But then, the island of New Guinea and its rainforests are a little bit out of this world.
The largest bead in the necklace of islands strung across the Asia-Pacific, the island of New Guinea houses the largest remaining block of tropical forest in the region and the third largest in the world after the Amazon and Congo basins.1
New Guinea is shared by 2 countries – Papua New Guinea to the east and Indonesia to the west (provinces of Papua and West Irian Jaya). Here, in just 1% of the world’s land area, live at least 5% of the world’s species. Two-thirds of these are unique to New Guinea.
Island magic in the Pacific
There’s a place in the Pacific Ocean, just above Australia, which still clings on to these rare words: “remote”, “pristine” and “mysterious”. Increasingly few places on Earth fit this description.
![[click to enlarge] New Guinea ecoregions map - © WWF New Guinea ecoregions map](http://assets.panda.org/img/new_guinea_ecoregions_map_233282.gif)