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The countries in this eco-region are French Guiana,
Guyana and Suriname, plus the tropical
Brazilian states (estados) of Alagoas, Amana,
Bahia, Ceara, Esperito Santo,
Maranhao, Para, Paraiba, Pernambuco,
Piaui, Rio de Janeiro, Rio Grande
do Norte and Sergipe.
Brazil's continental shelf shows a variety of widths,
being wider in the north of the country and becoming
narrower in the north east, the south east and the
south. The warm Brazil Current flows in a southwesterly
direction along the coast of Brazil from about latitude
10°S to the Río de La Plata in Uruguay, which forms
an important biogeographical barrier between the cold
Falkland (Malvinas) Current and the warm Brazil Current.
The northward extent of the Falkland Current is variable;
generally reaching the latitude of the province of
Buenos Aires in Argentina, but its influence can be
felt as far north as Rio de Janeiro. Highly productive
areas occur where there is mixing of inshore and deeper
northbound drifts of water with those of the southward-moving
warm Brazilian Current.
The Brazil Current is strongest off Brazil, from
Abrolhos Archipelago to the latitude of Rio de Janeiro.
South from the tropic of Capricorn, it becomes progressively
weaker. Tides along the Brazilian coast are generally
weak, growing in amplitude from south to north, from
approximately 2 metres around Cabo Frio (Rio de Janeiro
State) to a maximum of 12 metres in the Amazon estuary.
The warm and shallow Guyana Current flows along the
north coast of Brazil and links with the Caribbean
circulation system. Both the Brazil and Guyana Currents
are fed from the east by the westerly flowing South
Equatorial Current.
The South Equatorial Current branches to the north
and south, with the southerly branch becoming the
Brazil Current and the northerly branch becoming the
Guyana Current. This variety of physical conditions
creates a diverse range of habitats, which in turn
are home to a large variety of species Brazil has
one of the most extensive river systems in the world,
with eight major drainage basins. There are a number
of important estuaries in the region in addition to
several unique ecosystems, including dunes, mangroves,
restingas (scrubby vegetation typical of sand marine
barrier islands) and coral formations.
The Atol das Rocas is the only coral atoll in the
South Atlantic. It is the region's most important
nesting site for tropical marine birds and its second
most important breeding ground for Green Turtles (Chelonia
mydas). Ten of eighteen coral species are endemic
in this ecoregion. Where the shelf narrows in the
central section of the region, the substrate is made
up of carbonate sediments and is affected by the South
Equatorial Current.
The wide Abrolhos Bank of the east Brazil shelf forms
a physical barrier to the Brazil Current, so upwelling
and land conditions create even more diversity. General
environmental threats include industrial pollution,
overfishing and habitat loss.
In addition to Green Turtles, important species
to be found in the region include Loggerhead Turtles
(Caretta caretta), Spinner Dolphin (Stenella
longirostris), the Greater Flamingo (Phoenicopterus
ruber) and Caribbean Manatee (Trichechus manatus).
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