Bolivian Yungas
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The Bolivian Yungas blanket the eastern Andean slopes of west-central Bolivia, reaching into a small portion of extreme southeastern Peru, where they form a transition zone between the Southwest Amazon moist forests below and the high Andean puna above. Spanning elevations from roughly 400 to over 3,500 metres, the ecoregion is a mosaic of montane cloud forest and other evergreen forest, with Chusquea bamboo characteristic of areas disturbed by landslides. Epiphytes are abundant, including bromeliads, orchids, and tree-ferns (Cyathea) draped across the canopy. Fog and rain carried in on the northern trade winds keep humidity and precipitation high, sustaining these cloud forests. This Neotropical moist broadleaf forest holds notably high endemism, sheltering range-restricted vertebrates alongside the spectacled bear, jaguar, and lowland tapir, and nearly half of it now lies within protected areas such as Madidi and Carrasco national parks.
About the tropical & subtropical moist broadleaf forests biome
Warm, wet, highly productive forests — including tropical rainforests — with closed canopies, near year-round growing seasons, and the richest terrestrial biodiversity on Earth. Low seasonality and high rainfall sustain dense, layered vegetation from canopy to forest floor.
Collections for this ecoregion
No curated collection's plants all fit this ecoregion's zone range. We surface a collection only when every member would grow here — partial fits get filtered out rather than mislead. As the catalog and the curated set both grow, this section will fill in.