Deforestation in New Zealand
Deforestation in New Zealand has been a contentious environmental issue in the past, but native forests now have legal protection, and are not allowed to be tampered with by humans.
Deforestation in Tasman, South Island.
A photo from the Auckland Weekly News (9 March 1911) shows smoke billowing above the horizon, with the caption "The epidemic of bush fires in Auckland Province".
Environment of New Zealand
The environment of New Zealand is characterised by an endemic flora and fauna which has evolved in near isolation from the rest of the world. The main islands of New Zealand span two biomes, temperate and subtropical, complicated by large mountainous areas above the tree line. There are also numerous smaller islands which extend into the subantarctic. The prevailing weather systems bring significantly more rain to the west of the country. New Zealand's territorial waters cover a much larger area than its landmass and extend over the continental shelf and abyssal plateau in the South Pacific Ocean, Tasman Sea and Southern ocean.
New Zealand, showing mountains dividing a wet largely forested west coast from a drier east coast.
The effect of bedrock on soil and ecology. Ultramafic rock (left) and mafic rock (right).
A male brown kiwi. Eighty per cent of New Zealand's biota is endemic.
Kauri tree and epiphytes