Australasia ecozone
The
Australasian ecozone includes
Australia, the island of
New Guinea (including
Papua New Guinea and the
Indonesian province of
Papua), and the eastern part of the Indonesian archipelago, including the island of
Sulawesi, the Moluccan islands (the Indonesian provinces of
Maluku and
North Maluku) and islands of
Lombok,
Sumbawa,
Sumba,
Flores, and
Timor, often known as the Lesser Sundas. The rest of Indonesia is part of the Indomalayan ecozone. The Australasia ecozone also includes several Pacific island groups, including the
Bismarck Archipelago,
Vanuatu, the
Solomon Islands, and
New Caledonia.
New Zealand and its surrounding islands are a distinctive sub-region of Australasian ecozone.
From a biological point of view, Australasia is a distinct region with a common evolutionary history and a great many unique plants and animals, some of them common to the entire area, others specific to particular parts but sharing a common ancestry. The long isolation of Australasia from other continents allowed it to evolve relatively independently, and makes it home to many unique familes of plants and animals.
Australia and New Guinea are distinguished by their large population of
Marsupial mammals, including
kangaroos,
possums, and
wombats. The last remaining
Monotreme mammals, the
echidnas and the
platypus, are
endemic to Australasia. Prior to the arrival of humans about 50,000 years ago, only about one-third of Australasian mammal species were
placental.
The boundary between Australasia and Indomalaya follows the
Wallace Line, named after the naturalist
Alfred Russel Wallace who noted the differences in mammal and bird fauna between the islands either side of the line. The Islands to the west of the line, including
Java,
Bali,
Borneo, and the
Philippines share a similar fauna with East Asia, including tigers,
rhinoceros, and
apes. During the ice ages, sea levels were lower, exposing the continental shelf that links these islands to one another and to Asia, and allowed Asian land animals to inhabit these islands. Similarly, Australia and New Guinea are linked by a shallow continental shelf, and were linked by a land bridge during the ice ages. A group of Australasian islands east of the Wallace line, including Sulawesi, Halmahera, Lombok, Flores, Sumba, Sumbawa, and Timor, is separated by deep water from both the southeast Asian continental shelf and the Australia-New Guinea continental shelf. These islands are called
Wallacea, and contain relatively few Australian or Asian mammals. While most land mammals found it difficult to cross the Wallace Line, many plant, bird, and reptile species were better able to make the crossing.
Australia, New Zealand, and New Caledonia are all portions of the ancient supercontinent of
Gondwana, which started to break into smaller continents in the
Cretaceous era, 130-65 million years ago. New Zealand broke away first, more than 80 million years ago, and Australia finally broke free from
Antarctica about 45 million years ago, which allowed the marsupial mammals to move between Australia, Antarctica, and South America. All the Australasian lands are home to the
Antarctic flora, descended from the flora of southern Gondwana, including the
coniferous podocarps and
Araucaria pines, and the broadleafed
southern beech (
Nothofagus), and proteas (
Proteaceae).
As Australia moved north into the desert latitudes, the continent became hotter and drier, and the soils poorer and leached of nutrients, causing the old Antarctic flora to retreat to the humid corners of the continent in favor new drought and fire tolerant flora, dominated by the
Eucalyptus,
Casuarina, and
Acacia trees, and by grasses and scrub where the rainfall was too scarce to support trees. Presently Australia is the smallest continent, and also the driest continent and the flattest (lowest in elevation) continent.
Geologically, New Guinea is the northern extension of Australia, separated only by a shallow continental shelf that has served as a land bridge when sea levels were lower, particularly in the ice ages. New Guinea shares many families of birds and marsupial mammals with Australia. As the
Indo-Australian Plate, which contains India, Australia, and the
Indian Ocean floor in between, moved north, it collided with the
Eurasian Plate, and the collision of the two plates pushed up the
Himalayas, the Indonesian islands, and New Guinea's Central Range. The Central Range is much younger and higher than the mountains of Australia; so high that it is home to rare equatorial
glaciers. New Guinea and Wallacea are part of the humid tropics, and many Indomalayan rainforest plants spread across the narrow straits from Asia, mixing together with the old Australian and Antarctic floras. Some botanists consider New Guinea and Wallacea to be part of the
floristic province of
Malesia, together with the other Indonesian islands and the
Malay Peninsula, although Malesia is now mostly used to refer to only the Indomalayan side of the Wallace Line.
