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Palearctic realm

The Palearctic or Palaearctic is the largest of the eight biogeographic realms of the Earth. It stretches across all of Eurasia north of the foothills of the Himalayas, and North Africa.

The Palearctic realm

The realm consists of several bioregions: the Euro-Siberian region; the Mediterranean Basin; the Sahara and Arabian Deserts; and Western, Central and East Asia. The Palaearctic realm also has numerous rivers and lakes, forming several freshwater ecoregions.

The term 'Palearctic' was first used in the 19th century, and is still in use as the basis for zoogeographic classification.

History

In an 1858 paper for the Proceedings of the Linnean Society, British zoologist Philip Sclater first identified six terrestrial zoogeographic realms of the world: Palaearctic, Aethiopian/Afrotropic, Indian/Indomalayan, Australasian, Nearctic, and Neotropical. The six indicated general groupings of fauna, based on shared biogeography and large-scale geographic barriers to migration.[1]

 
Frontispiece to Alfred Russel Wallace's book The Geographical Distribution of Animals

Alfred Wallace adopted Sclater's scheme for his book The Geographical Distribution of Animals, published in 1876. This is the same scheme that persists today, with relatively minor revisions, and the addition of two more realms: Oceania and the Antarctic realm.

Major ecological regions

The Palearctic realm includes mostly boreal/subarctic-climate and temperate-climate ecoregions, which run across Eurasia from western Europe to the Bering Sea.

Euro-Siberian region

The boreal and temperate Euro-Siberian region is the Palearctic's largest biogeographic region, which transitions from tundra in the northern reaches of Russia and Scandinavia to the vast taiga, the boreal coniferous forests which run across the continent. South of the taiga are a belt of temperate broadleaf and mixed forests and temperate coniferous forests. This vast Euro-Siberian region is characterized by many shared plant and animal species, and has many affinities with the temperate and boreal regions of the Nearctic realm of North America. Eurasia and North America were often connected by the Bering land bridge, and have very similar mammal and bird fauna, with many Eurasian species having moved into North America, and fewer North American species having moved into Eurasia. Many zoologists consider the Palearctic and Nearctic to be a single Holarctic realm. The Palearctic and Nearctic also share many plant species, which botanists call the Arcto-Tertiary Geoflora.

Mediterranean Basin

The lands bordering the Mediterranean Sea in southern Europe, north Africa, and western Asia are home to the Mediterranean Basin ecoregions, which together constitute the world's largest and most diverse mediterranean climate region of the world, with generally mild, rainy winters and hot, dry summers. The Mediterranean basin's mosaic of Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub are home to 13,000 endemic species. The Mediterranean basin is also one of the world's most endangered biogeographic regions; only 4% of the region's original vegetation remains, and human activities, including overgrazing, deforestation, and conversion of lands for pasture, agriculture, and urbanization, have degraded much of the region. Formerly the region was mostly covered with forests and woodlands, but heavy human use has reduced much of the region to the sclerophyll shrublands known as chaparral, matorral, maquis, or garrigue. Conservation International has designated the Mediterranean basin as one of the world's biodiversity hotspots.

Sahara and Arabian deserts

A great belt of deserts, including the Atlantic coastal desert, Sahara desert, and Arabian desert, separates the Palearctic and Afrotropic ecoregions. This scheme includes these desert ecoregions in the palearctic realm; other biogeographers identify the realm boundary as the transition zone between the desert ecoregions and the Mediterranean basin ecoregions to the north, which places the deserts in the Afrotropic, while others place the boundary through the middle of the desert.

Western and Central Asia

The Caucasus mountains, which run between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea, are a particularly rich mix of coniferous, broadleaf, and mixed forests, and include the temperate rain forests of the Euxine-Colchic deciduous forests ecoregion.

Central Asia and the Iranian plateau are home to dry steppe grasslands and desert basins, with montane forests, woodlands, and grasslands in the region's high mountains and plateaux. In southern Asia the boundary of the Palearctic is largely altitudinal. The middle altitude foothills of the Himalaya between about 2000–2500 m form the boundary between the Palearctic and Indomalaya ecoregions.

