Daba Mountains evergreen forests
Daba Mountains evergreen forests
The Daba Mountains evergreen forests cover the rugged uplands of central China, spanning northeastern Sichuan, southern Shaanxi, northern Chongqing Municipality, and western Hubei. A temperate broadleaf and mixed forest, the ecoregion sits at a biogeographic crossroads between evergreen forests to the south and deciduous forests to the north: lower slopes carry oaks and arboreal mints while higher elevations support pines such as Chinese red pine and Chinese white pine. Its southern exposure shelters cold-sensitive species from the frigid winters that strike northern China, and higher reaches above the forest belt see heavy winter snow. This is a Global 200 endangered ecoregion of exceptional richness, with more than 850 woody plant species in over 250 genera and flagship animals including the Hubei golden snub-nosed monkey, and it serves as a refuge for ancient, ice age relict trees. Gardeners may recognize several ornamentals native here, including the dawn redwood (Metasequoia), the dove tree (Davidia involucrata), and Cercidiphyllum japonicum.
RESOLVE 659
Palearctic
64,974 sq mi
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Landscape type
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Plant region
Palearctic
Region footprint
64,974 sq mi
Habitat pressure
Nature Could Reach Half Protected (Dinerstein NNH 2)
Source & care
Sponsored
Plotwright may earn a commission from purchases made through these links, at no extra cost to you.
Use this as the broad planting pattern for the region: Four-season forests of deciduous hardwoods — oak, maple, beech — often mixed with conifers, shaped by warm summers and cold winters. Trees leaf out in spring and color in autumn; the generally fertile soils have made these forests heavily settled and farmed. For garden decisions, pair that context with the plant list below, then narrow by your site's light, water, soil, and mature-size constraints.
Range & origins
Marker placed inside the RESOLVE 2017 polygon at 31.7°N, 108.6°E.
Region through time
Modern footprint
RESOLVE 2017 maps 64,974 sq mi
This boundary is a modern ecological footprint for Daba Mountains evergreen forests, not a permanent line on the planet. It is useful for today's plant and wildlife context because it follows recurring vegetation, climate, landform, and disturbance patterns.
Why here
temperate broadleaf & mixed forests conditions
The region sits in the Palearctic realm and is classed as temperate broadleaf & mixed forests. Elevation, moisture, fire, soils, coasts, and human land use can all make the real landscape more varied than a single map color suggests.
Change pressure
Nature Could Reach Half Protected
Plotwright shows this as the current RESOLVE footprint. Over decades to centuries, warming, disturbance, invasive species, land use, and restoration can move the living edge of a region even when the reference map stays fixed.
Planting collections
Finished planting recipes where every member can handle this region's climate range. The fit badge uses the collection's most sensitive plant, so a resilient collection is a safer starting point than any single standout.
Currently suited · 2 plants
Bright shade foundation
A part-shade planting with shrub structure and low foliage contrast.
Currently suited · 8 plants
Climate-resilient natives for warming zones (eastern NA)
A pollinator-supporting palette of eastern North American natives with broad hardiness ranges and wide native distributions. Built for gardeners who want a planting that can handle warming zones without giving up wildlife value.
Currently suited · 3 plants
Kitchen patio planters
A compact edible collection for containers, patios, and near-door harvesting.
Currently suited · 6 plants
Mediterranean drought-tolerant edible
A low-water edible palette of culinary herbs + a hardy grape for hot dry sunny sites. Mediterranean-origin plants thrive on neglect; their primary failure mode is overwatering, not underwatering.
Currently suited · 9 plants
Native pollinator border (eastern US)
A continuous-bloom native pollinator strip for eastern North America. Covers spring through frost with host + nectar plants spanning monarchs, native bees, hummingbirds, and specialist Lepidoptera. Little bluestem provides the matrix grass + Hesperiidae host.
Currently suited · 4 plants
Sunny pollinator border
A durable sunny border with summer bloom, seedheads, and upright winter texture.
Similar planting regions
Browse other regions with a similar hot, dry-summer rhythm. Their plant lists can suggest species and combinations worth comparing.
RESOLVE 644 - Palearctic
Appenine deciduous montane forests
The Apennine deciduous montane forests occupy the higher elevations of the Apennine Mountains running down the spine of the Italian peninsula, surviving as disconnected patches that stretch southward for over 350 kilometers through central Italy. The dominant cover is montane broadleaf forest led by European beech (Fagus sylvatica), often mixed with silver fir (Abies alba), deciduous oaks (Quercus), maples (Acer), whitebeams and rowans (Sorbus), with cold meadows and grasslands taking over above the treeline. The climate is temperate-cool and notably wet, with rainfall ranging from roughly 1,000 mm in the southern mountains to 2,500 mm in the north and abundant winter snow at altitude. The ecoregion is the last stronghold of the critically endangered Marsican brown bear and the endemic Apennine (Abruzzo) chamois, and a 2017 assessment found about 46 percent of its area falls within protected reserves such as Abruzzo, Lazio and Molise National Park. For gardeners, several ornamental woody genera native here, including holly (Ilex aquifolium), yew (Taxus baccata) and linden (Tilia), are familiar temperate landscape plants.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 10a-12a
+3.4°F by 2070
6,223 sq mi
NNH tier 2
RESOLVE 645 - Palearctic
Azores temperate mixed forests
The Azores temperate mixed forests cover the Azores archipelago, an autonomous region of Portugal whose nine principal volcanic islands lie roughly 1,350 to 1,500 km west of the Portuguese mainland. Lowland areas retain little natural vegetation, but above about 500 meters elevation enclaves of evergreen shrub forest persist, characterized by trees such as Laurus azorica, Juniperus brevifolia, Picconia azorica, and Erica azorica. The Gulf Stream gives the islands a mild maritime climate for their latitude, with summer averages near 21 degrees C and winter averages around 14.5 degrees C, and frost does not occur below 500 meters. The ecoregion is home to the endemic Azores bullfinch and the endemic Azores noctule bat; native laurel and juniper forests have been heavily displaced by introduced poplar, oak, and chestnut and by aggressive invasives. Gardeners may recognize native ornamentals from here, including the Azores blueberry (Vaccinium cylindraceum) and Azorean holly (Ilex perado subsp. azorica).
