IUCN Red List of Ecosystems, Mangroves of the Tropical East Pacific

This is a Preprint and has not been peer reviewed. This is version 1 of this Preprint.

Add a Comment

You must log in to post a comment.


Comments

There are no comments or no comments have been made public for this article.

Downloads

Download Preprint

Authors

Camilo Montes-Chaura, J. Orlando Rangel-Ch, JP Caicedo-García, Sonia Pardo Spiess, Luis Chasqui, Denisse Cortés-C, Andrés E. Fraiz-Toma, Héctor Aponte, Paola Calle, Adolfo Quesada-Román, Juan F. Blanco-Libreros Blanco-Libreros, Laura Lozano-Arias, Diana Romero-D’Achiardi, Tania Carolina Hoyos, Carlos Troche-Souza, Natalia Molina-Moreira, Cristian Tovilla Hernández, Juan Felipe Lazarus, Paula Cristina Sierra-Correa, D. Di Nitto, Alba Calles Procel, Ena Suarez

Abstract

Mangroves of the Tropical East Pacific (TEP) province is a regional ecosystem subgroup (Level 4 unit of the IUCN Global Ecosystem Typology), present in the coastal ecoregions of the Mexican Tropical Pacific, Chiapas-Nicaragua, Nicoya, Panama Bight, and Guayaquil. In 2020, mangroves cover 7782 km2 in the province, representing 5.3% of the global coverage.
In the province, there are eight true mangrove species; however, regional experts recognize other related plants classified as associated plants. The IUCN Red List includes 224 species (217 Animalia and seven Plantae species), supported by records in the Global Biodiversity Information Facility GBIF.
It is estimated that the mangroves of the TEP showed a net change of -1.9% from 1996 to 2020; under this trend, a decrease of 3.3% is projected in 50 years, which is below 30%, classifying criterion A2 as least concern. However, based on indicative figures, a decrease of around 40% was estimated in the last 50 years (1970-2020); which as this exceeds 30%, the mangroves are vulnerable under Criterion A1. Although threats such as deforestation, human activities, pollution, infrastructure development, modification of natural systems, and invasion of exotic species are reported, none promote total disappearance; therefore, criteria B3 is classified as least concern. In a sea-level rise scenario (IPCC RCP8.5), ≈ 9.8% of the TEP mangroves would be submerged by 2060, which is below the 30% risk threshold for criterion C2. Furthermore, 1.5% of the province's mangrove is suffering degradation, with the potential to increase to 4.5% over 50-year period; this ranks the mangroves as least concern under criterion D2b.
Overall, the Tropical East Pacific mangrove ecosystem was assessed as Vulnerable (VU) with the available information. It is considered that there is insufficient data to assess the other criteria, therefore, it is recommended to update the data to increase the precision of the evaluation and enable the quantitative analysis of risks.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.32942/X24318

Subjects

Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences

Keywords

Mangroves; Red List of ecosystems; ecosystem collapse; threats.

Dates

Published: 2024-06-19 17:16

License

CC-By Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

Additional Metadata

Language:
English