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Like the surrounding areas, it has characteristics of the Neotropic ecozone.
The members (species) of this genus are found in the Neotropic ecozone.
It contains the following species, all found in the Neotropic ecozone:
These aromatic evergreen trees and shrubs are found throughout the Neotropic ecozone.
These butterflies are found in the Neotropic ecozone.
They are recognized as a distinct terrestrial ecoregion, part of the Neotropic ecozone.
It is part of the Neotropic ecozone.
The Neotropic ecozone is one of the eight ecozones dividing the Earth's surface.
The country has a tropical and subtropical climate and is part of the Neotropic ecozone.
They are distributed in the Neotropic ecozone from Mexico to Peru.
Yphthimoides is a genus of satyrid butterfly found in the Neotropic ecozone.
It is found in the Neotropic ecozone (South America).
Pheropsophus aequinoctialis was one of the first ground beetles to be described from the Neotropic ecozone.
Neotropic ecozone.
They are a large number of species in the Palearctic ecozone and fewer in the Neotropic ecozone.
All species of this genus are native to the Neotropic ecozone, occurring in several rivers and streams in northern South America.
Its only known species, Balintus tityrus, is found in the Neotropic ecozone, where it is endemic to Colombia.
Drimys is found in the Neotropic ecozone, from southern Mexico to the subarctic forests of southern South America.
The Neotropic ecozone includes 31 endemic bird families (over twice the number of any other ecozone) including rheas, curassows, toucans and hummingbirds.
It is considered part of the Neotropic ecozone, and its flora and fauna share many affinities with southern Mexico and Central America.
NASA's Earth Observatory (earthobservatory.nasa.gov) Neotropic ecozone (wikipedia.org)
Southern Mexico, southern Florida, Central America, and the Caribbean islands are part of the Neotropic ecozone, together with South America.
The 'Magellanic subpolar forests' are a terrestrial ecoregion of southernmost South America, covering parts of southern Chile and Argentina, and is part of the Neotropic ecozone.
The family is worldwide (Palearctic ecozone, Nearctic ecozone, Afrotropic ecozone, Neotropic ecozone, Australasian ecozone , Oceania ecozone, Indomalaya ecozone ).
Almost all species of this genus are native to the Neotropic ecozone in South America; about half a dozen species are from Central America and a single species, H. compressus, is from southern Mexico.