Timor and Wetar deciduous forests
Timor and Wetar deciduous forests
The Timor and Wetar deciduous forests cover the islands of Timor and Wetar, along with Rote, Savu, and adjacent smaller islands in the Lesser Sunda chain, spanning Indonesia and East Timor. The islands sit within Wallacea, never connected to either the Asian or Australian mainland, so they hold a distinctive blend of species from both realms. The lower country supports dry deciduous, dry evergreen, and thorn forests, with lowland monsoon forest featuring Pterocarpus indicus and open savannas of Eucalyptus alba and the palm Borassus flabellifer; natural stands of Eucalyptus urophylla and sandalwood (Santalum album) also occur. The climate is a tropical monsoon one that lies in Australia's rain shadow, making this among the driest parts of Indonesia with a long, pronounced dry season. The ecoregion has the greatest number of bird species (229) of any tropical dry forest ecoregion in the Indo-Pacific, with many endemics, though its prized sandalwood has been left scarce by generations of overharvesting. Gardeners may recognize several native genera grown ornamentally elsewhere, including eucalypts and fragrant sandalwood.
RESOLVE 166
Australasia
12,941 sq mi
Tropical & Subtropical Dry Broadleaf Forests
Tipo de paisagem
Tropical & Subtropical Dry Broadleaf Forests
Região vegetal
Australasia
Pegada da região
12,941 sq mi
Pressão sobre o habitat
Nature Could Recover (Dinerstein NNH 3)
Origem e cuidado
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Use isto como o padrão geral de plantio para a região: Tropical forests that pass through a pronounced dry season, when many trees drop their leaves to conserve water. They hold high biodiversity but are among the most threatened tropical habitats, sensitive to fire and to clearing for agriculture. Para decisões de jardim, combine esse contexto com a lista de plantas abaixo e depois refine pelas restrições de luz, água, solo e tamanho adulto do seu local.
Range & origins
Marker placed inside the RESOLVE 2017 polygon at 9.2°S, 125.1°E.
A região ao longo do tempo
Pegada moderna
RESOLVE 2017 mapeia 12,941 sq mi
Este limite é uma pegada ecológica moderna de Timor and Wetar deciduous forests, não uma linha permanente no planeta. É útil para o contexto atual de plantas e fauna porque segue padrões recorrentes de vegetação, clima, relevo e perturbações.
Por que aqui
Condições de tropical & subtropical dry broadleaf forests
A região fica no reino Australasia e é classificada como tropical & subtropical dry broadleaf forests. Altitude, umidade, fogo, solos, costas e o uso humano da terra podem tornar a paisagem real mais variada do que uma única cor no mapa sugere.
Pressão de mudança
Nature Could Recover
O Plotwright mostra isto como a pegada RESOLVE atual. Ao longo de décadas a séculos, o aquecimento, as perturbações, as espécies invasoras, o uso da terra e a restauração podem mover a borda viva de uma região mesmo quando o mapa de referência permanece fixo.
Regiões de plantio semelhantes
Explore outras regiões com um ritmo semelhante de verões quentes e secos. Suas listas de plantas podem sugerir espécies e combinações que valem a pena comparar.
RESOLVE 163 - Australasia
Lesser Sundas deciduous forests
The Lesser Sundas deciduous forests stretch across the Indonesian islands of Lombok, Sumbawa, Komodo, Flores, and Alor, in the eastern Lesser Sunda chain. These islands sit within Wallacea, the transitional zone straddling the Wallace Line, where Asian and Australian plants and animals mingle. Monsoon forests and savannas dominate, ranging from moist and dry deciduous woodland to dry thorn and dry evergreen forest, with characteristic trees such as tamarind (Tamarindus indica) and Schleichera oleosa, while open savanna woodlands carry lontar palm (Borassus flabellifer) and Indian jujube (Ziziphus mauritiana). This is the driest yet most strongly seasonal part of Indonesia, with annual rainfall of roughly 800 to 1,350 mm falling mainly in a December-to-March wet season. The region is famous as the home of the endemic Komodo dragon and a wealth of endemic birds, and Komodo National Park is protected as a World Heritage Site.
Tropical & Subtropical Dry Broadleaf Forests
Zones 13b
+2.9°F by 2070
15,227 sq mi
NNH tier 2
RESOLVE 164 - Australasia
New Caledonia dry forests
The New Caledonia dry forests cover the western side of Grand Terre, the main island of New Caledonia, a French territory in the South Pacific Ocean. They grow in the rain shadow of the island's central mountain range, where the drier climate favors dense, vine-laced sclerophyll (dry) forest with trees generally 5 to 15 meters tall and characteristic genera such as Acacia, Gardenia, Pittosporum, Dodonaea, and Premna. The flora is highly endemic, including the flagship tree Ixora margaretae, a small species festooned with large fuchsia blossoms along its trunk. The ecoregion is considered critically endangered: fire, clearing for agriculture and cattle, and invasive species have reduced the original forest to scattered patches covering only a small fraction of the land area, though a substantial share now lies within protected areas. For gardeners, this is a source region for ornamental tropical genera like Ixora, Gardenia, and Pittosporum that are widely grown elsewhere.
