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Mediterranean Basin

In biogeography, the Mediterranean Basin (/ˌmɛdɪtəˈrniən/ MED-ih-tə-RAY-nee-ən), also known as the Mediterranean Region or sometimes Mediterranea, is the region of lands around the Mediterranean Sea that have mostly a Mediterranean climate, with mild to cool, rainy winters and warm to hot, dry summers, which supports characteristic Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub vegetation.

Physical and political map of the Mediterranean Basin

Geography

 
Köppen–Geiger-based map of the areas surrounding the Mediterranean Sea. Based on the work of M. C. Peel, B. L. Finlayson and T. A. McMahon at the University of Melbourne. For a full legend, see Legend of the Köppen–Geiger climate classification on the Wikimedia Commons.
  Desert climate       Mediterranean climate
  Semi-arid climate       Humid subtropical climate
  Subarctic climate       Humid continental climate
  Tundra

The Mediterranean Basin covers portions of three continents: Europe, Africa, and Asia. It is distinct from the drainage basin, which extends much further south and north due to major rivers ending in the Mediterranean Sea, such as the Nile and Rhône. Conversely, the Mediterranean Basin includes regions not in the drainage basin.[1]

It has a varied and contrasting topography. The Mediterranean Region offers an ever-changing landscape of high mountains, rocky shores, impenetrable scrub, semi-arid steppes, coastal wetlands, sandy beaches and a myriad of islands of various shapes and sizes dotted amidst the clear blue sea. Contrary to the classic sandy beach images portrayed in most tourist brochures, the Mediterranean is surprisingly hilly. Mountains can be seen from almost anywhere.[2]

By definition, the Mediterranean Basin extends from Macaronesia in the west, to the Levant in the east, although some places may or may not be included depending on the view, as is the case with Macaronesia: some definitions only include Madeira and the Canary Islands[3] while others include the whole Macaronesia (with the Azores and Cape Verde).[4]

In Western Asia, it covers the western and southern portions of the peninsula of Anatolia, as far as Iraq,[5] but excluding the temperate-climate mountains of central Turkey. It includes the Mediterranean Levant at the eastern end of the Mediterranean, bounded on the east and south by the Syrian and Negev deserts.

The northern portion of the Maghreb region of northwestern Africa has a Mediterranean climate, separated from the Sahara Desert, which extends across North Africa, by the Atlas Mountains. In the eastern Mediterranean the Sahara extends to the southern shore of the Mediterranean, with the exception of the northern fringe of the peninsula of Cyrenaica in Libya, which has a dry Mediterranean climate.

Europe lies to the north of the Mediterranean. The European portion of the Mediterranean Basin loosely corresponds to Southern Europe. The three large Southern European peninsulas, the Iberian Peninsula, Italian Peninsula, and the Balkan Peninsula, extend into and comprise much of the Mediterranean-climate zone. A system of folded mountains, including the Pyrenees dividing Spain from France, the Alps dividing Italy from Central Europe, the Dinaric Alps along the eastern Adriatic, and the Balkan and Rila-Rhodope mountains of the Balkan Peninsula divide the Mediterranean from the temperate climate regions of Western, Northwestern or Northern Europe, Central Europe, and Eastern Europe.

Geology and paleoclimatology

The Mediterranean Basin was shaped by the ancient collision of the northward-moving African–Arabian continent with the stable Eurasian continent. As Africa–Arabia moved north, it closed the former Tethys Sea, which formerly separated Eurasia from the ancient super continent of Gondwana, of which Africa was part. At about the same time, 170 mya in the Jurassic period, a small Neotethys ocean basin formed shortly before the Tethys Sea was closed at the eastern end. The collision pushed up a vast system of mountains, extending from the Pyrenees in Spain to the Zagros Mountains in Iran. This episode of mountain building, known as the Alpine orogeny, occurred mostly during the Oligocene (34 to 23 million years ago (mya)) and Miocene (23 to 5.3 mya) epochs. The Neotethys became larger during these collisions and associated folding and subduction.

