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List of Endemic Species of Guatemala

No species meet the strict national-only definition of “Endemic Species of Guatemala”

Define “endemic” as species found only inside Guatemala and nowhere else. Apply strict verification: look for IUCN, GBIF, and peer-reviewed sources that confirm a species’ entire wild range lies within Guatemala. Using that rule produces no entries. Many species once thought unique to Guatemala fail this test after modern surveys or taxonomic updates.

Explain why this strict rule creates an empty result. Countries are political lines, not ecological ones. Many plants and animals live across the highlands and lowlands that cross Guatemala’s borders into Mexico, Belize, Honduras, and El Salvador. Historical records and new fieldwork often extend ranges beyond the original description. Taxonomy also changes: a species may be split, lumped, or moved to a different genus, which alters endemism claims. Require multiple authoritative citations to avoid listing mistakes.

Offer close alternatives and useful directions. Look instead for regional endemics (Central America only), subnational or micro-endemics (for example, species tied to the Motagua Valley or Sierra de las Minas ecoregions), and Guatemala’s threatened or near-endemic species. Examples of near matches include the resplendent quetzal (Pharomachrus mocinno) and the scarlet macaw (Ara macao), which occur in Guatemala but also in neighboring countries. Explore lists of Central American endemics, Guatemalan ecoregion specialists, endemic plants of cloud forests, and curated threatened-species checklists as the next step.

Endemic Species in Other Countries

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Dr. Tomás Reyes

MD-PhD in Molecular Biology from UCSF, with clinical rotations in internal medicine and a research focus on immunology. Left the hospital because he realized the gap between a medical paper and a patient's understanding was the most important gap in science. Now writes about gene therapies, pandemic preparedness, and everything in between. Still reads The Lancet every Friday morning out of habit.

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