“…Despite its global importance, and in spite of recent advances in the understanding of the distribution of its tree species and phylogenetic relatedness (Emilio et al, 2010;Oliveira & Nelson, 2001;Slik et al, 2018;ter Steege et al, 2000ter Steege et al, , 2013, a regionalization of the Amazon tree flora is still lacking. Clear and data-driven delimitation of subregions is a growing scientific enterprise (Cantidio & Souza, 2019;Moura, Argôlo, & Costa, 2016;Saiter et al, 2016;Silva & Souza, 2018a;Smith et al, 2018), with consequences for macroecological and biogeographical studies (Fine, 2015), to the practical identification of metacommunities (Leibold et al, 2004;Smith et al, 2018), to the understanding of animal distribution and evolution (Rueda, Rodríguez, & Hawkins, 2010), besides being a requisite for conservation planning and management (Dinerstein et al, 2017;Olson et al, 2001). Here we refer to subregions as land units containing distinct natural species assemblages delimited by their contemporary distribution (Olson et al, 2001).…”