About 6 mya during the late Miocene, the Mediterranean was closed at its western end by drifting Africa, which caused the entire sea to evaporate. There followed several (debated) episodes of sea drawdown and re-flooding known as the Messinian Salinity Crisis, which ended when the Atlantic last re-flooded the basin at the end of the Miocene.[6] Recent research has suggested that a desiccation-flooding cycle may have repeated several times [7][8] during the last 630,000 years of the Miocene epoch, which could explain several events of large amounts of salt deposition. Recent studies, however, show that repeated desiccation and re-flooding is unlikely from a geodynamic point of view.[9][10]

The end of the Miocene also marked a change in the Mediterranean Basin's climate. Fossil evidence shows that the Mediterranean Basin had a relatively humid subtropical climate with summer rainfall during the Miocene, which supported laurel forests. The shift to a Mediterranean climate occurred within the last 3.2–2.8 million years, during the Pliocene epoch, as summer rainfall decreased. The subtropical laurel forests retreated, although they persisted on the islands of Macaronesia off the Atlantic coast of Iberia and North Africa, and the present Mediterranean vegetation evolved, dominated by coniferous trees and sclerophyllous trees and shrubs, with small, hard, waxy leaves that prevent moisture loss in the dry summers. Much of these forests and shrublands have been altered beyond recognition by thousands of years of human habitation. There are now very few relatively intact natural areas in what was once a heavily wooded region.

Flora and fauna

Phytogeographically, the Mediterranean Basin together with the nearby Atlantic coast, the Mediterranean woodlands and forests and Mediterranean dry woodlands and steppe of North Africa, the Black Sea coast of northeastern Anatolia, the southern coast of Crimea between Sevastopol and Feodosiya in Ukraine and the Black Sea coast between Anapa and Tuapse in Russia forms the Mediterranean Floristic Region, which belongs to the Tethyan Subkingdom of the Boreal Kingdom and is enclosed between the Circumboreal, Irano-Turanian, Saharo-Arabian and Macaronesian floristic regions.

The Mediterranean Region was first proposed by German botanist August Grisebach in the late 19th century.

The monotypic Drosophyllaceae, recently segregated from Droseraceae, is the only plant family endemic to the region. Among the endemic plant genera are:[dubious ]

The genera Aubrieta, Sesamoides, Cynara, Dracunculus, Arisarum and Biarum are nearly endemic. Among the endemic species prominent in the Mediterranean vegetation are the Aleppo pine, stone pine, Mediterranean cypress, bay laurel, Oriental sweetgum, holm oak, kermes oak, strawberry tree, Greek strawberry tree, mastic, terebinth, common myrtle, oleander, Acanthus mollis and Vitex agnus-castus. Moreover, many plant taxa are shared with one of the four neighboring floristic regions only. According to different versions of Armen Takhtajan's delineation, the Mediterranean Region is further subdivided into seven to nine floristic provinces: Southwestern Mediterranean (or Southern Moroccan and Southwestern Mediterranean), Ibero-Balearian (or Iberian and Balearian), Liguro-Tyrrhenian, Adriatic, East Mediterranean, South Mediterranean and Crimeo-Novorossiysk.[11]

The Mediterranean Basin is the largest of the world's five Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub regions. It is home to a number of plant communities, which vary with rainfall, elevation, latitude, and soil.

  • Scrublands occur in the driest areas, especially areas near the seacoast where wind and salt spray are frequent. Low, soft-leaved scrublands around the Mediterranean are known as garrigar in Catalan, garrigue in French, phrygana in Greek, tomillares in Spanish, and batha in Hebrew.
  • Shrublands are dense thickets of evergreen sclerophyll shrubs and small trees and are the most common plant community around the Mediterranean. Mediterranean shrublands are known as màquia in Catalan, macchia in Italian, maquis in French, and "matorral" in Spanish. In some places, shrublands are the mature vegetation type, and in other places the result of the degradation of former forest or woodland by logging or overgrazing, or disturbance by major fires.
  • Savannas and grasslands occur around the Mediterranean, usually dominated by annual grasses.
  • Woodlands are usually dominated by oak and pine, mixed with other sclerophyll and coniferous trees.
  • 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. Mediterranean forests are generally composed of evergreen trees, predominantly oak and pine. At higher elevations Mediterranean forests transition to mixed broadleaf and tall conifer forests similar to temperate zone forests.

