The ecoregion is in the
Neotropical realm and the
tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests biome.
Climate The
Köppen climate classification is "Am": equatorial, monsoonal. Average temperatures range from with a mean of . Temperatures are fairly constant throughout the year. Average annual precipitation is . Precipitation is lowest in July with an average of and highest in March with an average of .
Flora Most of the vegetation is seasonally flooded tropical lowland rainforest. The flora have high
biodiversity and
endemism. In the north the forest is dense with a canopy of and emergent trees of up to . There is a dense understory. In the south the canopy is more open and the understory less dense. In the extreme south the moist forest meets patches of wooded savanna. As with other forests of the Amazon basin the main families are
Fabaceae,
Sapotaceae,
Lecythidaceae,
Moraceae,
Chrysobalanaceae,
Lauraceae and
Myristicaceae. The most common species are
Eschweilera alba,
Eschweilera odora,
Pouteria guianensis,
Vantanea guianensis,
Ragala sanguinolenta,
Licania apetala and
Iryanthera ulei. Four common species of palm are
Astrocaryum vulgare,
Oenocarpus bataua,
Attalea maripa, and
Socratea exorrhiza. The palm-like
Spathelia excelsa fruits once and then dies.
Couma utilis provides edible fruit. The
Physocalymma scaberrim is a typical emergent with red hardwood timber used in furniture.
Fauna (
Saimiri ustus) is endemic. There is diverse fauna with many endemic species. 165 species of mammals have been recorded, of which over 80 are bats. Primates include the
bare-eared squirrel monkey (
Saimiri ustus),
white-fronted capuchin (
Cebus albifrons),
brown woolly monkey (
Lagothrix lagotricha), and five species of
titi monkey (Callicebus genus), of which
Hershkovitz's titi (
Callicebus dubius),
ashy black titi (
Callicebus cinerascens), and
collared titi (
Callicebus torquatus) are endemic. Other mammals include
Hoffmann's two-toed sloth (
Choloepus hoffmanni),
brown-throated sloth (
Bradypus variegatus),
silky anteater (
Cyclopes didactylus),
southern tamandua (
Tamandua tetradactyla),
giant anteater (
Myrmecophaga tridactyla),
collared peccary (
Pecari tajacu),
jaguar (
Panthera onca),
cougar (
Puma concolor),
red brocket (
Mazama americana),
gray brocket (
Mazama gouazoubira), and
South American tapir (
Tapirus terrestris). Endangered mammals include
Peruvian spider monkey (
Ateles chamek),
white-cheeked spider monkey (
Ateles marginatus) and
giant otter (
Pteronura brasiliensis).
Green iguana (
Iguana iguana) and tegus lizards (genus
Tupinambis) are common. Snakes include fer-de-lance (
Bothrops asper), palm pit-vipers (genus
Bothriechis), coral snakes (genus
Micrurus), bushmasters (
Lachesis muta) and boa constrictors (
Boa constrictor). 572 species of birds have been recorded including migrant toucan (genus
Ramphastos),
Amazon parrot (genus
Amazona), and macaw (genus
Ara). Resident birds included tanagers (genera
Tangara and
Tachyphonus), woodcreepers (genus
Xiphorhynchus),
resplendent quetzal (
Pharomachrus mocinno), 15 species of curassows (genera
Crax,
Nothocrax,
Mitu and
Pauxi), and tinamous (genera
Crypturellus and
Tinamus). Endangered birds include
wattled curassow (
Crax globulosa) and
red-necked aracari (
Pteroglossus bitorquatus).
Status The
World Wildlife Fund classes the ecoregion as "Relatively Stable/Intact". Most of the environment is undamaged, apart from the south. A paved road (
BR-319) was built along the length of the region from
Humaitá to
Manaus, but it proved impossible to maintain and was closed. The
Trans-Amazonian Highway crosses the southwestern end of the region from
Humaitá to
Lábrea and has caused deforestation to create pasturage and agricultural fields. The southern area is threatened by controlled and uncontrolled fires. Mining in the upper sections of the Purus and Madeira rivers causes pollution and
habitat destruction. During the period from 2004 to 2011 the ecoregion experienced an annual rate of habitat loss of 0.32%. Global warming will force tropical species to migrate uphill to find areas with suitable temperature and rainfall. Low, flat ecoregions such as the Purus-Madeira moist forests are extremely vulnerable. ==Notes==