Mountains/Sierras

Biogeography of the Herpetofauna of the Pine-Oak Woodlands of the Sierra Madre Occidental

McCranie, J. R. and L. D. Wilson. 1987. The Biogeography of the Herpetofauna of the Pine-Oak Woodlands of Sierra Madre Occidental of México. Milwaukee Public Museum Contributions in Biology and Geology Number 72.

McCranie, J. R. and L. D. Wilson. 1990. Annotated Bibliography to the Herpetofauna of the Pine-Oak Woodlands of the Sierra Madre Occidental, Mexico. Smithsonian Herpetological Information Service Number 84.

Probable Occurrence of a Brown Bear (Ursus arctos) in Sonora, Mexico, in 1976

Gallo-Reynoso, J.-P., T. Van Devender, A. L. Reina-Guerrero, J. Egido-Villarreal, and E. Pfeiler. 2008. Probable Occurrence of a Brown Bear (Ursus arctos) in Sonora, Mexico, in 1976. Southwestern Naturalist 53(2): 256-260.

The ocelot, Leopardus pardalis, in north-western Mexico: ecology, distribution and conservation status

C. A., D. E. Brown and J. P. Gallo-Reynoso. 2003. The ocelot, Leopardus pardalis, in north-western Mexico: ecology, distribution and conservation status. Oryx 37(3): 358-364.

Mexican native trouts: a review of their history and current systematic and conservation status

Hendrickson, D. A., H. E. Pérez, L. T. Findley, W. Forbes, J. R. Tomelleri, R. L. Mayden, J. L. Nielsen, B. Jensen, G. R. Campos, A. V. Romero, A. van der Heiden, F. Camarena and F. J. García de León. 2002(2003). Mexican native trouts: a review of their history and current systematic and conservation status. Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries 12: 273–316.

Abstract
While biologists have been aware of the existence of native Mexican trouts for over a century, they have received little study. The few early studies that did muchmore than mention their existence began in the 1930s and continued into the early 1960s, focusing primarily on distributional surveys and taxonomic analyses. Starting in the 1980s the Baja California rainbow trout became the subject of more detailed studies, but very little remains known of mainland trouts of the Sierra Madre Occidental. We review earlier studies and report on our own collections and 274 observations made between 1975 and 2000. We present newly discovered historical evidence that leads us to conclude that a “lost” cutthroat trout, a lineage not previously known from Mexico, was collected more than a century ago from headwaters of the Río Conchos (a major tributary of the Río Grande (= Río Bravo)), a basin not previously considered to harbor a native trout. We review the last century of regional natural resource management and discuss our own observations of trout habitats. Impacts of logging, road building and overgrazing are widespread and expanding. Many streams suffer from heavy erosion, siltation and contamination, and though long-term hydrologic data are generally not available, there is evidence of decreased discharge in many streams.  These problems appear related to region-wide land management practices as well as recent regional drought. Trout culture operations using exotic rainbow trout have rapidly proliferated throughout the region, threatening genetic introgression and/or competition with native forms and predation on them. Knowledge of distribution, abundance, relationships and taxonomy, not to mention ecology and population biology, of native trouts of the Sierra Madre Occidental remains inadequate. Vast areas of most mainland drainages are still unexplored by fish collectors, and even rudimentary information regarding basic biology, ecology and population structure of stocks remains lacking.  Concentrated exploration, research and management of this long overlooked and undervalued resource are all urgently needed. The history of natural resources exploitation that placed so many native trouts of the western United States on threatened and endangered species lists is repeating itself in the Sierra Madre Occidental.  Without concerted action and development of region-wide socio-economic solutions for current, largely non-sustainable resource management practices, native Mexican trout gene pools will soon be in grave danger of extinction.

Birds of Pine-Oak Woodland in Southern Arizona and Adjacent Mexico Joe Marshall, 1957

Joe Marshall study area map - Madrean Sky IslandsJoe Marshall study area map - Madrean Sky Islands"Woodland of mixed pines and oaks is familiar mountain scenery in Mexico, whence it extends into southeastern Arizona along with many kinds of Mexican birds. This woodland occupies a belt from about 5500 to 6500 feet in elevation between encinal (oak woodland) below and ponderosa pine forest above. It combines tree forms of both these zones so as to make a smooth transition between them. The present report com- pares the numbers of each species of breeding bird in a series of stations, within pine-oak woodland, which were visited in the summers of 1951, 1952, and 1953. These sites extend from the Pinaleno and Santa Catalina mountains in Arizona south into central Sonora and to the Sierra Madre Occidental of northwestern Chihuahua. The stations were selected in relatively flat terrain in well-developed pine-oak woodland where there was water and a good place to camp. The stations differed in the following ways which affected the local occurrence of birds: steepness,whether on a ridge or in a canyon, amount of water and riparian vegetation, stature and spacing of trees, amount of grass, and proximity to coniferous forest."

Download PDF here (9.6 mb)

Joe Marshall study area map - Madrean Sky Islands

Joe Marshall study area map - Madrean Sky Islands

Sierra El Tigre View

Sierra El Tigre View

Sierra El Tigre Location Map

Sierra El Tigre Location Map

Sierra El Tigre Location Map

Sierra El Tigre Location Map
Syndicate content