The Mediterranean Basin is home to considerable biodiversity, including 22,500 endemic vascular plant species. Conservation International designates the region as a biodiversity hotspot, because of its rich biodiversity and its threatened status. The Mediterranean Basin has an area of 2,085,292 km2, of which only 98,009 km2 remains undisturbed.

Endangered mammals of the Mediterranean Basin include the Mediterranean monk seal, the Barbary macaque, and the Iberian lynx.

Ecoregions

The WWF identifies 22 Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub ecoregions in the Mediterranean Basin, most of which featuring sclerophyll plant species:

 
Map of the Mediterranean Basin's ecoregions. 1201: Aegean and Western Turkey sclerophyllous and mixed forests. 1202: Anatolian conifer and deciduous mixed forests. 1203: Canary Islands dry woodlands and forests. 1204: Corsican montane broadleaf and mixed forests. 1205: Crete Mediterranean forests. 1206: Cyprus Mediterranean forests. 1207: Eastern Mediterranean conifer-sclerophyllous-broadleaf forests. 1208: Iberian conifer forests. 1209: Iberian sclerophyllous and semi-deciduous forests. 1210: Illyrian deciduous forests. 1211: Italian sclerophyllous and semi-deciduous forests. 1212: Mediterranean acacia-argania dry woodlands and succulent thickets. 1213: Mediterranean dry woodlands and steppe. 1214: Mediterranean woodlands and forests. 1215: Northeastern Spain and Southern France Mediterranean forests. 1216: Northwest Iberian montane forests. 1217: Pindus Mountains mixed forests. 1218: South Apeninne mixed montane forests. 1219: Southeastern Iberian shrubs and woodlands. 1220: Southern Anatolian montane conifer and deciduous forests. 1221: Southwest Iberian Mediterranean sclerophyllous and mixed forests. 1222: Tyrrhenian-Adriatic sclerophyllous and mixed forests

.

History

Neanderthals inhabited western Asia and the non-glaciated portions of Europe starting about 230,000 years ago. Modern humans moved into western Asia from Africa less than 100,000 years ago. Modern humans, known as Cro-Magnons, moved into Europe approximately 50–40,000 years ago.

The most recent glacial period, the Wisconsin glaciation, reached its maximum extent approximately 21,000 years ago, and ended approximately 12,000 years ago. A warm period, known as the Holocene climatic optimum, followed the ice age.

Food crops, including wheat, chickpeas, and olives, along with sheep and goats, were domesticated in the eastern Mediterranean in the 9th millennium BCE, which allowed for the establishment of agricultural settlements. Near Eastern crops spread to southeastern Europe in the 7th millennium BCE. Poppy and oats were domesticated in Europe from the 6th to the 3rd millennium BCE. Agricultural settlements spread around the Mediterranean Basin. Megaliths were constructed in Europe from 4500 – 1500 BCE.

A strengthening of the summer monsoon 9000–7000 years ago increased rainfall across the Sahara, which became a grassland, with lakes, rivers, and wetlands. After a period of climatic instability, the Sahara settled into a desert state by the 4th millennium BCE.

Historiography

One of the earliest modern studies of the Mediterranean was Fernand Braudel's La Méditerranéee et le monde méditerranéen à l époque de Philippe II (The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II), published in 1949. S.D. Goitein's multivolume study of the Cairo Geniza documents was another important contribution in the area of Mediterranean Jewish culture.[12]

Agriculture

Wheat is the dominant grain grown around the Mediterranean Basin. Pulses and vegetables are also grown. The characteristic tree crop is the olive. Figs are another important fruit tree, and citrus, especially lemons, are grown where irrigation is present. Grapes are an important vine crop, grown for fruit and to make wine. Rice and summer vegetables are grown in irrigated areas.

