In Central America, it includes the mountain and coastal regions west of the Continental Divide in Mexico and southern Guatemala, southwestern Honduras, western Nicaragua, and western/southwestern Costa Rica, and southern Panama. In Guatemala, the Pacific Slope region is a humid plain of fertile land divided into widespread plantations (fincas) that grow abundant crops including sugarcane, bananas, and rubber.[8] In Costa Rica, the Pacific Slope refers to the region west of the continental divide at Monteverde, Costa Rica.[9]
In South America, the Pacific Slope is the narrow region west of the highest points of the Andes, including western Colombia, central Ecuador, western and southwestern Peru, and eastern Chile.
^"The Angiosperm Phylogeny Group. An ordinal classification for the families of flowering plants". The Cutting Edge. VI (1). Missouri Botanical Garden: 531–553. January 1999.
^Pomeroy, Earl (2003). The Pacific Slope: a History of California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Utah, and Nevada. Reno: University of Nevada Press. p. 488. ISBN978-0-87417-518-9.