Papagayo River Explained

Papagayo River
Pushpin Map:Mexico
Pushpin Map Caption:Location of mouth
Mouth Coordinates:16.6847°N -99.6107°W
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:Mexico
Subdivision Type2:State
Subdivision Name2:Guerrero
Mouth Elevation:Sea level

The Papagayo River is a river in Guerrero state of southern Mexico.[1] Its headwaters are in the Sierra Madre del Sur, and it drains southwards to empty into the Pacific Ocean southeast of the city of Acapulco.[2]

The natural vegetation varies with elevation. Pine–oak forest is the predominant at higher elevations in the upper watershed. tropical dry forest grows at middle and low elevations. Much of the original vegetation has been altered by human activity, and there are extensive areas of secondary vegetation, including woodland, shrubland, and savanna, as well as cropland, forest plantation, and livestock pasture.[3]

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rio Papagayo . GeoNames . July 26, 2021.
  2. Wiken, Ed, Francisco Jiménez Nava, and Glenn Griffith. 2011. North American Terrestrial Ecoregions—Level III. Commission for Environmental Cooperation, Montreal, Canada.
  3. Galicia, L., Zarco-Arista, A.E., Mendoza-Robles, K.I., Palacio-Prieto, J.L. and García-Romero, A. (2008), Land use/cover, landforms and fragmentation patterns in a tropical dry forest in the southern Pacific region of Mexico. Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography, 29: 137-154. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9493.2008.00326.x