See also

References

  1. ^ Portugal, Jordan and Iraq
  2. ^ Natura 2000 in the Mediterranean Region (PDF). European Commission of the European Union. 2009. ISBN 978-92-79-11587-5. Retrieved August 6, 2015.
  3. ^ The Status and Distribution of Reptiles and Amphibians of the Mediterranean Basin. Neil Cox, Janice Chanson, Simon Stuart. 2006. ISBN 978-2-8317-0912-3. Retrieved 29 November 2020.
  4. ^ "Mediterranean Basin". CEPF. Retrieved 29 November 2020.
  5. ^ Hegazy, Ahmad; Lovett-Doust, Jonathan (2016). "2.18 Iraq". Plant Ecology in the Middle East. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-107874-3. the Eastern Mediterranean conifer-sclerophyllous-broadleaf forest ecoregion, which extends slightly into Iraq
  6. ^ W. Krijgsman; A. R. Fortuinb; F. J. Hilgenc; F. J. Sierrod (2001). "Astrochronology for the Messinian Sorbas basin (SE Spain) and orbital (precessional) forcing for evaporite cyclicity" (PDF). Sedimentary Geology. 140 (1): 43–60. Bibcode:2001SedG..140...43K. doi:10.1016/S0037-0738(00)00171-8. hdl:1874/1632.
  7. ^ Gargani J., Rigollet C. (2007). "Mediterranean Sea level variations during the Messinian Salinity Crisis". Geophysical Research Letters. 34 (L10405): L10405. Bibcode:2007GeoRL..3410405G. doi:10.1029/2007GL029885.
  8. ^ Gargani J.; Moretti I.; Letouzey J. (2008). "Evaporite accumulation during the Messinian Salinity Crisis : The Suez Rift Case" (PDF). Geophysical Research Letters. 35 (2): L02401. Bibcode:2008GeoRL..35.2401G. doi:10.1029/2007gl032494. S2CID 129573384.
  9. ^ Govers, Rob (1 February 2009). "Choking the Mediterranean to dehydration: The Messinian salinity crisis". Geology. 37 (2): 167–170. Bibcode:2009Geo....37..167G. doi:10.1130/G25141A.1. ISSN 0091-7613.
  10. ^ Garcia-Castellanos, D.; Villaseñor, A. (2011). "Messinian salinity crisis regulated by competing tectonics and erosion at the Gibraltar Arc". Nature. 480 (7377): 359–63. Bibcode:2011Natur.480..359G. doi:10.1038/nature10651. PMID 22170684. S2CID 205227033. Retrieved 2011-12-15 – via sites.google.com.
  11. ^ Тахтаджян, А. Л. . Древнесредиземноморское подцарство (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2008-06-16. Retrieved 26 January 2019.
  12. ^ Wacks, David A. (2019). Medieval Iberian Crusade Fiction and the Mediterranean World. University of Toronto Press. p. 4.

Further reading

  • Attenborough, David (1987). The First Eden: The Mediterranean world and man. Boston, MA: Little Brown and Company.
  • Borutta, Manuel, Mediterraneum, EGO - European History Online, Mainz: Institute of European History, 2021, retrieved: March 8, 2021.
  • Dallman, Peter F. (1998). Plant Life in the World's Mediterranean Climates. California Native Plant Society. Berkeley, California: University of California Press.
  • Suc, J.-P. (1984). "Origin and evolution of the Mediterranean vegetation and climate in Europe". Nature. 307 (5950): 429–432. Bibcode:1984Natur.307..429S. doi:10.1038/307429a0. S2CID 4318726.
  • Wagner, Horst-Günter (2011). Mittelmeerraum, Geography, History, Economy. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft. ISBN 978-3-534-23179-9.


External links

  • Are wildfires a disaster in the Mediterranean basin? – A review
  • MedTrees: Trees and large shrubs of the Mediterranean Basin.
  • Mediterranean Experts on Climate and environmental Change (MedECC)

