Madagascar subhumid forests
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The Madagascar subhumid forests are a tropical moist broadleaf forest ecoregion which covers most of the central highlands of the island of Madagascar.
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[edit] Setting
The Madagascar subhumid forests cover most of Madagascar's central highlands, above approximately 800 meters elevation on the east and above 600 meters elevation on the west. The ecoregion has an area of approximately 199,500 square kilometers (77,000 square miles). The highlands catch the wet northeast trade winds, while the areas to the south, west, and north lie in the drier rain shadow of the highlands. The subhumid forests are bounded by the humid Madagascar lowland forests along the coastal strip to the east, by the Madagascar dry deciduous forests to the north, northwest and west, and by the xeric Madagascar succulent forests and Madagascar spiny thickets to the southwest and south. In four areas above 1800-2000 meters elevation, the subhumid forests yield to the montane Madagascar ericoid thickets. Amber Mountain (Montagne D’Ambre), which lies near the northern tip of the island, contains a significant pocket of subhumid forest, surrounded at lower elevations by dry deciduous forest. The subhumid forests ecoregion also includes the disjunct Analavelona and Isalo massifs to the southwest, surrounded by succulent forests at lower elevations.
[edit] Flora
The original flora of ecoregion has been much altered by human use; extensive areas have been cleared for agriculture, grazing, and rice cultivation, and many exotic species have been introduced. Pockets of closed-canopy evergreen forest still exist, as do open-canopy woodlands. Large areas are now covered by grassland, but the extent to which the grasslands are the result of human intervention is still subject to debate.
The subhumid forests shelter several species with origins in the temperate southern hemisphere Antarctic flora, including several species of podocarps (Podocarpus and Afrocarpus), and Takhtajania perrieri, from the primitive dicot family Winteraceae.
Madagascar's high plateau forests have been altered more than the eastern rainforests or the western dry forests, presumably due to historically greater population density and proximity to the capital city of Antananarivo; moreover, there has been extensive slash-and-burn activity by native peoples in the central highlands, eliminating most forest habitat and applying pressure to some endangered species. Slash-and-burn is a method sometimes used by shifting cultivators to create short term yields from marginal soils. When practiced repeatedly over a large scale area, or without intervening fallow periods, the nutrient poor soils may be exhausted or eroded to an unproductive state.
[edit] Fauna
The subhumid forests were formerly home to the island's distinct megafauna. Madagascar's long isolation from other continents resulted in a very limited land mammal fauna, and the endemic mammal lineages, in particular the lemurs, adapted to fill certain niches. Giant lemurs, now extinct, were as large as adult gorillas. Several species of elephant birds (Aepyornis), giant flightless ratites related to the ostrich, also became extinct since the arrival of humans approximately 2000 years ago, including Aepyornis maximus, the largest bird species ever to exist.