New Zealand North Island temperate forests

New Zealand North Island temperate forests

New Zealand North Island temperate forests
The New Zealand North Island temperate forests cover the warm-temperate to subtropical native forest of the North Island — historically dominated by kauri in the northern half, podocarp-broadleaf forest (rimu, totara, kahikatea, with broadleaf rata and tawa) across the central and southern reaches. Less than 25% of the original native forest remains; surviving fragments are heavily managed against introduced mammalian browsers (possum, deer, goat).
RESOLVE 171
Australasia
32,594 sq mi
Oceanic, subtropical to temperate (Köppen Cfa / Cfb)
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
États / provinces
Auckland, Waikato, Bay of Plenty, Taranaki, Hawke's Bay, Wellington
Type de paysage
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Région végétale
Australasia
Empreinte de la région
32,594 sq mi
Plage d'altitude
0 – 5,300 ft
Type de climat
Oceanic, subtropical to temperate (Köppen Cfa / Cfb)
Pression sur l'habitat
Nature Could Recover (Dinerstein NNH 3)
Utilisez ceci comme schéma général de plantation pour la région : 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. Pour vos décisions de jardin, associez ce contexte à la liste de plantes ci-dessous, puis affinez selon les contraintes de lumière, d'eau, de sol et de taille adulte de votre site.

Range & origins

Emplacement de New Zealand North Island temperate forests sur la carte du monde
Repère placé à l’intérieur du polygone RESOLVE 2017 à 39.3°S, 176.1°E.
La région à travers le temps
Empreinte moderne
RESOLVE 2017 cartographie 32,594 sq mi
Cette limite est une empreinte écologique moderne pour New Zealand North Island temperate forests, et non une ligne permanente sur la planète. Elle est utile pour le contexte actuel des plantes et de la faune car elle suit des schémas récurrents de végétation, de climat, de relief et de perturbations.
Pourquoi ici
Conditions de Oceanic, subtropical to temperate (Köppen Cfa / Cfb)
La région se situe dans le règne Australasia et est classée comme temperate broadleaf & mixed forests. L'altitude, l'humidité, le feu, les sols, les côtes et l'utilisation humaine des terres peuvent tous rendre le paysage réel plus varié qu'une seule couleur de carte ne le laisse penser.
Pression du changement
Nature Could Recover
Kauri dieback (Phytophthora agathidicida) is the headline forest-health story — climate change does not directly cause it, but warmer winters expand its overwintering window.