mediterranean, basin, mediterranean, region, redirects, here, other, uses, mediterranean, region, disambiguation, confused, with, drainage, basin, mediterranean, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, a. Mediterranean Region redirects here For other uses see Mediterranean Region disambiguation Not to be confused with the drainage basin of the Mediterranean Sea This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Mediterranean Basin news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message In biogeography the Mediterranean Basin ˌ m ɛ d ɪ t e ˈ r eɪ n i en MED ih te RAY nee en also known as the Mediterranean Region or sometimes Mediterranea is the region of lands around the Mediterranean Sea that have mostly a Mediterranean climate with mild to cool rainy winters and warm to hot dry summers which supports characteristic Mediterranean forests woodlands and scrub vegetation Physical and political map of the Mediterranean Basin Contents 1 Geography 2 Geology and paleoclimatology 3 Flora and fauna 4 Ecoregions 5 History 5 1 Historiography 6 Agriculture 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksGeography Edit Koppen Geiger based map of the areas surrounding the Mediterranean Sea Based on the work of M C Peel B L Finlayson and T A McMahon at the University of Melbourne For a full legend see Legend of the Koppen Geiger climate classification on the Wikimedia Commons Desert climate Mediterranean climate Semi arid climate Humid subtropical climate Subarctic climate Humid continental climate TundraThe Mediterranean Basin covers portions of three continents Europe Africa and Asia It is distinct from the drainage basin which extends much further south and north due to major rivers ending in the Mediterranean Sea such as the Nile and Rhone Conversely the Mediterranean Basin includes regions not in the drainage basin 1 It has a varied and contrasting topography The Mediterranean Region offers an ever changing landscape of high mountains rocky shores impenetrable scrub semi arid steppes coastal wetlands sandy beaches and a myriad of islands of various shapes and sizes dotted amidst the clear blue sea Contrary to the classic sandy beach images portrayed in most tourist brochures the Mediterranean is surprisingly hilly Mountains can be seen from almost anywhere 2 By definition the Mediterranean Basin extends from Macaronesia in the west to the Levant in the east although some places may or may not be included depending on the view as is the case with Macaronesia some definitions only include Madeira and the Canary Islands 3 while others include the whole Macaronesia with the Azores and Cape Verde 4 In Western Asia it covers the western and southern portions of the peninsula of Anatolia as far as Iraq 5 but excluding the temperate climate mountains of central Turkey It includes the Mediterranean Levant at the eastern end of the Mediterranean bounded on the east and south by the Syrian and Negev deserts The northern portion of the Maghreb region of northwestern Africa has a Mediterranean climate separated from the Sahara Desert which extends across North Africa by the Atlas Mountains In the eastern Mediterranean the Sahara extends to the southern shore of the Mediterranean with the exception of the northern fringe of the peninsula of Cyrenaica in Libya which has a dry Mediterranean climate Europe lies to the north of the Mediterranean The European portion of the Mediterranean Basin loosely corresponds to Southern Europe The three large Southern European peninsulas the Iberian Peninsula Italian Peninsula and the Balkan Peninsula extend into and comprise much of the Mediterranean climate zone A system of folded mountains including the Pyrenees dividing Spain from France the Alps dividing Italy from Central Europe the Dinaric Alps along the eastern Adriatic and the Balkan and Rila Rhodope mountains of the Balkan Peninsula divide the Mediterranean from the temperate climate regions of Western Northwestern or Northern Europe Central Europe and Eastern Europe Geology and paleoclimatology EditThe Mediterranean Basin was shaped by the ancient collision of the northward moving African Arabian continent with the stable Eurasian continent As Africa Arabia moved north it closed the former Tethys Sea which formerly separated Eurasia from the ancient super continent of Gondwana of which Africa was part At about the same time 170 mya in the Jurassic period a small Neotethys ocean basin formed shortly before the Tethys Sea was closed at the eastern end The collision pushed up a vast system of mountains extending from the Pyrenees in Spain to the Zagros Mountains in Iran This episode of mountain building known as the Alpine orogeny