Southern Central Sumatra
ID
738
Author(s)
J. Hales
Countries
Indonesia
Major Habitat Type
Tropical and subtropical coastal rivers
Drainages flowing into
Strait of Malacca
Main rivers to other water bodies
Some of the larger rivers in the ecoregion include the Rokan, Siak, Kampar, Indragiri, and Batang Hari. The largest lakes are Lake Singkarak, which is drained by the Indragiri River, and Lake Dibawah.
Description
Boundaries
This ecoregion extends along the central coast of Sumatra along the Strait of Malacca from the Rokan basin in the west to the Batanghari basin in the east. It also includes islands such as Rupat, Bengkalis, Pedang, Rangsang, Tebingtinggi, Mendol, and Kundar in the Strait of Malacca, as well as the Riau Archipelago and Lingga islands south of Singapore.
Terrestrial habitats
Sumatran montane rain forests [IM0159], Sumatran lowland rain forests [OM0158], Sumatran freshwater swamp forests [OM0157], Sumatran peat swamp forests [OM0160], Sunda shelf mangroves [IM1405], Tenasserim-South Thailand semi-evergreen rain forests [IM0163], and Peninsular Malaysian rain forests [IM0146] (WWF 2001)
Description of endemic fishes
This ecoregion is estimated to have around 20 endemic species (M. Kottelat pers. comm. 2006).
Justification for delineation
For Southeast Asia, delineations were determined using a bottom-up approach that employed both published and unpublished field data and expert assessment (Abell et al. 2008; Kottelat et al. 1993). This ecoregion shares many species with the Kapuas ecoregion [741] in Borneo, and not shared with the Northern Central Sumatra-Western Malaysia [735] and Southern Sumatra and Western Java [739] ecoregions (M. Kottelat pers. comm. 2006).
References
- World Wildlife Fund (WWF) (2001) \Terrestrial Ecoregions of the World\ "<"http://www.worldwildlife.org/wildworld/profiles/terrestrial_nt.html">"
- Abell, Robin,M.L. Thieme,C. Revenga,M. Bryer,M. Kottelat,N. Bogutskaya,B. Coad,N. Mandrak,S.C. Balderas,W. Bussing,M.L.J. Stiassny,P. Skelton,G.R. Allen,P. Unmack,A. Naseka,R. Ng,N. Sindorf,J. Robertson,E. Armijo,J.V. Higgins,T.J. Heibel,E. Wikramanayake, (2008). "Freshwater Ecoregions of the World: A New Map of Biogeographic Units for Freshwater Biodiversity Conservation" BioScience 58 (5) pp. 403-414.
- Kottelat, M. and Whitten, T. (1996) \Freshwater biodiversity in Asia with special reference to fish, World Bank Technical Paper No. 343\ Washington, DC, USA. The World Bank.
- Kottelat, M.,Whitten, A. J.,Kartikasari, S. N.;Wirjoatmodjo, S. (1993). "Freshwater fishes of Western Indonesia and Sulawesi" Hong Kong: Periplus.