New Caledonia is an old fragment of Gondwana; other nearby island groups, including the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu, were pushed up by the collision of the Australian plate with other oceanic plates. These islands were colonized by plants and some animals from New Guinea and New Caledonia, and are considered part of the Australasian ecozone based on those affinities. The island groups to the north and east, including
Micronesia,
Fiji, and
Polynesia, are part of the
Oceania ecozone.
New Zealand had no mammals (except for bats) until the arrival of humans. Birds adapted to ecological niches, such as grazers, insectivores, and large predators that have elsewhere been taken by mammals. New Zealand remained in the cool and humid latitudes, and lost many plant and animal families that were intolerant of its cool climate, including the araucarias and most proteas, as well as
crocodiles and
turtles.
Large
reptiles, including
crocodiles and huge monitor lizards (family Varanidae), like the
Komodo Dragon (
Varanus komodoensis), are ecologically important predators in Australia, New Guinea, and Wallacea.
There are 13 endemic
bird families, including
emus,
cassowaries,
kiwi,
kagu, cockatoos,
birds of paradise, and honeyeaters
The arrival of humans to Australia and New Guinea 50-60,000 years ago brought
dogs (
dingos) to Australia, and dogs and
pigs to New Guinea. Pigs and
rats arrived on New Zealand with the first
Polynesian settlers 800 years ago. The arrival of the first humans coincided with the extinction of much of the native
megafauna (see
Holocene extinction event). The arrival of Europeans brought a whole host of new animals and plants, including
sheep,
goats,
rabbits and
foxes, to Australasia, which have further disrupted the native ecologies; a great many Australasian plants and animals are presently endangered.
See also:
Australasia,
List of Australasia ecoregions
Australasia Terrestrial Ecoregions
\n| Tropical and Subtropical Moist Broadleaf Forests ecoregions |
\n\nAdmiralty Islands lowland rain forests (Papua New Guinea) \nBanda Sea Islands moist deciduous forests (Indonesia) \nBiak-Numfoor rain forests (Indonesia) \nBuru rain forests (Indonesia) \nCentral Range montane rain forests (Indonesia, Papua New Guinea) \nHalmahera rain forests (Indonesia) \nHuon Peninsula montane rain forests (Papua New Guinea) \nJapen rain forests (Indonesia) \nLord Howe Island subtropical forests (Australia) \nLouisiade Archipelago rain forests (Papua New Guinea) \nNew Britain-New Ireland lowland rain forests (Papua New Guinea) \nNew Britain-New Ireland montane rain forests (Papua New Guinea) \nNew Caledonia rain forests (New Caledonia) \nNorfolk Island subtropical forests (Australia) \nNorthern New Guinea lowland rain and freshwater swamp forests (Indonesia, Papua New Guinea) \nNorthern New Guinea montane rain forests (Indonesia, Papua New Guinea) \nQueensland tropical rain forests (Australia) \nSeram rain forests (Indonesia) \nSolomon Islands rain forests (Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands) \nSoutheastern Papuan rain forests (Papua New Guinea) \nSouthern New Guinea freshwater swamp forests (Indonesia, Papua New Guinea) \nSouthern New Guinea lowland rain forests (Indonesia, Papua New Guinea) \nSulawesi lowland rain forests (Indonesia) \nSulawesi montane rain forests (Indonesia) \nTrobriand Islands rain forests (Papua New Guinea) \nVanuatu rain forests (Solomon Islands, Vanuatu) \nVogelkop montane rain forests (Indonesia) \nVogelkop-Aru lowland rain forests (Indonesia) \n |