occurred mostly during the Oligocene 34 to 23 million years ago mya and Miocene 23 to 5 3 mya epochs The Neotethys became larger during these collisions and associated folding and subduction About 6 mya during the late Miocene the Mediterranean was closed at its western end by drifting Africa which caused the entire sea to evaporate There followed several debated episodes of sea drawdown and re flooding known as the Messinian Salinity Crisis which ended when the Atlantic last re flooded the basin at the end of the Miocene 6 Recent research has suggested that a desiccation flooding cycle may have repeated several times 7 8 during the last 630 000 years of the Miocene epoch which could explain several events of large amounts of salt deposition Recent studies however show that repeated desiccation and re flooding is unlikely from a geodynamic point of view 9 10 The end of the Miocene also marked a change in the Mediterranean Basin s climate Fossil evidence shows that the Mediterranean Basin had a relatively humid subtropical climate with summer rainfall during the Miocene which supported laurel forests The shift to a Mediterranean climate occurred within the last 3 2 2 8 million years during the Pliocene epoch as summer rainfall decreased The subtropical laurel forests retreated although they persisted on the islands of Macaronesia off the Atlantic coast of Iberia and North Africa and the present Mediterranean vegetation evolved dominated by coniferous trees and sclerophyllous trees and shrubs with small hard waxy leaves that prevent moisture loss in the dry summers Much of these forests and shrublands have been altered beyond recognition by thousands of years of human habitation There are now very few relatively intact natural areas in what was once a heavily wooded region Flora and fauna EditSee also Category Environment of the Mediterranean Phytogeographically the Mediterranean Basin together with the nearby Atlantic coast the Mediterranean woodlands and forests and Mediterranean dry woodlands and steppe of North Africa the Black Sea coast of northeastern Anatolia the southern coast of Crimea between Sevastopol and Feodosiya in Ukraine and the Black Sea coast between Anapa and Tuapse in Russia forms the Mediterranean Floristic Region which belongs to the Tethyan Subkingdom of the Boreal Kingdom and is enclosed between the Circumboreal Irano Turanian Saharo Arabian and Macaronesian floristic regions The Mediterranean Region was first proposed by German botanist August Grisebach in the late 19th century The monotypic Drosophyllaceae recently segregated from Droseraceae is the only plant family endemic to the region Among the endemic plant genera are dubious discuss Anagyris Andryala Aphyllanthes Argania Argantoniella Bellardia Biserrula Bivonaea Bolanthus Boleum Callicotome Ceratocapnos Ceratonia Chamaerops Chronanthus Cladanthus Coridothymus Didesmus Dorystoechas Drosophyllum Euzomodendron Fedia Guiraoa Gyrocarion Helicodiceros Hermodactylus Hutera Hymenocarpus Ionopsidium Lafuentea Lagoecia Leuzea Lycocarpus Malope Morisia Ortegia Petagnia Petromarula Phillyrea Preslia Putoria Rothmaleria Rosmarinus Rupicapnos Santolina Staehelina Soleirolia Spartium Tetraclinis Trachelium Tremastelma Triplachne Vella The genera Aubrieta Sesamoides Cynara Dracunculus Arisarum and Biarum are nearly endemic Among the endemic species prominent in the Mediterranean vegetation are the Aleppo pine stone pine Mediterranean cypress bay laurel Oriental sweetgum holm oak kermes oak strawberry tree Greek strawberry tree mastic terebinth common myrtle oleander Acanthus mollis and Vitex agnus castus Moreover many plant taxa are shared with one of the four neighboring floristic regions only According to different versions of Armen Takhtajan s delineation the Mediterranean Region is further subdivided into seven to nine floristic provinces Southwestern Mediterranean or Southern Moroccan and Southwestern Mediterranean Ibero Balearian or Iberian and Balearian Liguro Tyrrhenian Adriatic East Mediterranean South Mediterranean and Crimeo Novorossiysk 11 The Mediterranean Basin is the largest of the world s five Mediterranean forests woodlands and scrub regions It is home to a number of plant communities which vary with rainfall elevation latitude and soil Scrublands occur in the driest areas especially areas near the seacoast where wind and salt spray are frequent Low soft leaved scrublands around the Mediterranean are known as garrigar in Catalan garrigue in French phrygana in Greek tomillares in Spanish and batha in Hebrew Shrublands are dense thickets of evergreen sclerophyll shrubs and small trees and are the most common plant community around the Mediterranean