on Nayarit's Pacific coast, a former fishing village now mostly given over to tourism, part of the area now marketed as "La
Riviera Nayarit" Nayarit covers , making it one of the smaller states in Mexico. Nayarit is located between latitude lines 23°05' north and 20°36' south and longitude lines 103°43' east and 105°46' west. Its terrain is broken up by the western ends of the
Sierra Madre Occidental mountains. Its highest mountains are:
San Juan,
Sanguangüey,
El Ceboruco,
Cumbre de Pajaritos and
Picachos. Nayarit has two volcanoes,
Ceboruco and
Sangangüey. In the northeast are broad, tropical plains watered by the
Río Grande de Santiago, a continuation of the
Lerma River. The main state rivers are the
Río Grande de Santiago,
San Pedro Mezquital,
Acaponeta,
Ameca, and
Las Cañas. The Río Grande de Santiago is the largest river in Nayarit. The Santiago and its tributaries are of major importance for agricultural irrigation. The Ameca and the Las Cañas lie on the border between Nayarit and the states of
Jalisco and
Sinaloa, respectively. Notable
lagoons in Nayarit include
Santa María del Oro,
San Pedro Lagunillas and
Agua Brava.
Municipalities Nayarit – as with all states of Mexico – is geographically divided into
municipalities (municipios), creating twenty
municipalities in Nayarit:
Environment Nayarit's natural vegetation varies with altitude; coastal lowlands and river valleys were, historically, covered with tropical dry forest, containing many native deciduous trees that lost their leaves during the dry seasons. The
Sinaloan dry forests now cover the northern coastal lowlands, and extend up the valleys of the
San Pedro Mezquital River and the
Río Grande de Santiago and its tributaries. The
Jalisco dry forests ecoregion covers coastal Nayarit south of
San Blas and the Islas Marías. The
Marismas Nacionales–San Blas mangroves, a network of coastal Pacific lagoons and tidal mangrove forests, extend along the state's northern coast and into adjacent Sinaloa state. The mangroves are home to abundant wildlife, including migratory and resident waterbirds. The mountains are home to
pine–oak forests, which vary in density with elevation. Oak forests and woodlands tend to grow at lower elevations, interspersed with smaller areas of humid cloud forest in areas of higher rainfall. The highest elevations contain forests of conifers, pines and oak. Nayarit also contains hundreds of miles of rainforest in the Sierra. Its wildlife includes hundreds of
bird species, both resident and breeding/migratory populations, including parrots, like the
lilac-crowned amazon (
Amazona finschi) and numerous hummingbirds, such as the
Mexican woodnymph (
Thalurania ridgwayi). There are also 119 registered species of mammals, including
white-tailed deer (
Odocoileus virginianus),
collared peccary (
Dicotyles tajacu),
brocket deer (
Mazama americana), several types of
armadillo,
coyote, wild felines such as
puma (
Felis concolor),
jaguarundi (
Puma yagouarundi),
bobcat or
lince rojo,
ocelot (
Felis pardalis) and many more species. Historically, the
Mexican wolf,
Mexican grizzly bear and
jaguar would have been present in the region, as well, though the bears are now extinct; the Mexican wolf and jaguar survive today only in a few fragmented locations, due to decades of hunting and human encroachment on their habitats. Most of the rain forest has been exploited, especially around the region of
Santa María del Oro. The conservation and protection of the rain forest and wildlife of Nayarit is an issue of crucial importance. The
Islas Marías were designated as the
Islas Marías Biosphere Reserve by
UNESCO in 2010.
Flora and fauna == Education ==