Authors
JC Poynton, SP Loader, Emma Sherratt, BT Clarke
Publication date
2007
Journal
Vertebrate Conservation and Biodiversity
Pages
277-292
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Description
The Eastern Arc mountain chain and adjoining coastal forests of Tanzania and Kenya have been listed as world biodiversity hotspots. We report on an ongoing attempt to estimate amphibian diversity on the three best studied mountains of the Eastern Arc, the East Usambara, Uluguru and Udzungwa mountains of Tanzania, complemented by an estimate of diversity on the adjoining coastal lowland. This proves to be a complex task, which introduces a note of caution into evaluating global biodiversity estimates. Most amphibian species in eastern Tanzania occur on the coastal lowlands and are widely distributed, extending at least north or south of Tanzania and, to a variable extent, westwards to the elevated interior. Diversity patterns along the length of the lowlands are complex, with the presence of a Sahelian element in the extreme north. On the three Eastern Arc mountains studied, species turnover …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JC Poynton, SP Loader, E Sherratt, BT Clarke - Vertebrate Conservation and Biodiversity, 2007