Nelson Coast temperate forests
The Nelson Coast temperate forests is an ecoregion in New Zealand.
Location and description
These forests are located on the flanks of the Paparoa Range and other mountains at the top of South Island. The area is thickly forested and has high rainfall, especially on the west-facing slopes but less so on the sheltered eastern side, which has golden sand beaches. Natural features of the region include: the limestone Pancake Rocks near the town of Punakaiki on the edge of Paparoa National Park; Farewell Spit at the north of the island, the longest sandspit in New Zealand; the nearby Te Waikoropupu Springs; and the karst areas on the flanks of Mount Owen in Kahurangi National Park.Flora
There are small areas of northern rata ', rimu, and miro rainforest hardwoods as well as karaka ' and the Nīkau palm ' near the coast. However most of the area is covered in Southern beech forest containing all four species of Southern beech; red beech, silver beech and hard beech in the lowlands and mountain beech higher up. In the less fertile rocks areas there are yellow pine ' and Dracophyllums including the endemic D. townsonii and the mountain neinei. The alpine plants found here including Celmisia dallii occur as these peaks, along with Fiordland at the southern end of the island, were a high-elevation refuge from the effects of the last ice age.Fauna
The forests are home to a number of endemic species including two flightless birds that no longer survive in the lowland areas of the island, these are the western weka and the largest kiwi, the great spotted kiwi. The varied habitats in the region support a mixture of other birds found here include the kea, the kākā ', the kererū ' and the kārearea '. Farewell Spit in particular is an important site for wading birds and is on a migration route.The area is also rich in invertebrates including almost half of the known species of amber snails '.