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Rain forest in Mexico: research and conservation at Los Tuxtlas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 April 2009

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Abstract

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The rain forests of southern Mexico represent the northernmost extent of this ecosystem in the Americas. In the past 30 years half of these forests have been destroyed; only three patches remain where once forest stretched unbroken from Veracruz to Chiapas. But at a university research station set up in 1967 something is being done. The authors, who work at the station, describe the conservation, research and education taking place there and the important role the station has in persuading the community of the necessity of conserving the country’s rain forests.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Fauna and Flora International 1983

References

Gomez-Pompa, A., Vazques-Yanez, C. and Guevara, S. 1972. The tropical rain forest: a non-renewable resource. Science 177, 762764.Google Scholar
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Miranda, F. and Hernández, E. 1963. Los tipos de vegetacion de México y su clasificaciín. Bol. Soc. Bot. Mex. 29, 29179.Google Scholar