Occurrence Handle10.1046/j.ĪrticleTitleClimatic impact of tropical lowland deforestation on nearby montane cloud forestsĪrticleTitleAn ecological approach to identifying the endangered fauna of New South WalesĪrticleTitleFluctuations in amphibian populations: a meta-analysis Occurrence Handle10.1017/S1367943002002238ĪrticleTitleEpidemic disease and the catastrophic decline of Australian rain forest frogs Krieger Publishing Company, Melbourne, Florida, in press.ĪrticleTitlePriority conservation areas for birds in El Salvador The Amphibians and Reptiles of El Salvador. Occurrence Handle10.1046/j.ĪrticleTitleAn iterative method for establishing priorities for the selection of nature reserves: an example from Tasmania Accessed 11 December 2004.ĪrticleTitlePatterns of diversity of neotropical squamate reptile species with emphasis on the Brazilian Amazon and the conservation potential of indigenous reserves IUCN Conservation International & Nature Serve 2004. 2002 IUCN Red List of threatened species. Prepared by the IUCN Species Survival Commission 38: 411–421.ĪrticleTitleEstimating risks in declining populations with poor data A new species of Bolitoglossa (Amphibia: Caudata: Plethodontidae) from montane forests in Guatemala and El Salvador. Occurrence Handle10.1046/j.ĪrticleTitleThe ecology of extinction: population fluctuation and decline in amphibians Society for the Study of Amphibians and ReptilesĪrticleTitleDraft guidelines for the application of IUCN Red List criteria at national and regional levelsĪrticleTitlePreliminary distributional analysis of US endangered bird speciesĪrticleTitleEvaluating completeness of species lists for conservation and macroecology: a case study of Mexican land birds Global distribution of amphibians: patterns, conservation, and future challenges Patterns of Distribution of Amphibians: A Global PerspectiveĪrticleTitleThe impact of man on the zoogeography of El Salvador Occurrence Handle10.1016/0006-3207(94)90616-5ĪrticleTitleOn the relationship between species abundance and distribution of speciesĪrticleTitleSpatial variation in abundanceĭistribution patterns of amphibians in Middle America The department with the most threatened species (35 of 76 threatened amphibians and reptiles) is Santa Ana, where many threatened species occur in pine-oak and cloud forest in Montecristo National Park.ĪrticleTitleWhere have all the froggies gone?ĪrticleTitlePathogenic fungus contributes to amphibian losses in the Pacific Northwest The anurans (frogs) and saurians (lizards) had been inventoried relatively completely in 10 of 14 departments. We applied a method for evaluating inventory completeness to our data set, and used species from reasonably well-surveyed taxonomic groups (Anura and Sauria) to carryout the complementarity analysis. We used the number and distribution of threatened species and a complementarity analysis to identify departments in El Salvador that require higher priority for conservation action. The IUCN method was biased by collecting effort and was unable to classify 25 species that were categorized as ȁ8data deficientȁ9. In general, most threatened taxa were aquatic organisms in lowland habitats or cloud-forest specialists in highland areas. Seventy-six out of 130 species were found to be threatened or endangered at the national level. We applied the IUCN Red List method for threat assessment to the amphibians and reptiles of El Salvador, the smallest Central American country.
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