The Mesoamerican pine–oak forests is a composite ecoregion of southern Mexico and Central America, designated by the World Wildlife Fund as one of their Global 200 ecoregions, a list of priority ecoregions for conservation.
These forests include montane subtropical forests where pine and oak trees predominate, stretching across several major mountain ranges, including the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt and the Sierra Madre del Sur. Ecoregions include:
- Central American montane forests
- Central American pine–oak forests
- Chimalapas montane forests
- Sierra Madre del Sur pine–oak forests
- Sierra Madre de Oaxaca pine–oak forests
- Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt pine–oak forests
See also
External links
Categories:- Tropical and subtropical coniferous forests
- Ecoregions of Central America
- Ecoregions of Mexico
- Natural history of Mesoamerica
- Ecoregions of El Salvador
- Ecoregions of Guatemala
- Ecoregions of Honduras
- Ecoregions of Nicaragua
- Flora of El Salvador
- Flora of Guatemala
- Flora of Honduras
- Flora of Nicaragua
- Flora of Central America
- Flora of Central Mexico
- Flora of Mexico
- Forests of El Salvador
- Forests of Mexico
- Forests of Nicaragua
- Sierra Madre de Chiapas
- Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt
- Trees of Central America
- Trees of Northern America
- Neotropical ecoregions