| \n |
| Tropical and Subtropical Dry Broadleaf Forests ecoregions |
\n\nLesser Sundas deciduous forests (Indonesia) \nNew Caledonia dry forests (New Caledonia) \nSumba deciduous forests (Indonesia) \nTimor and Wetar deciduous forests (Indonesia) \n |
| \n |
| Temperate Broadleaf and Mixed Forests ecoregions |
\n\nChatham Islands temperate forests (New Zealand) \nEastern Australian temperate forests (Australia) \nFiordland temperate forests (New Zealand) \nNelson Coast temperate forests (New Zealand) \nNorthland temperate forests (New Zealand) \nNorthland temperate kauri forests (New Zealand) \nRakiura Island (Stewart Island) temperate forests (New Zealand) \nRichmond temperate forests (New Zealand) \nSoutheast Australia temperate forests (Australia) \nSouthland temperate forests (New Zealand) \nTasmanian Central Highland forests (Australia) \nTasmanian temperate forests (Australia) \nTasmanian temperate rain forests (Australia) \nWestland temperate forests (New Zealand) \n |
| \n |
| Tropical and Subtropical Grasslands, Savannas, and Shrublands ecoregions |
\n\nArnhem Land tropical savanna (Australia) \nBrigalow tropical savanna (Australia) \nCape York tropical savanna (Australia) \nCarpentaria tropical savanna (Australia) \nEinasleigh upland savanna (Australia) \nKimberly tropical savanna (Australia) \nMitchell grass downs (Australia) \nTrans Fly savanna and grasslands (Indonesia, Papua New Guinea) \nVictoria Plains tropical savanna (Australia) \n |
| \n |
| Temperate Grasslands, Savannas and Shrublands ecoregions |
\n\nCanterbury-Otago tussock grasslands (New Zealand) \nEastern Australia mulga shrublands (Australia) \nSoutheast Australia temperate savanna (Australia) \n |
| \n |
| Montane Grasslands and Shrublands ecoregions |
\n\nAustralian Alps montane grasslands (Australia) \nCentral Range sub-alpine grasslands (Indonesia, Papua New Guinea) \nSouthland montane grasslands (New Zealand) \n |
| \n |
| Tundra ecoregions |
\n\nAntipodes Subantarctic Islands tundra (Australia, New Zealand) \n |
| \n |
| Mediterranean Forests, Woodlands, and Shrub ecoregions |
\n\nCoolgardie woodlands (Australia) \nEsperance mallee (Australia) \nEyre and York mallee (Australia) \nJarrah-Karri forest and shrublands (Australia) \nKwongan heathlands (Australia) \nMount Lofty woodlands (Australia) \nMurray-Darling woodlands and mallee (Australia) \nNaracoorte woodlands (Australia) \nSouthwest Australia savanna (Australia) \nSouthwest Australia woodlands (Australia) \n |
| \n |
| Deserts and Xeric Shrublands ecoregions |
\n\nCarnarvon xeric shrublands (Australia) \nCentral Ranges xeric scrub (Australia) \nGibson Desert (Australia) \nGreat Sandy-Tanami Desert (Australia) \nGreat Victoria Desert (Australia) \nNullarbor Plain xeric shrublands (Australia) \nPilbara shrublands (Australia) \nSimpson Desert (Australia) \nTirari-Stuart's Stony Desert (Australia) \nWestern Australian mulga shrublands (Australia) \n |
| \n |
| Mangrove ecoregions |
\n\nNew Guinea mangroves (Indonesia) \n |
Australasia biomes
Tropical and Subtropical Moist Broadleaf Forests | Tropical and Subtropical Dry Broadleaf Forests | Temperate Broadleaf and Mixed Forests | Tropical and Subtropical Grasslands, Savannas, and Shrublands | Temperate Coniferous Forests | Boreal Forests/Taiga | Temperate Grasslands, Savannas, and Shrublands | Montane Grasslands and Shrublands | Tundra | Mediterranean Forests, Woodlands, and Shrub | Deserts and Xeric Shrublands | Mangrove
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