East Asia

China, Korea and Japan are more humid and temperate than adjacent Siberia and Central Asia, and are home to rich temperate coniferous, broadleaf, and mixed forests, which are now mostly limited to mountainous areas, as the densely populated lowlands and river basins have been converted to intensive agricultural and urban use. East Asia was not much affected by glaciation in the ice ages, and retained 96 percent of Pliocene[citation needed] tree genera, while Europe retained only 27 percent. In the subtropical region of southern China and southern edge of the Himalayas, the Palearctic temperate forests transition to the subtropical and tropical forests of Indomalaya, creating a rich and diverse mix of plant and animal species. The mountains of southwest China are also designated as a biodiversity hotspot. In Southeastern Asia, high mountain ranges form tongues of Palearctic flora and fauna in northern Indochina and southern China. Isolated small outposts (sky islands) occur as far south as central Myanmar (on Nat Ma Taung, 3050 m), northernmost Vietnam (on Fan Si Pan, 3140 m) and the high mountains of Taiwan.

Freshwater

The realm contains several important freshwater ecoregions as well, including the heavily developed rivers of Europe, the rivers of Russia, which flow into the Arctic, Baltic, Black, and Caspian seas, Siberia's Lake Baikal, the oldest and deepest lake on the planet, and Japan's ancient Lake Biwa.

Flora and fauna

One bird family, the accentors (Prunellidae), is endemic to the Palearctic region. The Holarctic has four other endemic bird families: the divers or loons (Gaviidae), grouse (Tetraoninae), auks (Alcidae), and waxwings (Bombycillidae).

There are no endemic mammal orders in the region, but several families are endemic: Calomyscidae (mouse-like hamsters), Prolagidae, and Ailuridae (red pandas). Several mammal species originated in the Palearctic and spread to the Nearctic during the Ice Age, including the brown bear (Ursus arctos, known in North America as the grizzly), red deer (Cervus elaphus) in Europe and the closely related elk (Cervus canadensis) in far eastern Siberia, American bison (Bison bison), and reindeer (Rangifer tarandus, known in North America as the caribou).

Megafaunal extinctions

Several large Palearctic animals became extinct from the end of the Pleistocene into historic times, including Irish elk (Megaloceros giganteus), aurochs (Bos primigenius), woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis), woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius), North African elephant (Loxodonta africana pharaoensis), Chinese elephant (Elephas maximus rubridens), cave bear (Ursus spelaeus), Straight tusked elephant (Palaeoloxodon antiquus) and European lion (Panthera leo europaea).

