Indomalayan realm

The Indomalayan realm is one of the eight biogeographic realms.[1] It extends across most of South and Southeast Asia and into the southern parts of East Asia.

The Indomalayan realm

Also called the Oriental realm by biogeographers, Indomalaya spreads all over the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia to lowland southern China, and through Indonesia as far as Sumatra, Java, Bali, and Borneo, east of which lies the Wallace line, the realm boundary named after Alfred Russel Wallace which separates Indomalaya from Australasia. Indomalaya also includes the Philippines, lowland Taiwan, and Japan's Ryukyu Islands.

Most of Indomalaya was originally covered by forest, and includes tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests, with tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests predominant in much of India and parts of Southeast Asia. The tropical forests of Indomalaya are highly variable and diverse, with economically important trees, especially in the families Dipterocarpaceae and Fabaceae.

Major ecological regions

The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) divides Indomalayan realm into three bio-regions, which it defines as "geographic clusters of eco-regions that may span several habitat types, but have strong biogeographic affinities, particularly at taxonomic levels higher than the species level (genus, family)".

Indian subcontinent

The Indian subcontinent bioregion covers most of India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, and Sri Lanka and eastern parts of Pakistan. The Hindu Kush, Karakoram, Himalaya, and Patkai ranges bound the bioregion on the northwest, north, and northeast; these ranges were formed by the collision of the northward-drifting Indian subcontinent with Asia beginning 45 million years ago. The Hindu Kush, Karakoram, and Himalaya are a major biogeographic boundary between the subtropical and tropical flora and fauna of the Indian subcontinent and the temperate-climate Palearctic realm.

Indochina

The Indochina bioregion includes most of mainland Southeast Asia, including Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, and Cambodia, as well as the subtropical forests of southern China.

Sunda Shelf and the Philippines

Malesia is a botanical province which straddles the boundary between Indomalaya and Australasia. It includes the Malay Peninsula and the western Indonesian islands (known as Sundaland), the Philippines, the eastern Indonesian islands, and New Guinea. While the Malesia has much in common botanically, the portions east and west of the Wallace Line differ greatly in land animal species; Sundaland shares its fauna with mainland Asia, while terrestrial fauna on the islands east of the Wallace line are derived at least in part from species of Australian origin, such as marsupial mammals and ratite birds.

History

The flora of Indomalaya blends elements from the ancient supercontinents of Laurasia and Gondwana. Gondwanian elements were first introduced by India, which detached from Gondwana approximately 90 MYA, carrying its Gondwana-derived flora and fauna northward, which included cichlid fish and the plant families Crypteroniaceae and possibly Dipterocarpaceae. India collided with Asia 30-45 MYA, and exchanged species. Later, as Australia-New Guinea drifted north, the collision of the Australian and Asian plates pushed up the islands of Wallacea, which were separated from one another by narrow straits, allowing a botanic exchange between Indomalaya and Australasia. Asian rainforest flora, including the dipterocarps, island-hopped across Wallacea to New Guinea, and several Gondwanian plant families, including podocarps and araucarias, moved westward from Australia-New Guinea into western Malesia and Southeast Asia.

Flora

The subfamily Dipterocarpoideae comprises characteristic tree species in Indomalaya's moist and seasonally dry forests, with the greatest species diversity in the moist forests of Borneo.[2] Teak (Tectona) is characteristic of the seasonally dry forests of the Indomalaya, from India through Indochina, Malaysia, and the Philippines. Tropical pitcher plants (Nepenthes) are also characteristic of Indomalaya, and the greatest diversity of species is in Sumatra, Borneo, and the Philippines.

The tropical forests of Indomalaya and Australasia share many lineages of plants, which have managed over millions of years to disperse across the straits and islands between Sundaland and New Guinea. The two floras evolved in long isolation, and the fossil record suggests that Asian species dispersed to Australasia starting 33 million years ago as Australasia moved northwards, and dispersal increased 12 million years ago as the two continents approached their present positions. The exchange was asymmetric, with more Indomalayan species spreading to Australasia than Australasian species to Indomalaya.[3]

Fauna

Two orders of mammals, the colugos (Dermoptera) and treeshrews (Scandentia), are endemic to the realm, as are families Craseonycteridae (Kitti's hog-nosed bat), Diatomyidae, Platacanthomyidae, Tarsiidae (tarsiers) and Hylobatidae (gibbons). Large mammals characteristic of Indomalaya include the leopard, tigers, water buffalos, Asian elephant, Indian rhinoceros, Javan rhinoceros, Malayan tapir, orangutans, and gibbons.

