The Mount Selinda area is home to a staggering array of indigenous African flora, fungi, birds, butterflies, insects and reptiles. This is mainly due to its position adjoining the
Chirinda Forest Botanical Reserve which is protected by law. Among the hundreds of indigenous trees found in Mount Selinda are
Red mahogany, Brown mahogany,
Natal mahogany, Albizia, Forest Newtonia (
Newtonia buchananii), Big Leaf,
White stinkwood,
Chirinda stinkwood,
Ironwood and colossal specimens of strangling figs. The
largest Red Mahogany tree in southern Africa, a 1,000- to 2,000-year-old leviathan with a trunk diameter of some 6 metres stands at Mount Selinda. Other smaller flora include thousands of specimens of the yucca-like
Dracaena fragrans, numerous ferns, creepers, vines, epiphytes,
montbretia, orchids and flame lilies. Due to its proximity to the botanical reserve, Mount Selinda boasts a dazzling array of bird life, with
Trumpeter hornbills,
Livingstone's turaco,
African pygmy kingfishers, Firefinches, Sunbirds,
African green pigeons, Owls, Nightjars, Narina Trogon, Eagles and Bee-eaters. The sheer variety and brilliant colours of butterflies in the area is also noteworthy.
Samango monkeys are often seen in the area. The reptile population consists of, amongst others, pythons, cobras, vipers, mambas, adders, chameleons, geckos, skinks and lizards. The endemic chameleon
Marshall's leaf chameleon,
Rhampholeon marshalli, is found within the forest and at the
forest margin and it is scattered sparsely in suitable forest habitat throughout the mountains of the
Eastern Highlands. == Agriculture ==