Palearctic terrestrial ecoregions

Guizhou Plateau broadleaf and mixed forests China
Yunnan Plateau subtropical evergreen forests China
Palearctic temperate broadleaf and mixed forests
Apennine deciduous montane forests Italy
Atlantic mixed forests Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Netherlands
Azores temperate mixed forests Portugal
Balkan mixed forests Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Greece, Kosovo, North Macedonia, Romania, Serbia, Turkey
Baltic mixed forests Denmark, Germany, Poland, Sweden
Cantabrian mixed forests Portugal, Spain
Caspian Hyrcanian mixed forests Azerbaijan, Iran
Caucasus mixed forests Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Russia, Turkey
Celtic broadleaf forests Ireland, United Kingdom
Central Anatolian deciduous forests Turkey
Central China loess plateau mixed forests China
Central European mixed forests Austria, Belarus, Czech Republic, Germany, Lithuania, Moldova, Poland
Central Korean deciduous forests North Korea, South Korea
Changbai Mountains mixed forests China, North Korea
Changjiang Plain evergreen forests China
Crimean Submediterranean forest complex Russia, Ukraine
Daba Mountains evergreen forests China
Dinaric Mountains mixed forests Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Italy, Montenegro, Serbia, Slovenia
East European forest steppe Bulgaria, Moldova, Romania, Russia, Ukraine
Eastern Anatolian deciduous forests Turkey
English Lowlands beech forests United Kingdom
Euxine–Colchic deciduous forests Bulgaria, Georgia, Turkey
Hokkaido deciduous forests Japan
Huang He Plain mixed forests China
Madeira evergreen forests Portugal
Manchurian mixed forests China, North Korea, Russia, South Korea
Nihonkai evergreen forests Japan
Nihonkai montane deciduous forests Japan
North Atlantic moist mixed forests Ireland, United Kingdom
Northeast China Plain deciduous forests China
Pannonian mixed forests Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Ukraine
Po Basin mixed forests Italy
Pyrenees conifer and mixed forests Andorra, France, Spain
Qin Ling Mountains deciduous forests China
Rodope montane mixed forests Bulgaria, Greece, North Macedonia, Serbia
Sarmatic mixed forests Belarus, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Russia, Sweden
Sichuan Basin evergreen broadleaf forests China
South Sakhalin–Kurile mixed forests Russia
Southern Korea evergreen forests South Korea
Taiheiyo evergreen forests Japan
Taiheiyo montane deciduous forests Japan
Tarim Basin deciduous forests and steppe China
Ussuri broadleaf and mixed forests Russia
West Siberian broadleaf and mixed forests Russia
Western European broadleaf forests Austria, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Switzerland
Zagros Mountains forest steppe Iran, Iraq, Turkey
Alps conifer and mixed forests Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Slovenia, Switzerland
Altai montane forest and forest steppe China, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Russia
Caledon conifer forests United Kingdom
Carpathian montane conifer forests Czech Republic, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Ukraine
Da Hinggan–Dzhagdy Mountains conifer forests China, Russia
East Afghan montane conifer forests Afghanistan, Pakistan
Elburz Range forest steppe Iran
Helanshan montane conifer forests China
Hengduan Mountains subalpine conifer forests China
Hokkaido montane conifer forests Japan
Honshū alpine conifer forests Japan
Khangai Mountains conifer forests Mongolia
Mediterranean conifer and mixed forests Algeria, Morocco, Spain, Tunisia
Northeastern Himalayan subalpine conifer forests China, India, Bhutan
Northern Anatolian conifer and deciduous forests Turkey
Nujiang Langcang Gorge alpine conifer and mixed forests China
Qilian Mountains conifer forests China
Qionglai–Minshan conifer forests China
Sayan montane conifer forests Mongolia, Russia
Scandinavian coastal conifer forests Norway
Tian Shan montane conifer forests China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan
Alai–Western Tian Shan steppe Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan
Altai steppe and semi-desert Kazakhstan
Central Anatolian steppe Turkey
Daurian forest steppe China, Mongolia, Russia
Eastern Anatolian montane steppe Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Iran, Turkey
Emin Valley steppe China, Kazakhstan
Faroe Islands boreal grasslands Faroe Islands, Denmark
Gissaro–Alai open woodlands Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan
Kazakh forest steppe Kazakhstan, Russia
Kazakh steppe Kazakhstan, Russia
Kazakh Uplands Kazakhstan
Mongolian–Manchurian grassland China, Mongolia, Russia
Pontic steppe Kazakhstan, Moldova, Romania, Russia, Ukraine, Bulgaria
Sayan Intermontane steppe Russia
Selenge–Orkhon forest steppe Mongolia, Russia
South Siberian forest steppe Russia
Syrian xeric grasslands and shrublands Iraq, Jordan, Syria
Tian Shan foothill arid steppe China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan
Altai alpine meadow and tundra China, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Russia
Central Tibetan Plateau alpine steppe China
Eastern Himalayan alpine shrub and meadows Bhutan, Myanmar, China, India, Nepal
Ghorat–Hazarajat alpine meadow Afghanistan
Hindu Kush alpine meadow Afghanistan
Karakoram–West Tibetan Plateau alpine steppe Afghanistan, China, India, Pakistan
Khangai Mountains alpine meadow Mongolia
Kopet Dag woodlands and forest steppe Iran, Turkmenistan
Kuh Rud and Eastern Iran montane woodlands Iran
Mediterranean High Atlas juniper steppe Morocco
North Tibetan Plateau–Kunlun Mountains alpine desert China
Northwestern Himalayan alpine shrub and meadows China, India, Pakistan
Ordos Plateau steppe China
Pamir alpine desert and tundra Afghanistan, China, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan
Qilian Mountains subalpine meadows China
Sayan alpine meadows and tundra Mongolia, Russia
Southeast Tibet shrub and meadows China
Sulaiman Range alpine meadows Afghanistan, Pakistan
Tian Shan montane steppe and meadows China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan
Tibetan Plateau alpine shrublands and meadows China
Western Himalayan alpine shrub and meadows India, Nepal
Yarlung Zambo arid steppe China
Aegean and Western Turkey sclerophyllous and mixed forests Greece, North 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, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey
Iberian conifer forests 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, 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 Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Turkey
Southwest Iberian Mediterranean sclerophyllous and mixed forests Portugal, Spain
Tyrrhenian–Adriatic sclerophyllous and mixed forests Croatia, France, Italy, Malta
Palearctic deserts and xeric shrublands[2]
Afghan Mountains semi-desert Afghanistan
Alashan Plateau semi-desert China, Mongolia
Arabian Desert Egypt, Israel, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, Yemen
Atlantic coastal desert Mauritania, Western Sahara
Azerbaijan shrub desert and steppe Azerbaijan, Georgia, Iran
Badghyz and Karabil semi-desert Afghanistan, Iran, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan
Baluchistan xeric woodlands Afghanistan, Pakistan
Caspian lowland desert Iran, Kazakhstan, Russia, Turkmenistan
Central Afghan Mountains xeric woodlands Afghanistan
Central Asian northern desert Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
Central Asian riparian woodlands Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan
Central Asian southern desert Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan
Central Persian desert basins Afghanistan, Iran
Eastern Gobi desert steppe China, Mongolia
Gobi Lakes Valley desert steppe Mongolia
Great Lakes Basin desert steppe Mongolia, Russia
Junggar Basin semi-desert China, Mongolia
Kazakh semi-desert Kazakhstan
Kopet Dag semi-desert Iran, Turkmenistan
Mesopotamian shrub desert Iraq, Iran, Israel, Jordan, Syria
North Saharan steppe and woodlands Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Tunisia, Western Sahara
Paropamisus xeric woodlands Afghanistan
Persian Gulf desert and semi-desert Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates
Qaidam Basin semi-desert China
Red Sea coastal desert Egypt, Sudan
Red Sea Nubo–Sindian tropical desert and semi-desert Egypt, Jordan, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Yemen
Registan–North Pakistan sandy desert Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan
Sahara desert Algeria, Chad, Egypt, Libya, Mali, Niger, Sudan, Western Sahara
South Iran Nubo–Sindian desert and semi-desert Iran, Iraq, Pakistan
South Saharan steppe and woodlands Algeria, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Sudan
Taklimakan desert China
Tibesti–Jebel Uweinat montane xeric woodlands Chad, Egypt, Libya, Sudan
West Saharan montane xeric woodlands Algeria, Mali, Mauritania, Niger

