In the past, Tai Mo Shan was famous for a type of
green tea, called
mist or
cloud tea, which grew wild on the mountain side. Occasionally, local people can still be seen picking the tea shoots for brewing green tea. More than 1,500 species of plants have been recorded in Tai Mo Shan including 27 species of native wild orchids, the protected Chinese Lily (
Lilium brownii) which mostly grows on the east side of the Mountain, 24 species of native ferns, including
tree ferns, of which a total of only 4 tree ferns species have been recorded around the entire mountain, 19 species of native grasses, and 7 species of native bamboos.
Camellia sinensis var. waldenae (formerly
Camellia waldenae) are also found on the mountain. A few types of wild orchids also grow in the streams of Tai Mo Shan including the
Chinese pholidota orchid, Hong Kong's most common orchid, and the
bamboo orchid, so called because of a distinct stem that looks like bamboo, which also grows in the streams of Tai Mo Shan. During the
Japanese occupation of Hong Kong in
World War II, most of the trees in the park were cut down and extensive
reforestation was carried out after the war. Trees that were planted are mostly non-native such as
Pinus massoniana,
Acacia confusa,
Lophostemon confertus, and
paper bark tree. The area has now become one of Hong Kong's major forest plantations. The south-east slopes of Tai Mo Shan are covered with patches of well developed
montane forest. The area, covering 130 hectares, was designated as a
Site of Special Scientific Interest in 1975. ==Wildlife==