Indomalaya has three endemic bird families, the Irenidae (fairy bluebirds), Megalaimidae and Rhabdornithidae (Philippine creepers). Also characteristic are pheasants, pittas, Old World babblers, and flowerpeckers.

Indomalaya has 1000 species of amphibians in 81 genera, about 17 of global species. 800 Indomalayan species, or 80%, are endemic. Indomalaya has three endemic families of amphibians, Nasikabatrachidae, Ichthyophiidae, and Uraeotyphlidae. 329, or 33%, of Indomalayan amphibians are considered threatened or extinct, with habitat loss as the principal cause.[4]

More information is available under Indomalayan realm fauna.

Indomalayan ecoregions

Ecoregions of the Indomalayan realm, color-coded by biome. Beige: deserts and xeric shrublands. Light brown: tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests. Green: tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests. Bright green: tropical and subtropical coniferous forests. light green: temperate broadleaf and mixed forests. Dark green: temperate coniferous forests. Light blue: flooded grasslands and savannas. Light purple: montane grasslands and shrublands. Magenta: mangroves.
Andaman Islands rain forestsIndia
Borneo lowland rain forestsBrunei, Indonesia, Malaysia
Borneo montane rain forestsBrunei, Indonesia, Malaysia
Borneo peat swamp forestsBrunei, Indonesia, Malaysia
Brahmaputra Valley semi-evergreen forestsIndia
Cardamom Mountains rain forestsCambodia, Thailand, Vietnam
Chao Phraya freshwater swamp forestsThailand
Chao Phraya lowland moist deciduous forestsThailand
Chin Hills–Arakan Yoma montane forestsMyanmar, India
Christmas and Cocos Islands tropical forestsAustralia
Eastern Highlands moist deciduous forestsIndia
Eastern Java–Bali montane rain forestsIndonesia
Eastern Java–Bali rain forestsIndonesia
Greater Negros–Panay rain forestsPhilippines
Hainan Island monsoon rain forestsChina
Himalayan subtropical broadleaf forestsBhutan, India, Nepal
Irrawaddy freshwater swamp forestsMyanmar
Irrawaddy moist deciduous forestsMyanmar
Jiang Nan subtropical evergreen forestsChina
Kayah–Karen montane rain forestsMyanmar, Thailand
Lower Gangetic Plains moist deciduous forestsBangladesh, India
Luang Prabang montane rain forestsLaos
Luzon montane rain forestsPhilippines
Luzon rain forestsPhilippines
Malabar Coast moist forestsIndia
Maldives–Lakshadweep–Chagos Archipelago tropical moist forestsBritish Indian Ocean Territory, India, Maldives
Meghalaya subtropical forestsIndia
Mentawai Islands rain forestsIndonesia
Mindanao montane rain forestsPhilippines
Mindanao–Eastern Visayas rain forestsPhilippines
Mindoro rain forestsPhilippines
Mizoram–Manipur–Kachin rain forestsBangladesh, India, Myanmar
Myanmar coastal rain forestsMyanmar
Nansei Islands subtropical evergreen forestsJapan
Nicobar Islands rain forestsIndia
North Western Ghats moist deciduous forestsIndia
North Western Ghats montane rain forestsIndia
Northern Annamites rain forestsLaos, Vietnam
Northern Indochina subtropical forestsChina, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam
Northern Khorat Plateau moist deciduous forestsLaos, Thailand
Northern Thailand-Laos moist deciduous forestsLaos, Thailand
Northern Triangle subtropical forestsMyanmar
Northern Vietnam lowland rain forestsVietnam
Orissa semi-evergreen forestsIndia
Palawan rain forestsPhilippines
