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The semi-arid coastal areas of southern Vietnam are the most arid in Vietnam because of the rainshadow effects of the plateaus of the southern Annamite Range, which restrict the flow of humid air in the early monsoon season. Mean annual rainfall is less than 1,500 mm in the coastal belt south of Nha Trang and below 800 m at Cape Padaran south of Phan Rang. These areas have been heavily affected by human activities and greatly altered. The coastal region around Nha Trang, Cam Ranh Bay, and Phan Rang in southern coastal Vietnam is formed as a succession of small alluvial plains to the east of the Annamite Range and separated by low hills up to 1,000 m elevation formed of rhyolite or granite. The first woody community encountered away from the beach in southern Vietnam is generally a thicket community that gives way to a low scrubby forest further inland. Areas with extensive coverage of unstabilized dunes support a distinctive community of shrubby trees with extensive root systems. On low dunes these species have a shrubby growth form. However, where a significant phreatophytic zone of freshwater develops at the base of these dunes, a true forest may develop with a variety of tree species reaching up to 12 m in height. Moist depressions within these dunes are dominated by Baeckia frutescens (Myrtaceae), Melaleuca leucadendron, and diverse graminoids. Extensive areas of coastal dunes formed of stabilized red sands are a characteristic component of this coastal region around Cam Ranh Bay on granitic parent material. Two endemic species of Dipterocarpaceae, Hopea cordata and Shorea falcata, are known only from dune forests on these sands. These are two of only six endemic Dipterocarpaceae for all of Indochina, suggesting that many other endemic species may be found in this habitat if it is more carefully studied. Evergreen and semi-evergreen forest cover may be present on the coastal hills that reach higher elevations. A unique low forest or thicket community occurring on semi-arid slopes along the coast of southern Vietnam and notably rich in endemic species has been described near Phan Rang, Ba Ngoi, and Nha Trang, but it is heavily degraded today. The low rolling hills of Binh Chau-Phouc Buu Nature Reserve, southwest of Phan Thiet, contain a variety of dry forest communities including notable tree endemics such as Lithocarpus dinhensis, Dalbergia bariensis, and the recently discovered Dipterocarpus caudatus. The forest is dominated by varying combinations of Dipterocarpus caudatus, D. intricatus, Shorea siamensis, and S. roxburghii.
There are several large mammals of conservation significance in this ecoregion, including the endangered douc langur (Pygathrix nemaeus), red-cheeked gibbon (Hylobates gabriellae), and pileated gibbon (Hylobates pileatus) and potentially the tiger (Panthera tigris). The ecoregion also overlaps with a portion of the South Vietnamese Lowlands (144) EBA (Stattersfield et al. 1998) and contains two near-endemic bird species (table 1). Table 1. Endemic and Near-Endemic Bird Species.
More than 90 percent of the habitat in this ecoregion has been cleared. There are ten very small protected areas (the average size is only 69 km2) in the ecoregion that cover less than 700 km2 (about 2 percent) of the ecoregion (table 2). Even these small protected areas do not have effective protection and are now insularized by forest clearing throughout the larger landscape, increasing the edge effects. Table 2. WCMC (1997) Protected Areas That Overlap with the Ecoregion.
The main threats to this habitat are agriculture, exploitation of valuable hardwood trees and other plant resources, and the rampant hunting primarily to supply the huge commercial market in both Vietnam and China (WWF and IUCN 1995; Compton 1998).
MacKinnon (1997) included the coastal habitats of Vietnam, Cambodia, and Thailand in the Coastal Indochina biounit (05), consisting of four subunits. Each of these subunits includes several biomes. We delineated several ecoregions based on the distribution of these biomes. Like MacKinnon, we chose the Hai Van pass to represent a transition from the tropical south and the subtropical north and placed the lowland dry coastal forests in the Southern Vietnam Lowland Dry Forests [IM0211].
References for this ecoregion are currently consolidated in one document for the entire Indo-Pacific realm. Reviewed by: This text was originally published in the book Terrestrial ecoregions of the Indo-Pacific: a conservation assessment from Island Press. This assessment offers an in-depth analysis of the biodiversity and conservation status of the Indo-Pacific's ecoregions. For more general information on this ecoregion, go to the WildWorld version of this description. All text by World Wildlife Fund © 2001 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||