References

  1. ^ Sclater, Philip Lutley (1858). "On the general geographical distribution of the members of the class Aves". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 2 (7): 130–145. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.1858.tb02549.x.
  2. ^ Eric Dinerstein, David Olson, et al. (2017). An Ecoregion-Based Approach to Protecting Half the Terrestrial Realm, BioScience, Volume 67, Issue 6, June 2017, Pages 534–545 [1]

General references

External links

palearctic, realm, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, 2015, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, palearc. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Palearctic or Palaearctic is the largest of the eight biogeographic realms of the Earth It stretches across all of Eurasia north of the foothills of the Himalayas and North Africa The Palearctic realm The realm consists of several bioregions the Euro Siberian region the Mediterranean Basin the Sahara and Arabian Deserts and Western Central and East Asia The Palaearctic realm also has numerous rivers and lakes forming several freshwater ecoregions The term Palearctic was first used in the 19th century and is still in use as the basis for zoogeographic classification Contents 1 History 2 Major ecological regions 2 1 Euro Siberian region 2 2 Mediterranean Basin 2 3 Sahara and Arabian deserts 2 4 Western and Central Asia 2 5 East Asia 2 6 Freshwater 3 Flora and fauna 3 1 Megafaunal extinctions 4 Palearctic terrestrial ecoregions 5 References 6 General references 7 External linksHistory EditIn an 1858 paper for the Proceedings of the Linnean Society British zoologist Philip Sclater first identified six terrestrial zoogeographic realms of the world Palaearctic Aethiopian Afrotropic Indian Indomalayan Australasian Nearctic and Neotropical The six indicated general groupings of fauna based on shared biogeography and large scale geographic barriers to migration 1 Frontispiece to Alfred Russel Wallace s book The Geographical Distribution of Animals Alfred Wallace adopted Sclater s scheme for his book The Geographical Distribution of Animals published in 1876 This is the same scheme that persists today with relatively minor revisions and the addition of two more realms Oceania and the Antarctic realm Major ecological regions EditThe Palearctic realm includes mostly boreal subarctic climate and temperate climate ecoregions which run across Eurasia from western Europe to the Bering Sea Euro Siberian region Edit Main article Euro Siberian region The boreal and temperate Euro Siberian region is the Palearctic s largest biogeographic region which transitions from tundra in the northern reaches of Russia and Scandinavia to the vast taiga the boreal coniferous forests which run across the continent South of the taiga are a belt of temperate broadleaf and mixed forests and temperate coniferous forests This vast Euro Siberian region is characterized by many shared plant and animal species and has many affinities with the temperate and boreal regions of the Nearctic realm of North America Eurasia and North America were often connected by the Bering land bridge and have very similar mammal and bird fauna with many Eurasian species having moved into North America and fewer North American species having moved into Eurasia Many zoologists consider the Palearctic and Nearctic to be a single Holarctic realm The Palearctic and Nearctic also share many plant species which botanists call the Arcto Tertiary Geoflora Mediterranean Basin Edit Main article Mediterranean Basin The lands bordering the Mediterranean Sea in southern Europe north Africa and western Asia are home to the Mediterranean Basin ecoregions which together constitute the world s largest and most diverse mediterranean climate region of the world with generally mild rainy winters and hot dry summers The Mediterranean basin s mosaic of Mediterranean forests woodlands and scrub are home to 13 000 endemic species The Mediterranean basin is also one of the world s most endangered biogeographic regions only 4 of the region s original vegetation remains and human activities including overgrazing deforestation and conversion of lands for pasture agriculture and urbanization have degraded much of the region Formerly the region was mostly covered with forests and woodlands but heavy human use has reduced much of the region to the sclerophyll shrublands known as chaparral matorral maquis or garrigue Conservation International has designated the Mediterranean basin as one of the world s biodiversity hotspots Sahara and Arabian deserts Edit A great belt of deserts including the Atlantic coastal desert Sahara desert and Arabian desert separates the Palearctic and Afrotropic ecoregions This scheme includes