Forest was once the primary
climax vegetation across most of the region. Most primary forest has been replaced by secondary wooded grassland, agriculture, and forest plantations. Frank White (1983) identified ten characteristic plant communities: •
Zanzibar-Inhambane lowland rain forest It found mostly in Tanzania, on the windward (east-facing) slopes of the
Uluguru,
Nguru, and
Usambara Mountains, and in parts of
Ulanga and
Iringa districts. Trees form a closed evergreen canopy up to 20 meters tall, with emergent trees up to 40 meters tall. It is now reduced to small remnant patches. •
Swamp forest grows in limited areas in the coastal lowlands, often inland from coastal mangroves and extending along the lower reaches of rivers.
Barringtonia racemosa is the predominant tree. Swamp forests of
Raffia palm grow in low-lying areas of
Pemba Island. •
Zanzibar-Inhambane transition woodland •
Zanzibar-Inhambane woodland and scrub woodland •
Zanzibar-Inhambane evergreen and semi-evergreen bushland and thicket •
Zanzibar-Inhambane edaphic grassland •
Zanzibar-Inhambane secondary grassland and wooded grassland White (1983) estimated 3000 plant species were native to the region, of which several hundred are endemic. Of 192 native forest trees recorded by White, 90, or nearly half, are endemic. ==Gallery==