Kvist et al. (2004) found similar levels of Barasertib endemism for the Gesneriaceae in Ecuador (23 of 107 species). These endemism levels are very similar to what Gentry (1982) estimated for the Chocó flora, one of the worlds most publicised regions in terms of plant diversity and endemism. It was recently that the Equatorial Pacific SDFs and the Chocó were jointly considered as one of the hotspots of biodiversity in the world, (Mittermeier et al. 2005), with an estimated endemism level of 25%. This estimation seems to hold true, at least
for the woody component of the Equatorial Pacific SDFs. There is little comparable information about levels of endemism in other SDF regions in the Neotropics as most ITF2357 data are from local checklists and inventories (e.g., Lott and Atkinson 2006 for SDF floristic checklists in Mexico and Central America). Available data suggest that the Equatorial Pacific SDFs are intermediate in levels of endemism as compared to other SDF regions. The Chiquitano SDFs in eastern lowland Bolivia seems to have the lowest endemism level of all neotropical SDF regions with only three endemic woody species out of 155 reported trees, a fact probably explained by the recent geological past of the area into which the extant flora arrived from more northerly latitudes after the last glacial maximum (Killeen et al. 2006). Intermediate levels of endemism have
been reported for the dry Andean valleys Selleckchem Caspase inhibitor C1GALT1 in Bolivia, where 18% of the total native flora
is considered endemic (López 2003). A study of three plant families (Labiatae, Asclepiadaceae, Acanthaceae) in the same region showed higher levels of endemism (33%), although care has to be taken to extrapolate these figures as there is ample variation in the level of endemism between different families (Wood 2006). The highest levels of endemism in neotropical SDFs have been found in the Brazilian Caatinga and in Mexico. In the former, 41% of the 932 known plants are endemic (Silva et al. 2003), whereas 52% of the species of Leguminosae, the most important and dominant SDF family in the Neotropics, are restricted to this biome (Queiroz 2006). Finally, Mexican SDFs are estimated to have 60% of endemic species (Rzedowski 1991). Both countries have also variants of inter-Andean SDF, which are best represented in the long and deep valleys of Peru. The most important of these dry valleys, the Rio Marañon valley, is located east of the northwestern Peruvian coastal SDF and connected to them by the lowest mountain pass of the whole Andean chain, the Porculla Pass (2,165 m.a.s.l.). It has been suggested, that this pass has favoured the immigration and exchange of SDF biota, which evolved either in the Marañon valley or the coastal SDF (woody plants: Linares-Palomino et al. 2003; birds: BirdLife International 2003, herpetofauna: Venegas 2005).