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
1,010 sq mi
NNH tier 4
RESOLVE 646 - Palearctic
Balkan mixed forests
The Balkan mixed forests stretch across southeastern Europe, spanning Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Greece, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Romania, Serbia, and Turkey, reaching from the Black Sea toward the Adriatic. Deciduous oaks dominate most of the ecoregion's lower forests, most prominently Hungarian oak (Quercus frainetto) along with Turkey oak (Quercus cerris) and downy oak (Quercus pubescens), giving way above roughly 800 to 1,200 meters to European beech and conifers such as black pine, Scots pine, Bosnian pine, Macedonian pine, silver fir, and Norway spruce. The climate ranges from humid subtropical to humid warm-summer continental with wet winters, and a few high-rainfall pockets have been considered temperate rainforest relicts. The region is exceptionally rich and conservation-critical, hosting the greatest concentration of threatened mammal species in Europe, with the saker falcon as its flagship; the Shar Mountain area alone holds over 2,000 plant species, around 400 of them endemic to the Balkans.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 8b-11a
+4.3°F by 2070
86,629 sq mi
NNH tier 3
RESOLVE 647 - Palearctic
Baltic mixed forests
The Baltic mixed forests stretch along the western and southern shores of the Baltic Sea, spanning northeastern Germany, northwestern Poland, eastern Denmark, and the southernmost tip of Sweden. Despite the name, the ecoregion does not reach the Baltic states; its woodlands are dominated by European beech (Fagus sylvatica), mixed with oak, ash, maple, linden, elm, hazel, rowan, and birch, alongside planted Norway spruce, forming beech, oak-beech, and pine-oak forest communities. The climate is mild and maritime, with mean annual temperatures roughly 7-13 degrees Celsius, gentle winters, and summers whose hottest months rarely exceed 20 degrees Celsius. The region supports around 340 bird species and serves as habitat for the aquatic warbler, described as the rarest passerine in mainland Europe, while mammals such as European otter, roe deer, red deer, wild boar, and wolf persist; the ecoregion is classified as Critical/Endangered. For gardeners, several native trees here, including silver birch, Norway maple, English oak, and European hornbeam, are familiar temperate ornamentals.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 9b-10b
+5.1°F by 2070
44,044 sq mi
NNH tier 3
RESOLVE 648 - Palearctic
Cantabrian mixed forests
The Cantabrian mixed forests stretch across southwestern Europe, running along the coastal Cantabrian Mountains and Galician Massif of northern Spain, south into northern Portugal, and northward through the westernmost Pyrenees into southwestern France. Oak and beech woodlands predominate, with lowlands of English oak (Quercus robur), sweet chestnut (Castanea sativa), and European ash (Fraxinus excelsior) giving way to upland forests of sessile and Pyrenean oak (Quercus petraea and Quercus pyrenaica) and European beech (Fagus sylvatica), interspersed with montane heaths. The climate is mild and humid Atlantic, transitional between the Mediterranean and oceanic zones, with cold, snowy winters and more Mediterranean conditions in Galicia. This is the far-southwestern stronghold of the brown bear and shelters the critically endangered European mink, the rare Pyrenean desman, and the Cantabrian capercaillie, with Picos de Europa National Park alone hosting many orchid species. Gardeners may recognize natives such as sweet chestnut and the heathers of its montane heathlands.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 9b-12a
+2.1°F by 2070
37,101 sq mi
NNH tier 3
RESOLVE 649 - Palearctic
Caspian Hyrcanian mixed forests
The Caspian Hyrcanian mixed forests form an 800-kilometer belt nestled between the Caspian Sea and the Elburz Mountains, lying mostly in northern Iran with portions reaching the Lenkoran lowlands and Talysh Mountains of southeastern Azerbaijan. These are temperate broadleaf and mixed deciduous forests, with Oriental beech the dominant species and characteristic trees including chestnut-leaved oak, European hornbeam, Persian ironwood, the Persian silk tree, and relict genera such as Caucasian zelkova and wingnut. The climate is humid and semi-subtropical at lower elevations, grading to oceanic and humid continental conditions in the mountains, and the high humidity drives exceptional forest productivity. The forests are an ancient Pleistocene refuge often called the "mother of European forests" because many plants dispersed across the continent from here after the glaciations; they were designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2019 (expanded into Azerbaijan in 2023) and shelter wildlife such as the flagship Persian leopard, brown bear, and wolf. Several of their native trees, including the Persian silk tree and Persian ironwood, are familiar to gardeners as ornamentals.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 8b-11b
+4.1°F by 2070
21,275 sq mi
NNH tier 3
Sources & citations
Cite this page
For lesson plans, articles, or regional planting notes that use this Plotwright page. To cite the underlying ecoregion framework or a specific editorial profile, use the source cards below.
Plotwright. (n.d.). Daba Mountains evergreen forests (Daba Mountains evergreen forests). Retrieved 2026, June 14, from https://plotwright.garden/regions/resolve-659
Sources for this region
This page cites Plotwright first for the compiled view, then lists the upstream framework, climate, and editorial source pages so readers can cite the original material directly.
RESOLVE 2017 Terrestrial Ecoregions (Dinerstein et al.)
Primary ecoregion framework
Backs 4 fields
RESOLVE id
Biome + realm
Area
NNH tier