these desert ecoregions in the palearctic realm other biogeographers identify the realm boundary as the transition zone between the desert ecoregions and the Mediterranean basin ecoregions to the north which places the deserts in the Afrotropic while others place the boundary through the middle of the desert Western and Central Asia Edit The Caucasus mountains which run between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea are a particularly rich mix of coniferous broadleaf and mixed forests and include the temperate rain forests of the Euxine Colchic deciduous forests ecoregion Central Asia and the Iranian plateau are home to dry steppe grasslands and desert basins with montane forests woodlands and grasslands in the region s high mountains and plateaux In southern Asia the boundary of the Palearctic is largely altitudinal The middle altitude foothills of the Himalaya between about 2000 2500 m form the boundary between the Palearctic and Indomalaya ecoregions East Asia Edit China Korea and Japan are more humid and temperate than adjacent Siberia and Central Asia and are home to rich temperate coniferous broadleaf and mixed forests which are now mostly limited to mountainous areas as the densely populated lowlands and river basins have been converted to intensive agricultural and urban use East Asia was not much affected by glaciation in the ice ages and retained 96 percent of Pliocene citation needed tree genera while Europe retained only 27 percent In the subtropical region of southern China and southern edge of the Himalayas the Palearctic temperate forests transition to the subtropical and tropical forests of Indomalaya creating a rich and diverse mix of plant and animal species The mountains of southwest China are also designated as a biodiversity hotspot In Southeastern Asia high mountain ranges form tongues of Palearctic flora and fauna in northern Indochina and southern China Isolated small outposts sky islands occur as far south as central Myanmar on Nat Ma Taung 3050 m northernmost Vietnam on Fan Si Pan 3140 m and the high mountains of Taiwan Freshwater Edit The realm contains several important freshwater ecoregions as well including the heavily developed rivers of Europe the rivers of Russia which flow into the Arctic Baltic Black and Caspian seas Siberia s Lake Baikal the oldest and deepest lake on the planet and Japan s ancient Lake Biwa Flora and fauna EditOne bird family the accentors Prunellidae is endemic to the Palearctic region The Holarctic has four other endemic bird families the divers or loons Gaviidae grouse Tetraoninae auks Alcidae and waxwings Bombycillidae There are no endemic mammal orders in the region but several families are endemic Calomyscidae mouse like hamsters Prolagidae and Ailuridae red pandas Several mammal species originated in the Palearctic and spread to the Nearctic during the Ice Age including the brown bear Ursus arctos known in North America as the grizzly red deer Cervus elaphus in Europe and the closely related elk Cervus canadensis in far eastern Siberia American bison Bison bison and reindeer Rangifer tarandus known in North America as the caribou Megafaunal extinctions Edit Several large Palearctic animals became extinct from the end of the Pleistocene into historic times including Irish elk Megaloceros giganteus aurochs Bos primigenius woolly rhinoceros Coelodonta antiquitatis woolly mammoth Mammuthus primigenius North African elephant Loxodonta africana pharaoensis Chinese elephant Elephas maximus rubridens cave bear Ursus spelaeus Straight tusked elephant Palaeoloxodon antiquus and European lion Panthera leo europaea Palearctic terrestrial ecoregions EditPalearctic tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests ecoregionsvteGuizhou Plateau broadleaf and mixed forests ChinaYunnan Plateau subtropical evergreen forests ChinaPalearctic temperate broadleaf and mixed forestsApennine deciduous montane forests ItalyAtlantic mixed forests Belgium Denmark France Germany NetherlandsAzores temperate mixed forests PortugalBalkan mixed forests Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgaria Greece Kosovo North Macedonia Romania Serbia TurkeyBaltic mixed forests Denmark Germany Poland SwedenCantabrian mixed forests Portugal SpainCaspian Hyrcanian mixed forests Azerbaijan IranCaucasus mixed forests Armenia Azerbaijan Georgia Russia TurkeyCeltic broadleaf forests Ireland United KingdomCentral Anatolian deciduous forests TurkeyCentral China loess plateau mixed forests ChinaCentral European mixed forests Austria Belarus Czech Republic Germany Lithuania Moldova PolandCentral Korean deciduous forests North Korea South KoreaChangbai Mountains mixed forests China North KoreaChangjiang Plain evergreen forests ChinaCrimean Submediterranean