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Encyclopedia > Mediterranean Forests

Mediterranean Forests, Woodlands, and Shrub is a temperate biome, characterized by hot-dry summers and mild and rainy winters. Nearly all of the rainfall occurs in the winter and spring rainy season.


Mediterranean Forests, Woodlands, and Shrub ecoregions occur in the worlds five mediterranean-climate zones, which all occur on the west coast of continents in the mid-latitudes. these regions are the Mediterranean basin, California, Central Chile, southwest Australia, and the Cape Province of South Africa.


These mediterranean climate regions are home to a tremendous diversity of habitats and species. The five mediterranean-climate regions of the world occupy less than 5% of the earth's surface yet harbour about 48,250 known vascular plant species, almost 20% of the world total. These regions also have exceptionally high numbers of rare and locally endemic plants, and include some recognized species flocks, which are clusters of numerous closely-related species, especially in south-western Australia and the Cape Province.


Much of the woody vegetation in mediterranean-climate regions is sclerophyll, which means 'hard-leaved' in Greek. Sclerophyll vegetation generally has small, dark leaves covered with a waxy outer layer to retain moisture in the dry summer months.


Mediterranean ecoregions are semi-arid, and often have poor soils, so they are vulnerable to degradation by human activities such as logging, overgrazing, and the introduction of exotic species. These regions are also some of the most endangered on the planet, and many ecoregions have suffered tremendous degradation and habitat loss through logging, overgrazing, conversion to agriculture, urbanization, and introduction of exotic species. The ecoregions around the Mediterranean basin have been particularly affected by degradation due to human activity, suffering extensive loss of forests and soil erosion, and many native plants and animals have become extinct or endangered.


Fire, both natural and human caused, has played a large role in shaping the ecology of Mediterranean ecoregions. The hot, dry summers make much of the region prone to fires, and lighting-caused fires occur with some frequency. Many of the plants are pyrophyte, or fire-loving, depending on fire for reproduction, recycling of nutrients, and the removal of dead or senescent vegetation. In both the Australian and Californian mediterranean-climate ecoregions, native peoples used fire extensively to clear brush and trees, making way for the grasses and herbaceous vegetation that supported game animals and useful plants. The plant communities in these areas adapted to the frequent human-caused fires, and pyrophyte species grew more common and more fire-loving, while plants that were poorly adapted to fire retreated. After European colonization of these regions, fires were suppressed, which has caused some unintended consequences in these ecoregions; fuel builds up, so that when fires do come they are much more devastating, and some species dependent on fire for their reproduction are now threatened.


Mediterranean Forests, Woodlands, and Shrub ecoregions are often home to dense thickets of evergreen sclerophyll shrubs and small trees, called Chaparral, Matorral, Maquis, or Garrique. In some places Chaparral is the natural vegetation type, and in other places the result of degradation of former forests by logging or overgrazing.


Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and shrub ecoregions

Australasia ecozone

Coolgardie woodlands (Australia)
Esperance mallee (Australia)
Eyre and York mallee (Australia)
Jarrah-Karri forest and shrublands (Australia)
Kwongan heathlands (Australia)
Mount Lofty woodlands (Australia)
Murray-Darling woodlands and mallee (Australia)
Naracoorte woodlands (Australia)
Southwest Australia savanna (Australia)
Southwest Australia woodlands (Australia)

Afrotropic ecozone

Albany thickets (South Africa)
Lowland fynbos and renosterveld (South Africa)
Montane fynbos and renosterveld (South Africa)

Nearctic ecozone

California chaparral and woodlands (Mexico, United States)

Neotropic ecozone

Chilean Matorral (Chile)

Palearctic ecozone

Aegean and Western Turkey sclerophyllous and mixed forests (Greece, Macedonia, Turkey)
Anatolian conifer and deciduous mixed forests (Turkey)
Canary Islands dry woodlands and forests (Spain)
Corsican montane broadleaf and mixed forests (France)
Crete Mediterranean forests (Greece)
Cyprus Mediterranean forests (Cyprus)
Eastern Mediterranean conifer-sclerophyllous-broadleaf forests (Israel, Jordan, Syria, Turkey)
Iberian conifer forests (Portugal, Spain)
Iberian sclerophyllous and semi-deciduous forests (Portugal, Spain)
Illyrian deciduous forests (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Greece, Italy, Slovenia)
Italian sclerophyllous and semi-deciduous forests (France, Italy)
Mediterranean acacia-argania dry woodlands and succulent thickets (Morocco, Canary Islands (Spain))
Mediterranean dry woodlands and steppe (Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Morocco, Tunisia)
Mediterranean woodlands and forests (Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia)
Northeastern Spain and Southern France Mediterranean forests (France, Spain)
Northwest Iberian montane forests (Portugal, Spain)
Pindus Mountains mixed forests (Albania, Greece, Macedonia)
South Appenine mixed montane forests (Italy)
Southeastern Iberian shrubs and woodlands (Spain)
Southern Anatolian montane conifer and deciduous forests (Israel, Jordan, Syria, Turkey)
Southwest Iberian Mediterranean sclerophyllous and mixed forests (France, Italy, Morocco, Portugal, Spain)
Tyrrhenian-Adriatic sclerophyllous and mixed forests (France, Italy)

Ecozones
Afrotropic | Antarctic | Australasia | Indomalaya | Nearctic | Neotropic | Oceania | Palearctic
Terrestrial biomes
Tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests | Tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests | Tropical and subtropical coniferous forests | Temperate broadleaf and mixed forests | Temperate coniferous forests | Boreal forests/taiga | Tropical and subtropical grasslands, savannas, and shrublands | Temperate grasslands, savannas, and shrublands | Flooded grasslands and savannas | Montane grasslands and shrublands | Tundra | Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and shrub | Deserts and xeric shrublands | Mangrove

External link

  • Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and shrub (World Wildlife Fund) (http://www.panda.org/about_wwf/where_we_work/ecoregions/global200/pages/habitat/habitat12.htm)
  • Map of the ecozones (http://www.panda.org/about_wwf/where_we_work/ecoregions/global200/pages/mainmap.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Mediterranean Basin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1185 words)
The Mediterranean Basin was shaped by the ancient collision of the northward-moving African-Arabian continent with the stable Eurasian continent.
Mediterranean shrublands are known as matorral in Spain, macchia in Italy, and maquis in France and elsewhere around the Mediterranean.
Forests are distinct from woodlands in having a closed canopy, and occur in the areas of highest rainfall and in riparian zones along rivers and streams where they receive summer water.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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