Mediterranean shrublands are known as maquia in Catalan macchia in Italian maquis in French and matorral in Spanish In some places shrublands are the mature vegetation type and in other places the result of the degradation of former forest or woodland by logging or overgrazing or disturbance by major fires Savannas and grasslands occur around the Mediterranean usually dominated by annual grasses Woodlands are usually dominated by oak and pine mixed with other sclerophyll and coniferous trees 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 Mediterranean forests are generally composed of evergreen trees predominantly oak and pine At higher elevations Mediterranean forests transition to mixed broadleaf and tall conifer forests similar to temperate zone forests The Mediterranean Basin is home to considerable biodiversity including 22 500 endemic vascular plant species Conservation International designates the region as a biodiversity hotspot because of its rich biodiversity and its threatened status The Mediterranean Basin has an area of 2 085 292 km2 of which only 98 009 km2 remains undisturbed Endangered mammals of the Mediterranean Basin include the Mediterranean monk seal the Barbary macaque and the Iberian lynx Ecoregions EditThe WWF identifies 22 Mediterranean forests woodlands and scrub ecoregions in the Mediterranean Basin most of which featuring sclerophyll plant species Aegean and Western Turkey sclerophyllous and mixed forests Greece Turkey North Macedonia Bulgaria 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 Lebanon Iraq Israel Jordan Palestine Syria Turkey Iberian conifer forests Spain Iberian sclerophyllous and semi deciduous forests Portugal Spain Illyrian deciduous forests Albania Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia Greece Italy Montenegro Slovenia Italian sclerophyllous and semi deciduous forests France Italy San Marino Mediterranean acacia argania dry woodlands Western Sahara Morocco Canary Islands Spain Mediterranean dry woodlands and steppe Algeria Egypt Libya Morocco Tunisia Mediterranean woodlands and forests Algeria Libya Morocco Tunisia Northeastern Spain and Southern France Mediterranean forests France Monaco Spain Northwest Iberian montane forests Portugal Spain Pindus Mountains mixed forests Albania Greece North Macedonia South Apennine mixed montane forests Italy Southeastern Iberian shrubs and woodlands Spain Southern Anatolian montane conifer and deciduous forests Lebanon Israel Jordan Syria Turkey Southwest Iberian Mediterranean sclerophyllous and mixed forests Portugal Spain Tyrrhenian Adriatic sclerophyllous and mixed forests Croatia France Italy Malta Map of the Mediterranean Basin s ecoregions 1201 Aegean and Western Turkey sclerophyllous and mixed forests 1202 Anatolian conifer and deciduous mixed forests 1203 Canary Islands dry woodlands and forests 1204 Corsican montane broadleaf and mixed forests 1205 Crete Mediterranean forests 1206 Cyprus Mediterranean forests 1207 Eastern Mediterranean conifer sclerophyllous broadleaf forests 1208 Iberian conifer forests 1209 Iberian sclerophyllous and semi deciduous forests 1210 Illyrian deciduous forests 1211 Italian sclerophyllous and semi deciduous forests 1212 Mediterranean acacia argania dry woodlands and succulent thickets 1213 Mediterranean dry woodlands and steppe 1214 Mediterranean woodlands and forests 1215 Northeastern Spain and Southern France Mediterranean forests 1216 Northwest Iberian montane forests 1217 Pindus Mountains mixed forests 1218 South Apeninne mixed montane forests 1219 Southeastern Iberian shrubs and woodlands 1220 Southern Anatolian montane conifer and deciduous forests 1221 Southwest Iberian Mediterranean sclerophyllous and mixed forests 1222 Tyrrhenian Adriatic sclerophyllous and mixed forests History EditMain article History of the Mediterranean region Neanderthals inhabited western Asia and the non glaciated portions of Europe starting about 230 000 years ago Modern humans moved into western Asia from Africa less than 100 000 years ago Modern humans known as Cro Magnons moved into Europe approximately 50 40 000 years ago The most recent glacial period the Wisconsin glaciation reached its maximum extent approximately 21 000 years ago and ended approximately 12 000 years ago A warm period known as the Holocene climatic optimum followed the ice age Food crops including wheat chickpeas and olives along with sheep and goats were domesticated in the eastern Mediterranean in the 9th millennium BCE which allowed for the establishment of agricultural settlements Near Eastern crops spread to southeastern Europe in the 7th millennium BCE Poppy and oats were domesticated in Europe from the 6th to the 3rd millennium