Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Alejandro de Humboldt National Park' has mentioned 'Species' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
[4] 16 of Cuba's 28 endemic plant species are protected in the park including such flora as Dracaena cubensis and Podocarpus ekman. | WIKI |
Fauna present in the park includes various species of parrots, lizards, hummingbirds, the endangered Cuban solenodon (endemic), hutia and snails. | WIKI |
Over 900 total plant species have been recorded at the park, along with 45 species of reptiles, 21 amphibian species, and 10 mammal species. | WIKI |
This continued into the 1980s with the proposal of the Ojito del Agua Refuge, associated with the last sighting of the royal woodpecker, a last remnant of this species which was already extinct in its other habitats in the United States and Mexico. | WIKI |
It is assumed that the area was a Pleistocene Refuge where numerous species have survived past periods of climate change. | UNESCO |
This in turn is believed to have resulted in high adaptation pressure and the birth of an impressive number of often endemic plant species. | UNESCO |
With many new species likely to be discovered, AHNP boast an impressive list of more than 1,300 seed plants and 145 species of ferns, of which more than 900 are endemic to Cuba and more than 340 locally endemic, respectively. | UNESCO |
As for the marine biodiversity the West Indian Manatee deserves to be noted as a flagship species. | UNESCO |
There is a consensus that many species remain to be discovered in the property. | UNESCO |
The high degree of endemism across numerous taxonomic groups both on land and in freshwater is of particular importance, reaching almost three quarters of all known species in the case of the extremely diverse flora with many being local endemics. | UNESCO |
Countless species are severely restricted in their range, which adds to the importance of the property. | UNESCO |
As the largest conserved remnant of a mountain ecosystem in Cuba Alejandro de Humboldt National Park has a size and conservation status that ensure the long-term functioning of ecological processes supporting the ongoing evolution of its biological communities and species. | UNESCO |