Aya Biosphere Reserve
The Aya Biosphere Reserve is a UNESCO Man and the Biosphere Programme in the south of Kyushu Island, Japan. It harbours one of the country’s largest remaining lucidophyllous forests. The forest shows high biodiversity and embraces many indigenous species. Forest therapy and traditional recycling based agriculture in Aya Town are an ecotourism draw to the Biosphere Reserve.
Ecological characteristics
Aya Biosphere Reserve consists of a plateau containing high relief mountains, low relief Mountains and Shirasu layers, as well as a flat alluvial plain around the confluence of the Ayakita and Ayaminami Rivers. It is located near the centre of Miyazaki Prefecture in Southeastern Kyushu, where the Kyushu Central Mountains and the Miyazaki Plain meet.Lucidophyllous forests within the Biosphere Reserve consist of many species endemic to Japan. Lucidophyllous forests in East Asia are unique as they have lain on the border of two floras since the Cretaceous Period when angiosperms were first born.
Forests account for 88% of the total area of the Biosphere Reserve out of which about 16% are natural lucidophyllous forests and about 25% are secondary lucidophyllous forests.
1033 botanical species, 145 fungal species, 70 avian species and 19 mammal species have been identified in the Biosphere Reserve. The area around Aya Town is the southern limit of habitats for the Japanese serow and golden eagles.