The Gulf of Guayaquil is the largest estuary ecosystem on South America's Pacific coast.
The flat land and high tides result in salt water moving far up the gulf.
Average annual rainfall is 600 millimetres (24 in), but in some years may be as much as 3,800 millimetres (150 in).[3]
The ecoregion contains plant formations of mangrove (Rhizophora spp.) forest that are adapted to permanently flooded conditions and the resulting environments, which offer little available oxygen.
The Tumbes River is the southern limit for some mangrove species.[3]
Large parts of the mangroves have been destroyed to make way for aquaculture, rice farms, housing and industry.
Other threats come from mercury pollution from gold and silver mining upstream in the Puyango-Tumbes watershed, urban pollution and dams.[3]
In Ecuador about 40,000 hectares (99,000 acres) of mangroves were lost in the 1980s and early 1990s due to unsustainable shrimp pond development.
Since then the mangroves have been slowly recovering, and seem stable.[5]
On Ecuador's side of the mangrove ecoregion, particularly near the cities of Machala and Santa Rosa in the province of El Oro, many shrimp farm ponds have been dug out for export of shrimp to the U.S., Europe and other regions. Shrimp are one of Ecuador's main exports together with crude oil and derivatives, bananas and ornamental flowers.