Régions de plantation similaires

Parcourez d'autres régions au rythme similaire d'étés chauds et secs. Leurs listes de plantes peuvent suggérer des espèces et des combinaisons à comparer.
RESOLVE 167 - Australasia
Chatham Island temperate forests
The Chatham Island temperate forests cover the remote Chatham Islands archipelago, which lies roughly 800 kilometers east of New Zealand's South Island in the Pacific Ocean and includes the two largest islands, Chatham and Pitt. Isolated for well over a million years, the islands were originally cloaked in relatively low-stature forest interwoven with scrubby heathland and rush swamp, where tree ferns, orchids, and Nikau palms (Rhopalostylis sapida) thrive in a humid, peaty understory; conspicuously, the podocarps and southern beeches typical of mainland New Zealand are absent. The climate is oceanic and windswept, with a narrow temperature range, frequent rain, and constant exposure to Southern Ocean storms. The flora is strikingly distinct, with around fifty endemic plant species, and the ecoregion's flagship is the Chatham Island black robin (Petroica traversi), famously brought back from just a handful of surviving birds, though invasive mammals and past habitat clearance keep much of the native vegetation under pressure. For gardeners, the islands are the wild home of several prized ornamentals, including the Chatham Islands forget-me-not (Myosotidium hortensia) and tree daisies of the genus Olearia.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
310 sq mi
Niveau NNH 4
RESOLVE 168 - Australasia
Eastern Australian temperate forests
The Eastern Australian temperate forests cover the southeastern Australian wet-eucalypt forest belt — from coastal southeast Queensland through New South Wales (the Great Dividing Range east slopes), eastern Victoria, and the immediately adjacent inland tablelands. Mountain ash (Eucalyptus regnans), messmate, manna gum, and brown stringybark anchor the wet-forest canopies, with tree ferns, sassafras, and southern beech in the understory of the wettest gullies. Sydney + Newcastle + Wollongong + Melbourne all sit at or near the coastal edge of this ecoregion.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 10b-13a
+3.1°F d’ici 2070
114,255 sq mi
Profil éditorial
Niveau NNH 4
RESOLVE 169 - Australasia
Fiordland temperate forests
The Fiordland temperate forests occupy the rugged southwest corner of New Zealand's South Island, a remote landscape largely protected within Fiordland National Park and the Te Wahipounamu South West New Zealand World Heritage Area. Southern beeches (Nothofagus) dominate much of the forest, with silver beech (Nothofagus menziesii) clothing the fiords and red beech (Nothofagus fusca) filling inland valleys, alongside tall podocarps such as rimu, totara, and miro and an understory rich in tree ferns, mosses, and shrubs. The climate is wet and cool-summered, with rainfall that climbs steeply from drier eastern areas to extraordinarily high totals near the western fiords, holding the treeline below about 1,000 meters despite the region's mid-latitude position. Isolation has produced some of the highest levels of endemism of any temperate or alpine area on Earth, with nearly 700 higher plants largely unique to the ecoregion and emblematic birds including the takahe, the alpine kea, the kakapo, and the southern brown kiwi. Gardeners may recognize natives of this region's open alpine zones, where Chionochloa snow tussocks form extensive herbfields above the beech line.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 9b-11b
+2.6°F d’ici 2070
4,257 sq mi
Niveau NNH 1
RESOLVE 170 - Australasia
Nelson Coast temperate forests
The Nelson Coast temperate forests cover the top of New Zealand's South Island, spanning the Tasman and West Coast regions across the flanks of the Paparoa Range and neighbouring mountains. Southern beech (Nothofagus) dominates the drier eastern ridges, while podocarp rainforests in the wetter west carry northern rata (Metrosideros robusta), karaka (Corynocarpus laevigatus), and the nikau palm (Rhopalostylis sapida). The climate is temperate and maritime, with high rainfall on the west-facing slopes giving way to a more sheltered, drier eastern side fringed by golden sand beaches. Despite its modest size, the region holds about half of New Zealand's roughly 2,450 plant species and shelters the great spotted kiwi, with much of it protected within Kahurangi, Paparoa, and Abel Tasman national parks. For gardeners, several signature natives here, including the nikau palm, northern rata, and karaka, are valued ornamentals in suitably mild, moist climates.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 9b-12a
+2.9°F d’ici 2070
5,627 sq mi
Niveau NNH 1
RESOLVE 172 - Australasia
New Zealand South Island temperate forests
The New Zealand South Island temperate forests (also mapped as the Southland temperate forests) cover the southernmost lowlands and adjacent highlands of New Zealand's South Island, spanning the Otago and Southland regions and including The Catlins, the Takitimu Mountains, and the Longwood Range. Original cover was a mix of broadleaf trees and ancient podocarp conifers, with kahikatea (Dacrycarpus dacrydioides) common in swampy ground and rimu (Dacrydium cupressinum) and totara (Podocarpus totara) on drier sites, while southern beech (Nothofagus, including silver beech) dominated higher inland slopes; red tussock grass (Chionochloa rubra) prevailed in open ground and expanded as forest was cleared. These podocarp and beech communities are a living legacy of the Gondwana supercontinent, reflecting New Zealand's long isolation. Most of the original forest has been lost, and remaining blocks are now safeguarded by reserves such as Catlins Conservation Park, though introduced predators including ship rats, stoats, and possums continue to threaten native birds like the yellowhead (mohua) and the flagship tui.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 9b-11b
+2.7°F d’ici 2070
4,511 sq mi
Niveau NNH 3
RESOLVE 173 - Australasia
Northland temperate kauri forests
The Northland temperate kauri forests cover the warm northern end of New Zealand's North Island, spanning the Northland, Auckland, and Waikato regions along with offshore islands such as the Three Kings and Poor Knights. The ecoregion takes its name from the towering southern kauri (Agathis australis), which rises above broadleaf and podocarp forest of rimu (Dacrydium cupressinum), totara, miro, and tanekaha, and it also holds New Zealand's southernmost mangroves. These are the warmest forests in the country, with a warm and humid climate. The forests are notably endemic-rich but heavily reduced: most of the original kauri was removed through logging and gum-tapping for farmland, and introduced predators such as rats, stoats, and ferrets have pushed many plants, birds, and reptiles into offshore-island refuges. Gardeners may recognize several striking endemics from this region, including the Three Kings vine (Tecomanthe speciosa) and the genus Pennantia.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 10b-12b
+2.8°F d’ici 2070
11,555 sq mi
Niveau NNH 3

Sources et citations

Citer cette page
Pour les plans de cours, articles ou notes de plantation régionales qui utilisent cette page Plotwright. Pour citer le cadre d'écorégions sous-jacent ou un profil éditorial spécifique, utilisez les fiches de sources ci-dessous.
Plotwright. (n.d.). New Zealand North Island temperate forests (New Zealand North Island temperate forests). Retrieved 2026, June 24, from https://plotwright.com/regions/resolve-171
Sources pour cette région
Cette page cite d'abord Plotwright pour la vue compilée, puis répertorie les pages sources du cadre, du climat et de l'éditorial en amont afin que les lecteurs puissent citer directement le matériel d'origine.
RESOLVE 2017 Terrestrial Ecoregions (Dinerstein et al.)
Cadre principal des écorégions
Étaye 4 champs
Identifiant RESOLVE
Biome + règne
Superficie
Palier NNH