Banda Sea Islands moist deciduous forests


The Banda Sea Islands moist deciduous forests is a tropical moist forest ecoregion in Indonesia. The ecoregion includes several island groups in the southwestern Banda Sea, including the Tanimbar Islands, Kai Islands, and the Barat Daya Islands except for Wetar.

Geography

The islands in the ecoregion are part of Wallacea, a group of indonesian islands which lie between the Australian and Asian continents but were never part of either continent.
The islands consist of two concentric island arcs. The Inner Banda Arc is made up of young, active volcanic islands, including the Banda Islands, Serua Island, Nila Island, Teun Island, Damar Island, and Romang Island.
The Outer Banda Arc is made up of oceanic sediments, principally coralline limestone, together with some older metamorphic rocks which accreted as the Australian plate subducts under the Banda Sea plate. The Outer Banda Arc includes the Kai Islands, Tanimbar Islands, Babar Islands, and Leti Islands. Yamdena in the Tanimbar Islands is the largest island in the ecoregion. Yamdena is mostly low, with a maximum elevation of 120 meters. Yamdena and several other Outer Arc islands have areas of karst where the island's limestone was uplifted and then eroded.

Climate

The ecoregion has a tropical monsoon climate, with two seasons. The west monsoon season runs from mid-December to June, and brings humidity and higher rainfall. The east monsoon season brings drier weather. On Yamdena, the largest island in the Tanimbar Islands and in the ecoregion, the highest rainfall month is February, and the driest month is September.
The islands receive more rainfall than Timor, Wetar, and the other islands of Nusa Tenggara to the west.

Flora

The principal plant communities are evergreen rain forest, semi-evergreen rain forest, moist deciduous forest, and dry deciduous forest. Common trees in the Tanimbar and Kai forests include Dillenia papuana, Pometia pinnata, Manilkara kanosiensis, Inocarpus fagifer, Heritiera littoralis, Diospyros spp., Garcinia celebica, and Myristica lancifolia.

Fauna

The ecoregion has 22 species of mammals. The dusky pademelon is a kangaroo native to the Kai Islands, as well as the Aru Islands and southern New Guinea. The Kei myotis is an endemic bat. The Indonesian tomb bat is native to the ecoregion and neighboring Timor.
The islands are home to several species of mosaic-tailed rats. In the Tanimbar islands, Melomys cooperae is endemic to Yamdena, and the Riama mosaic-tailed rat is endemic to the island of Selaru in the Tanimbar Islands. Bannister's rat is endemic to the Kai Islands, and closely related to M. lutillus of New Guinea. The other rodents of the Kai islands are Hydromys chrysogaster and Uromys caudimaculatus, which are also found in New Guinea and Australia.
The ecoregion is home to 225 bird species, including 21 endemic species and subspecies. It corresponds to the Banda Sea Islands endemic bird area.
Endemic birds include the Tanimbar megapode,
Tanimbar cockatoo, blue-streaked lory, green-cheeked bronze cuckoo, Kai coucal, Banda myzomela, golden-bellied flyrobin,, Wallacean whistler, cinnamon-tailed fantail, long-tailed fantail, black-bibbed monarch, Kai monarch, Kai cuckoo-shrike, slaty-backed thrush, fawn-breasted thrush, Tanimbar starling, Damar flycatcher, Great Kai white-eye, Little Kai white-eye, and Tanimbar bush-warbler.

Protected areas

A 2017 assessment found that, 14% of the ecoregion, is in protected areas. Protected areas include Kai Besar Nature Reserve.