The awesome Paradise Forests stretch from South East Asia, across the islands of Indonesia, on to Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands in the Pacific.
This wonderfully diverse region supports hundreds of indigenous
cultures and creatures found nowhere else in the world. The island of
New Guinea, the world's second biggest island, has the largest
continuous tracts of ancient forest in the Asia Pacific region. The
island is divided into two regions: the Indonesian territory of Papua
in the west and the nation of Papua New Guinea in the east.
Inside the forest
The Paradise Forests consist of tropical rainforests, mangrove, coastal
and swamp forests. Monsoon and deciduous forests flourish in the drier
and more mountainous regions. They shelter an amazingly rich number of
plant and animal species, many of which occur nowhere else on earth.
The orang-utan, Sumatran tiger and the world's largest flower, the one
metre wide rafflesia all call the Paradise Forests home.
Photo story: Wildlife of the Paradise Forests.
People also live in the Paradise Forests. Their deep connection to the
forest for their cultural, spiritual and physical wellbeing has been
unbroken for thousands of years. The diversity of these cultures is
extraordinary. More than 1000 languages are spoken on the island of New
Guinea alone. That is around one sixth of all the living languages on
Earth today.