The New Guinea Highlands are home to a great variety of
Australasian plant and animal communities, distinct from the surrounding lowlands to the north and south of the central ranges and varying up and along the mountain ranges. The habitats of the mountains have been separated into two
ecoregions, depending on their elevation, the tropical montane forests and alpine grasslands, but within these broad bands there is a variety of wildlife along the island as some of the mountains stand quite a distance from others with some species of plant or animal existing on only one or two mountains. Particular centres of plant diversity are the Star Mountains area of western Papua New Guinea near the Indonesian border including
Telefomin and
Strickland Gorge; the
Hunstein Range;
Mount Giluwe, a major birdwatching area for
birds-of-paradise; the volcanic limestone
Kubor Range; the Bismarck Range/Mount Wilhelm/
Schrader Range/Mount
Gahavisuka, of which Mount Wilhelm is particularly rich in endemic species; and finally the Crater Mountain and Mount Michael in the Eastern Highlands.
Central Range montane rain forests The montane rain forests (from 1,000 to 3,000m) can be further categorised into three broad vegetation zones on the mountains, distinguished by elevation. The lower montane forests extend from 1,000 to 1,500 metres elevation. They are dominated by broadleaf evergreen trees, including
Castanopsis acuminatissima, Lithocarpus spp.,
elaeocarps, and
laurels. Coniferous
Araucarias may form thick stands. The upper montane forests, which extend from 1,500 to 2,500 metres in elevation, are dominated by moss-covered
Nothofagus. Finally, the high mountain forest extends from 2,500 to 3,000 metres in elevation. Conifers (
Podocarpus, Dacrycarpus, Dacrydium, Papuacedrus, Araucaria, and
Libocedrus) and broadleaf trees of the myrtle family (
Myrtaceae) form a thin canopy, with a prominent understory. The montane forests are home to a rich wildlife, a great deal of which is unique to these mountains including many plants, reptiles, and over 100 birds and animals. Of the 90 mammals found on the island, 44 are endemic, a very high proportion. The birds and animals include many Australasian species such as
tree-kangaroos,
bowerbirds,
Australasian robins,
honeyeaters, and birds of paradise. Four of the endemic mammals are critically endangered: the
Bulmer's fruit bat, with only tiny communities remaining in the Papua New Guinea end of the island, and three rodents; a large
Leptomys, the
eastern shrew mouse, and the
lesser small-toothed rat. There are 55 bird species endemic to the mountains from a total of 348 birds found here. There are several endemic butterflies, particularly in the
Weyland Mountains and the Wahgi Valley. While there are several endemic plants there are few animals on the higher slopes, with only nine mammals found here: four rodents, two bats, a
cuscus possum, an
antechinus, and Doria's tree-kangaroo (
Dendrolagus dorianus). Four of these are endemic: the small marsupial black-tailed antechinus (
Murexechinus melanurus),
western shrew mouse,
glacier rat, and
alpine woolly rat. There are nearly 100 birds of which 28 are considered endemic or nearly so, including the vulnerable
long-bearded honeyeater (
Melionyx princeps), ribbon-tailed astrapia (
Astrapia mayeri), and
Macgregor's giant honeyeater, which although endangered generally is a cultural icon of the
Ketengban people of the Star Mountains and therefore protected in some areas. Almost half of these remote grasslands are protected in national parks and they are in good condition although in recent times more people are accessing the highlands as visitors or through involvement in mining. ==Protected areas==