Forest Ecosystems
The Congo Basin contains some of the oldest and most intact tropical forest ecosystems remaining on Earth, encompassing lowland rainforest, swamp forest, montane forest, bamboo zones, and flooded forest systems across an area second in scale only to the Amazon.
These forests support thousands of plant species, many poorly studied, alongside iconic canopy trees including moabi, African mahogany, iroko, ebony, and sapele, some of which live for centuries and reach massive dimensions within the primary forest. Many species carry significant ecological, cultural, and economic importance for surrounding communities through traditional medicine, food systems, construction materials, and non-timber forest products.
Intact forest systems regulate regional rainfall patterns, stabilise soils and watersheds, and provide habitat connectivity for wildlife across Central Africa. As fragmentation, deforestation, and extractive pressures continue to expand, the protection of connected primary forest landscapes remains critical for both biodiversity conservation and global climate resilience