BCE Agricultural settlements spread around the Mediterranean Basin Megaliths were constructed in Europe from 4500 1500 BCE A strengthening of the summer monsoon 9000 7000 years ago increased rainfall across the Sahara which became a grassland with lakes rivers and wetlands After a period of climatic instability the Sahara settled into a desert state by the 4th millennium BCE Historiography Edit One of the earliest modern studies of the Mediterranean was Fernand Braudel s La Mediterraneee et le monde mediterraneen a l epoque de Philippe II The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II published in 1949 S D Goitein s multivolume study of the Cairo Geniza documents was another important contribution in the area of Mediterranean Jewish culture 12 Agriculture EditFurther information Mediterranean cuisine Wheat is the dominant grain grown around the Mediterranean Basin Pulses and vegetables are also grown The characteristic tree crop is the olive Figs are another important fruit tree and citrus especially lemons are grown where irrigation is present Grapes are an important vine crop grown for fruit and to make wine Rice and summer vegetables are grown in irrigated areas See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mediterranean Ancient Egypt Ancient Greece Ancient Rome Life zones of the Mediterranean region Mediterranean wine climate MISTRALS Ottoman Empire Phoenicia Zanclean floodReferences Edit Portugal Jordan and Iraq Natura 2000 in the Mediterranean Region PDF European Commission of the European Union 2009 ISBN 978 92 79 11587 5 Retrieved August 6 2015 The Status and Distribution of Reptiles and Amphibians of the Mediterranean Basin Neil Cox Janice Chanson Simon Stuart 2006 ISBN 978 2 8317 0912 3 Retrieved 29 November 2020 Mediterranean Basin CEPF Retrieved 29 November 2020 Hegazy Ahmad Lovett Doust Jonathan 2016 2 18 Iraq Plant Ecology in the Middle East Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 107874 3 the Eastern Mediterranean conifer sclerophyllous broadleaf forest ecoregion which extends slightly into Iraq W Krijgsman A R Fortuinb F J Hilgenc F J Sierrod 2001 Astrochronology for the Messinian Sorbas basin SE Spain and orbital precessional forcing for evaporite cyclicity PDF Sedimentary Geology 140 1 43 60 Bibcode 2001SedG 140 43K doi 10 1016 S0037 0738 00 00171 8 hdl 1874 1632 Gargani J Rigollet C 2007 Mediterranean Sea level variations during the Messinian Salinity Crisis Geophysical Research Letters 34 L10405 L10405 Bibcode 2007GeoRL 3410405G doi 10 1029 2007GL029885 Gargani J Moretti I Letouzey J 2008 Evaporite accumulation during the Messinian Salinity Crisis The Suez Rift Case PDF Geophysical Research Letters 35 2 L02401 Bibcode 2008GeoRL 35 2401G doi 10 1029 2007gl032494 S2CID 129573384 Govers Rob 1 February 2009 Choking the Mediterranean to dehydration The Messinian salinity crisis Geology 37 2 167 170 Bibcode 2009Geo 37 167G doi 10 1130 G25141A 1 ISSN 0091 7613 Garcia Castellanos D Villasenor A 2011 Messinian salinity crisis regulated by competing tectonics and erosion at the Gibraltar Arc Nature 480 7377 359 63 Bibcode 2011Natur 480 359G doi 10 1038 nature10651 PMID 22170684 S2CID 205227033 Retrieved 2011 12 15 via sites google com Tahtadzhyan A L Floristicheskie deleniya sushi i okeana Drevnesredizemnomorskoe podcarstvo in Russian Archived from the original on 2008 06 16 Retrieved 26 January 2019 Wacks David A 2019 Medieval Iberian Crusade Fiction and the Mediterranean World University of Toronto Press p 4 Further reading EditAttenborough David 1987 The First Eden The Mediterranean world and man Boston MA Little Brown and Company Borutta Manuel Mediterraneum EGO European History Online Mainz Institute of European History 2021 retrieved March 8 2021 Dallman Peter F 1998 Plant Life in the World s Mediterranean Climates California Native Plant Society Berkeley California University of California Press Suc J P 1984 Origin and evolution of the Mediterranean vegetation and climate in Europe Nature 307 5950 429 432 Bibcode 1984Natur 307 429S doi 10 1038 307429a0 S2CID 4318726 Wagner Horst Gunter 2011 Mittelmeerraum Geography History Economy Darmstadt Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft ISBN 978 3 534 23179 9 External links EditMediterranean Basin biodiversity hotspot Conservation International Are wildfires a disaster in the Mediterranean basin A review MedTrees Trees and large shrubs of the Mediterranean Basin Mediterranean Experts on Climate and environmental Change MedECC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mediterranean Basin amp oldid 1166834234, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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