Peninsular Malaysian montane rain forestsMalaysia, Thailand
Peninsular Malaysian peat swamp forestsMalaysia, Thailand
Peninsular Malaysian rain forestsIndonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand
Red River freshwater swamp forestsVietnam
South China Sea Islandsdisputed between China, Malaysia, Philippines, Taiwan, Vietnam
South China–Vietnam subtropical evergreen forestsChina, Vietnam
South Taiwan monsoon rain forestsTaiwan
South Western Ghats moist deciduous forestsIndia
South Western Ghats montane rain forestsIndia
Southern Annamites montane rain forestsCambodia, Laos, Vietnam
Southwest Borneo freshwater swamp forestsIndonesia
Sri Lanka lowland rain forestsSri Lanka
Sri Lanka montane rain forestsSri Lanka
Sulu Archipelago rain forestsPhilippines
Sumatran freshwater swamp forestsIndonesia
Sumatran lowland rain forestsIndonesia
Sumatran montane rain forestsIndonesia
Sumatran peat swamp forestsIndonesia
Sundaland heath forestsIndonesia
Sundarbans freshwater swamp forestsBangladesh, India
Taiwan subtropical evergreen forestsTaiwan
Tenasserim–South Thailand semi-evergreen rain forestsMalaysia, Myanmar, Thailand
Tonle Sap freshwater swamp forestsCambodia, Vietnam
Tonle Sap–Mekong peat swamp forestsCambodia, Vietnam
Upper Gangetic Plains moist deciduous forestsIndia
Western Java montane rain forestsIndonesia
Western Java rain forestsIndonesia
Central Deccan Plateau dry deciduous forestsIndia
Central Indochina dry forestsCambodia, Laos, Thailand, Vietnam
Chota-Nagpur dry deciduous forestsIndia
East Deccan dry evergreen forestsIndia
Irrawaddy dry forestsMyanmar
Khathiar–Gir dry deciduous forestsIndia
Narmada Valley dry deciduous forestsIndia
Northern dry deciduous forestsIndia
South Deccan Plateau dry deciduous forestsIndia
Southeastern Indochina dry evergreen forestsCambodia, Laos, Thailand
Southern Vietnam lowland dry forestsVietnam
Sri Lanka dry-zone dry evergreen forestsSri Lanka
Himalayan subtropical pine forestsBhutan, India, Nepal, Pakistan
Luzon tropical pine forestsPhilippines
Northeast India–Myanmar pine forestsMyanmar, India
Sumatran tropical pine forestsIndonesia
Eastern Himalayan broadleaf forestsBhutan, India, Nepal
Northern Triangle temperate forestsMyanmar
Western Himalayan broadleaf forestsIndia, Nepal, Pakistan
Eastern Himalayan subalpine conifer forestsBhutan, India, Nepal
Western Himalayan subalpine conifer forestsIndia, Nepal, Pakistan
Terai–Duar savanna and grasslandsBhutan, India, Nepal
Rann of Kutch seasonal salt marshIndia, Pakistan
Kinabalu montane alpine meadowsMalaysia
Deccan thorn scrub forestsIndia, Sri Lanka
Indus Valley desertIndia, Pakistan
Northwestern thorn scrub forestsIndia, Pakistan
Thar desertIndia, Pakistan
Godavari–Krishna mangrovesIndia
Indochina mangrovesCambodia, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam
Indus River Delta–Arabian Sea mangrovesPakistan
Myanmar coast mangrovesMyanmar, India, Malaysia, Thailand
Sunda Shelf mangrovesBrunei, Indonesia, Malaysia
Sundarbans mangrovesBangladesh, India

See also

Bibliography

  • Wikramanayake, E., E. Dinerstein, C. J. Loucks, D. M. Olson, J. Morrison, J. L. Lamoreux, M. McKnight, and P. Hedao. 2002. Terrestrial ecoregions of the Indo-Pacific: a conservation assessment. Island Press, Washington, DC, USA, [2].

References

7°00′N 97°00′E / 7.000°N 97.000°E / 7.000; 97.000