Tropical & Subtropical Dry Broadleaf Forests
Zones 12b-13b
+2.8°F by 2070
1,706 sq mi
NNH tier 1
RESOLVE 165 - Australasia
Sumba deciduous forests
The Sumba deciduous forests cover the single Indonesian island of Sumba, in the Lesser Sunda Islands of East Nusa Tenggara province, within the biologically distinctive Wallacea region where Asian and Australasian faunas mix. Deciduous monsoon forest covers most of the island, while moister south-facing slopes that stay green through the dry season hold lowland evergreen rainforest; sandalwood (Santalum) was historically a common element of these woods. The climate is tropical and seasonally dry, with a pronounced dry season from roughly May to November and a rainy season from December to April. Despite the island's small size and modest vertebrate diversity, it supports a notably high level of bird endemism, with the Sumba hornbill serving as the ecoregion's flagship species. Much of the original forest has been cleared for crops and grazing, and repeated fires and grazing now maintain fire-resistant Casuarina and eucalypt savannas across the island. Two national parks, Laiwangi Wanggameti and Manupeu Tanah Daru, were designated in 1998 to protect endangered wildlife.
Tropical & Subtropical Dry Broadleaf Forests
Zones 13b
+3.0°F by 2070
4,155 sq mi
NNH tier 3
RESOLVE 520 - Neotropic
Apure-Villavicencio dry forests
The Apure-Villavicencio dry forests stretch along the eastern foot of the Andes' eastern cordillera, spanning the Venezuelan states of Portuguesa, Barinas and Apure and the Colombian departments of Arauca, Casanare and Meta. This is a transitional ecoregion, a patchwork of premontane, gallery and deciduous dry forest grading into savanna where the Andean montane forests give way to the lowland Llanos grasslands. Characteristic woody plants include mesquite (Prosopis juliflora), palo verde (Cercidium praecox), kapok (Ceiba pentandra), yellow mombin (Spondias mombin), and palms such as the moriche (Mauritia flexuosa) and macaúba (Acrocomia aculeata). Its climate is equatorial with a pronounced dry winter (Köppen Aw), with temperatures ranging from about 19 to 33 degrees Celsius. The forests have been severely degraded by deforestation, farming and ranching, leaving poorly protected remnants that the World Wildlife Fund rates as Vulnerable, yet they still shelter the giant anteater, Geoffroy's spider monkey, and the flagship Colombian four-eyed frog. Gardeners may recognize several natives here as ornamentals, including the stately kapok tree and the moriche and macaúba palms.
Tropical & Subtropical Dry Broadleaf Forests
Zones 12a-13b
+3.6°F by 2070
26,469 sq mi
NNH tier 3
RESOLVE 521 - Neotropic
Bajío dry forests
The Bajío dry forests cover the southwestern Mexican Plateau in west-central Mexico, spanning the states of Jalisco, Guanajuato, and Michoacán across the Lerma River basin and the lake country around Chapala, Cuitzeo, and Pátzcuaro. Set in valleys between roughly 1,000 and 2,000 meters on shallow, rocky, well-drained volcanic and limestone soils, the region was historically dry deciduous forest whose characteristic trees included copal, pochote, palo amarillo, and mauto, with thorn-scrub communities of mesquite and huamúchil. The climate is tropical subhumid, with annual rainfall around 500 to 930 millimeters and a pronounced dry season that can last up to eight months. This is one of Mexico's most developed and densely populated landscapes, and centuries of agriculture and grazing have reduced the forest to small pockets now dominated by thorn scrub and subtropical matorral, leaving the ecoregion classed as critical or endangered with only about 7.5 percent in protected areas. Gardeners working in comparably dry, seasonal climates may recognize natives of this region in drought-adapted, deciduous trees such as mesquite and copal.
Tropical & Subtropical Dry Broadleaf Forests
Zones 11a-11b
+2.8°F by 2070
14,472 sq mi
NNH tier 4
RESOLVE 522 - Neotropic
Balsas dry forests
The Balsas dry forests occupy the basin of the Balsas River in western and central Mexico, spreading across the states of Michoacan, Guerrero, Morelos, Mexico, Puebla, and Oaxaca. This tropical dry broadleaf ecoregion is a deciduous and thorn forest dominated by Bursera trees, alongside the legume Haematoxylum brasiletto and abundant columnar cacti such as Pachycereus and Cephalocereus. The climate is tropical and subhumid, with seasonal rainfall and a severe dry season that can last up to eight months. The forests are a renowned center of plant endemism and speciation, especially for Bursera, with roughly half of the region's Bursera species found nowhere else, and they shelter the near-endemic Balsas screech-owl, though only about a tenth of the ecoregion lies within protected areas. For drought-tolerant or xeric plantings, the native Bursera (the source of copal incense) and the dyewood Haematoxylum brasiletto are ornamental genera that evolved here.
Tropical & Subtropical Dry Broadleaf Forests
Zones 10b-13b
+3.1°F by 2070
24,105 sq mi
NNH tier 4
Sources & citations
Cite this page
Para planos de aula, artigos ou notas de plantio regionais que usem esta página do Plotwright. Para citar a estrutura de ecorregiões subjacente ou um perfil editorial específico, use os cartões de fontes abaixo.
Plotwright. (n.d.). Timor and Wetar deciduous forests (Timor and Wetar deciduous forests). Retrieved 2026, June 15, from https://plotwright.garden/regions/resolve-166
Fontes para esta região
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RESOLVE 2017 Terrestrial Ecoregions (Dinerstein et al.)
Estrutura principal de ecorregiões
Backs 4 fields
ID do RESOLVE
Bioma + reino
Área
Nível NNH