garden of the Soconusco region and Orchidarium Santo Domingo
title_full_unstemmed Botanical garden of the Soconusco region and Orchidarium Santo Domingo
title_sort botanical garden of the soconusco region and orchidarium santo domingo
work_keys_str_mv AT damonanneashbydoctoraautora2085 botanicalgardenofthesoconuscoregionandorchidariumsantodomingo
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:615252024-03-12T12:29:43ZBotanical garden of the Soconusco region and Orchidarium Santo Domingo Damon, Anne Ashby Doctora autora 2085 textengMexico is considered one of the five megadiverse countries of the world with 12% of global biodiversity (CONABIO, 2017), and the southeast of the country connecting with the Mesoamerican biodiversity hotspot (Mittermeier, 2011). Within that scenario, Soconusco, in the extreme southeast of Mexico, includes one of the national priority regions for terrestrial biodiversity, the Tacaná-Boquerón corridor, which is the second most important region for orchid species richness in Mexico (Solano et al. 2016; Arriaga, 2000). The Soconusco region also coincides with all, or part of three Biosphere Reserves: Volcán Tacaná, La Encrucijada and El Triunfo. The rare, endangered cloud forest ecosystem amounted to approximately 2% of total forest cover in Mexico, but 50% of that area has now been lost to agriculture and human settlements etc. (CONABIO 2010). In Soconusco, the renowned coffee growing region coincided with, and largely replaced the cloud forest that is the preferred ecosystem for a disproportionately high number of orchid species (Kohler et al., 2006). For well over a century, many of those orchids, including several endemic species, coexisted with the traditional, shaded, coffee plantations at middle elevations (800 – 1,600m) (Toledo-Aceves, 2013; Cruz-Angón et al., 2009; Hietz, 2005) but these are now threatened by recent changes that promote full sun coffee, using ‘modern’ dwarf varieties and a range of chemical inputs. These changes rapidly provoke soil erosion, biodiversity depletion and outbreaks of pests and diseases. In most areas, there are now very few or no mature orchid plants to produce seeds for recolonization, and very few trees available for orchids and other epiphytes to colonize. Traditional, shaded coffee plantations were, and could still be, important repositories of the original biodiversity of the cloud forest ecosystem (Moguel and Toledo, 1999), including epiphytic plants (Damon, 2017; Espejo et al., 2005; Solis-Montero et al., 2005). A total of 325 orchid species have been recorded historically for the Soconusco region, however, extensive research, starting in the year 2000, led to the finding of 249 species of which more than 200 are now under cultivation in the collection, some of which are still awaiting identification. Others are monitored in known locations and so far have not been established in the collection, for reasons of climate, habitat, or extreme rarity. For example, a few species grow at such high elevations that they cannot be maintained within either of the two sites currently available. These data suggest that over 80 species are now possibly extinct in the Soconusco region.Mexico is considered one of the five megadiverse countries of the world with 12% of global biodiversity (CONABIO, 2017), and the southeast of the country connecting with the Mesoamerican biodiversity hotspot (Mittermeier, 2011). Within that scenario, Soconusco, in the extreme southeast of Mexico, includes one of the national priority regions for terrestrial biodiversity, the Tacaná-Boquerón corridor, which is the second most important region for orchid species richness in Mexico (Solano et al. 2016; Arriaga, 2000). The Soconusco region also coincides with all, or part of three Biosphere Reserves: Volcán Tacaná, La Encrucijada and El Triunfo. The rare, endangered cloud forest ecosystem amounted to approximately 2% of total forest cover in Mexico, but 50% of that area has now been lost to agriculture and human settlements etc. (CONABIO 2010). In Soconusco, the renowned coffee growing region coincided with, and largely replaced the cloud forest that is the preferred ecosystem for a disproportionately high number of orchid species (Kohler et al., 2006). For well over a century, many of those orchids, including several endemic species, coexisted with the traditional, shaded, coffee plantations at middle elevations (800 – 1,600m) (Toledo-Aceves, 2013; Cruz-Angón et al., 2009; Hietz, 2005) but these are now threatened by recent changes that promote full sun coffee, using ‘modern’ dwarf varieties and a range of chemical inputs. These changes rapidly provoke soil erosion, biodiversity depletion and outbreaks of pests and diseases. In most areas, there are now very few or no mature orchid plants to produce seeds for recolonization, and very few trees available for orchids and other epiphytes to colonize. Traditional, shaded coffee plantations were, and could still be, important repositories of the original biodiversity of the cloud forest ecosystem (Moguel and Toledo, 1999), including epiphytic plants (Damon, 2017; Espejo et al., 2005; Solis-Montero et al., 2005). A total of 325 orchid species have been recorded historically for the Soconusco region, however, extensive research, starting in the year 2000, led to the finding of 249 species of which more than 200 are now under cultivation in the collection, some of which are still awaiting identification. Others are monitored in known locations and so far have not been established in the collection, for reasons of climate, habitat, or extreme rarity. For example, a few species grow at such high elevations that they cannot be maintained within either of the two sites currently available. These data suggest that over 80 species are now possibly extinct in the Soconusco region.El Colegio de la Frontera Sur (México) Jardín Botánico Regional El SoconuscoOrquídeasEspecies en peligro de extinciónColecciones de plantasArtfrosurWorld orchid collections 2020Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso