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Banda Sea Islands moist deciduous forests (AA0102)

 

Banda Sea Islands moist deciduous forests
Banda Islands, Indonesia
Photograph by Anasia-Cruise


 

Where
Southeastern Asia: Small islands scattered across the Banda Sea in Indonesia
Biome
Tropical and Subtropical Moist Broadleaf Forests

  Size
2,900 square miles (7,500 square kilometers) -- about half the size of Hawaii
Vulnerable
 
 

· Location and General Description
· Biodiversity Features
· Current Status
· Threats
· Ecoregion Justification
· References
More Photos

The Banda Sea Islands Moist Deciduous Forests [AA0102] are found on small islands scattered across the Banda Sea and are part of the region known as Wallacea, which contains a distinctive fauna representing a mix of Asian and Australasian species. Active volcanoes are found on the Banda Islands, whereas other parts of the ecoregion represent portions of the Australian continent that have been torn off. The islands contain a remarkable twenty-one bird species found nowhere else on Earth. The forests in this ecoregion are still largely intact, but although many of these islands are tiny and uninhabitable, the bird populations are seriously threatened by accidentally released rats and cats and by the removal of their eggs for sale by fishers traveling through this area.

Location and General Description

This ecoregion represents the moist deciduous and limestone forests of Tanimbar, Kai, Banda, and smaller island groups in the Banda Sea, part of the eastern Indonesian Archipelago. Based on the Köppen climate zone system, this ecoregion falls in the tropical wet climate zone (National Geographic Society 1999). Geologically, the islands have a mixed history. The Banda Islands are part of the inner arc, whereas the rest of the ecoregion is part of the outer arc. The inner arc islands are a result of the subduction and partial melting of the Indo-Australian tectonic plate below the Eurasian plate. The inner arc islands represent young volcanoes that have coalesced with lava and sediment. The volcanically active Mt. Api is found in the Banda Islands, which represent the ruins of a very large volcano that erupted in prehistory. The basement rock of the outer islands, on the other hand, is composed of actual continental margin from the Australian plate that has not been subducted. These outer islands are less than 4 million years old. The resulting surface geology consists of complex sedimentary and metamorphic rocks: uplifted coral reefs over complex basement rocks (Monk et al. 1997).

In the south the forest biogeography of the Moluccas differs from that associated with the classic dipterocarp forests of Borneo or Sumatra. Northern Maluku has relatively similar dipterocarp forests. Many of the dipterocarp species have been replaced by dominants more typical of the Australo-Melanesian area. The forests of this ecoregion are varied but include evergreen rain forest (Kepulauan Kai), semi-evergreen rain forest, moist deciduous forest, and dry deciduous forest (Monk et al. 1997).

Biodiversity Features

The mammal fauna consists of twenty-two species with both Asian and Australasian affinities, and three species are endemic (table 1) (Flannery 1995). The Moluccan mouse-eared bat (Myotis stalkeri) is endangered, whereas the dusky pademelon (Thylogale bruinii) and brown-bearded sheathtail bat (Taphozous achates) are considered vulnerable (IUCN 2000). The dusky pademelon is the only macropodid (kangaroo) found in the Banda Sea islands (Kai), although it is also found in the Aru Islands and the Trans Fly of New Guinea (Flannery 1995).

Table 1. Endemic and Near-Endemic Mammal Species.

Family

Species

Macropodidae

Thylogale bruinii

Vespertilionidae

Myotis stalkeri*

Emballonuridae

Taphozous achates*

An asterisk signifies that the species' range is limited to this ecoregion.

Together with Halmahera, Buru, and Seram islands, this ecoregion lies within an area with perhaps the highest levels of bird endemism for its size anywhere in the world and the highest number of endemic birds of any area in Asia. Even the smallest, uninhabitable islands are significant as breeding sites for large numbers of seabirds such as frigatebirds, tropicbirds, boobies, terns, and smaller species (Whitten and Whitten 1992). Manuk Island and Mt. Api (north of Wetar), two nature reserves in the Banda Sea, are the breeding and roosting sites for millions of seabirds. Active volcanoes, they are probably the greatest bird islands left in all southeast Asia (Whitten and Whitten 1992; Monk et al. 1997). This ecoregion contains more than 225 species of terrestrial birds, of which forty-three are endemic or near endemic (table 2). This ecoregion corresponds with the Banda Sea Islands EBA, which contains forty-one restricted-range species, and includes eighteen species that are found nowhere else on Earth (Stattersfield et al. 1998). Only one of these species, the Damar flycatcher (Ficedula henrici), is considered threatened.

Table 2. Endemic and Near-Endemic Bird Species.

Family

Common Name

Species

Megapodiidae

Tenimbar megapode

Megapodius tenimberensis*

Megapodiidae

Forsten's scrubfowl

Megapodius forstenii

Columbidae

Dusky cuckoo-dove

Macropygia magna

Columbidae

Wallace's fruit-dove

Ptilinopus wallacii

Columbidae

Pink-headed imperial-pigeon

Ducula rosacea

Cacatuidae

Tanimbar cockatoo

Cacatua goffini*

Loriidae

Red lory

Eos bornea

Loriidae

Blue-streaked lory

Eos reticulata*

Loriidae

Olive-headed lorikeet

Trichoglossus euteles

Cuculidae

Green-cheeked bronze-cuckoo

Chrysococcyx rufomerus*

Cuculidae

Pied bronze-cuckoo

Chrysococcyx crassirostris

Cuculidae

Kai coucal

Centropus spilopterus*

Strigidae

Moluccan hawk-owl

Ninox squamipila

Tytonidae

Lesser masked-owl

Tyto sororcula

Alcedinidae

Cinnamon-backed kingfisher

Todirhamphus australasia

Acanthizidae

Rufous-sided gerygone

Gerygone dorsalis

Meliphagidae

White-tufted honeyeater

Lichmera squamata

Meliphagidae

Banda myzomela

Myzomela boiei*

Meliphagidae

Black-faced friarbird

Philemon moluccensis

Eopsaltriidae

Golden-bellied flyrobin

Microeca hemixantha*

Pachycephalida

Drab whistler

Pachycephala griseonota

Pachycephalida

Wallacean whistler

Pachycephala arctitorquis*

Rhipiduridae

Cinnamon-tailed fantail

Rhipidura fuscorufa*

Rhipiduridae

Long-tailed fantail

Rhipidura opistherythra*

Monarchidae

White-naped monarch

Monarcha pileatus

Monarchidae

Black-bibbed monarch

Monarcha mundus*

Monarchidae

White-tailed monarch

Monarcha leucurus*

Monarchidae

Moluccan flycatcher

Myiagra galeata

Oriolidae

Buru oriole

Oriolus bouroensis

Campephagidae

Kai cuckoo-shrike

Coracina dispar*

Turdidae

Slaty-backed thrush

Zoothera schistacea*

Turdidae

Orange-banded thrush

Zoothera peronii

Turdidae

Fawn-breasted thrush

Zoothera machiki*

Sturnidae

Tanimbar starling

Aplonis crassa*

Muscicapidae

Cinnamon-chested flycatcher

Ficedula buruensis

Muscicapidae

Damar flycatcher

Ficedula henrici*

Zosteropidae

Great Kai white-eye

Zosterops grayi*

Zosteropidae

Little Kai white-eye

Zosterops uropygialis*

Sylviidae

Timor stubtail

Urosphena subulata

Sylviidae

Tanimbar bush-warbler

Cettia carolinae*

Estrildidae

Tricolored parrotfinch

Erythrura tricolor

Dicaeidae

Ashy flowerpecker

Dicaeum vulneratum

Dicaeidae

Red-chested flowerpecker

Dicaeum maugei

An asterisk signifies that the species' range is limited to this ecoregion.

Current Status

This ecoregion consists of a chain of small islands. The forests in this ecoregion are still largely intact, with only about 20 percent of the habitat being lost. The island of Yamdena in the Tanimbars represents a fairly large block of undisturbed habitat. There are five protected areas that cover 1,500 km2 (27 percent) of the ecoregion (table 3). However, the largest of the protected areas is still in a proposed state.

Table 3. WCMC (1997) Protected Areas That Overlap with the Ecoregion.

Protected Area

Area (km2)

IUCN Category

Kai Besar

290

PRO

Pulau Nuswotar

40-75

I

Jamdena

1,130

PRO

Pulau Nustaram

30

I

Pulau Lucipara

20

?

Pulau Angwarmase

10

I

Gunung Api (north of Wetar)

1

?

Total

1,521

 
Ecoregion numbers of protected areas that overlap with additional ecoregions are listed in brackets.

Types and Severity of Threats

Although many of these islands are tiny and uninhabitable, the bird populations are seriously threatened by predatory rats and cats that have been accidentally released onto these islands and by the removal of their eggs for sale by fishers traveling through this area (Whitten and Whitten 1992). On inhabited islands, such as Manuk Island Nature Reserve, small-scale agriculture poses another threat as farmers oust both tree-nesting and ground-nesting birds (Whitten and Whitten 1992).

Justification of Ecoregion Delineation

The Sula Islands were included within the Sulawesi Lowland Rain Forests [AA0123] and the Aru Islands in the Vogelkop-Aru Lowland Rain Forests [AA0128]. Buru Island, identified as a distinct subunit (13c) by MacKinnon (1997) and as an EBA (Stattersfield et al. 1998), was delineated as a distinct ecoregion, the Buru Rain Forests [AA0104]. Seram, the larger island to the east of Buru, was also delineated as an ecoregion: Seram Rain Forests [AA0118]. The larger Halmahera Rain Forests [AA0106] includes Obi Island, which MacKinnon (1997) recognized as a separate subunit (13b) from Halmahera Island (subunit 13a). We created the Banda Sea Islands Moist Deciduous Forests [AA0102] by combining the islands in the Kai and Tanimbar archipelagos, which were distinguished as a biogeographic unit by Monk et al. (1997). The primary vegetation on the islands in both these archipelagos is moist deciduous forests and semi-evergreen forests, whereas the vegetation in the other, nearby large islands (Seram and Aru) is evergreen rain forests (Monk et al. 1997).

References

References for this ecoregion are currently consolidated in one document for the entire Indo-Pacific realm.
Indo-Pacific Reference List

Prepared by: John Morrison
Reviewed by:

This text was originally published in the book Terrestrial ecoregions of the Indo-Pacific: a conservation assessment from Island Press. This assessment offers an in-depth analysis of the biodiversity and conservation status of the Indo-Pacific's ecoregions.

For more general information on this ecoregion, go to the WildWorld version of this description.

All text by World Wildlife Fund © 2001