forest complex Russia UkraineDaba Mountains evergreen forests ChinaDinaric Mountains mixed forests Albania Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia Italy Montenegro Serbia SloveniaEast European forest steppe Bulgaria Moldova Romania Russia UkraineEastern Anatolian deciduous forests TurkeyEnglish Lowlands beech forests United KingdomEuxine Colchic deciduous forests Bulgaria Georgia TurkeyHokkaido deciduous forests JapanHuang He Plain mixed forests ChinaMadeira evergreen forests PortugalManchurian mixed forests China North Korea Russia South KoreaNihonkai evergreen forests JapanNihonkai montane deciduous forests JapanNorth Atlantic moist mixed forests Ireland United KingdomNortheast China Plain deciduous forests ChinaPannonian mixed forests Austria Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia Czech Republic Hungary Romania Serbia Slovakia Slovenia UkrainePo Basin mixed forests ItalyPyrenees conifer and mixed forests Andorra France SpainQin Ling Mountains deciduous forests ChinaRodope montane mixed forests Bulgaria Greece North Macedonia SerbiaSarmatic mixed forests Belarus Denmark Estonia Finland Latvia Lithuania Norway Russia SwedenSichuan Basin evergreen broadleaf forests ChinaSouth Sakhalin Kurile mixed forests RussiaSouthern Korea evergreen forests South KoreaTaiheiyo evergreen forests JapanTaiheiyo montane deciduous forests JapanTarim Basin deciduous forests and steppe ChinaUssuri broadleaf and mixed forests RussiaWest Siberian broadleaf and mixed forests RussiaWestern European broadleaf forests Austria Czech Republic France Germany SwitzerlandZagros Mountains forest steppe Iran Iraq TurkeyvtePalearctic temperate coniferous forests ecoregionsAlps conifer and mixed forests Austria France Germany Italy Slovenia SwitzerlandAltai montane forest and forest steppe China Kazakhstan Mongolia RussiaCaledon conifer forests United KingdomCarpathian montane conifer forests Czech Republic Poland Romania Slovakia UkraineDa Hinggan Dzhagdy Mountains conifer forests China RussiaEast Afghan montane conifer forests Afghanistan PakistanElburz Range forest steppe IranHelanshan montane conifer forests ChinaHengduan Mountains subalpine conifer forests ChinaHokkaido montane conifer forests JapanHonshu alpine conifer forests JapanKhangai Mountains conifer forests MongoliaMediterranean conifer and mixed forests Algeria Morocco Spain TunisiaNortheastern Himalayan subalpine conifer forests China India BhutanNorthern Anatolian conifer and deciduous forests TurkeyNujiang Langcang Gorge alpine conifer and mixed forests ChinaQilian Mountains conifer forests ChinaQionglai Minshan conifer forests ChinaSayan montane conifer forests Mongolia RussiaScandinavian coastal conifer forests NorwayTian Shan montane conifer forests China Kazakhstan KyrgyzstanPalearctic boreal forests taiga ecoregionsvteEast Siberian taiga RussiaIceland boreal birch forests and alpine tundra IcelandKamchatka Kurile meadows and sparse forests RussiaKamchatka Kurile taiga RussiaNortheast Siberian taiga RussiaOkhotsk Manchurian taiga RussiaSakhalin Island taiga RussiaScandinavian and Russian taiga Finland Norway Russia SwedenTrans Baikal conifer forests Mongolia RussiaUrals montane tundra and taiga RussiaWest Siberian taiga RussiaPalearctic temperate grasslands savannas and shrublands ecoregionsvteAlai Western Tian Shan steppe Kazakhstan Tajikistan UzbekistanAltai steppe and semi desert KazakhstanCentral Anatolian steppe TurkeyDaurian forest steppe China Mongolia RussiaEastern Anatolian montane steppe Armenia Azerbaijan Georgia Iran TurkeyEmin Valley steppe China KazakhstanFaroe Islands boreal grasslands Faroe Islands DenmarkGissaro Alai open woodlands Kyrgyzstan Tajikistan UzbekistanKazakh forest steppe Kazakhstan RussiaKazakh steppe Kazakhstan RussiaKazakh Uplands KazakhstanMongolian Manchurian grassland China Mongolia RussiaPontic steppe Kazakhstan Moldova Romania Russia Ukraine BulgariaSayan Intermontane steppe RussiaSelenge Orkhon forest steppe Mongolia RussiaSouth Siberian forest steppe RussiaSyrian xeric grasslands and shrublands Iraq Jordan SyriaTian Shan foothill arid steppe China Kazakhstan KyrgyzstanPalearctic flooded grasslands and savannas ecoregionsvteAmur meadow steppe China RussiaBohai Sea saline meadow ChinaNenjiang River grassland ChinaNile Delta flooded savanna EgyptSaharan halophytics Algeria Egypt Mauritania Tunisia Western SaharaTigris Euphrates alluvial salt marsh Iraq IranUssuri Wusuli meadow and forest meadow China RussiaYellow Sea saline meadow ChinaPalearctic montane grasslands and shrublands ecoregionsvteAltai alpine meadow and tundra China Kazakhstan Mongolia RussiaCentral Tibetan Plateau alpine steppe ChinaEastern Himalayan alpine shrub and meadows Bhutan Myanmar China India NepalGhorat Hazarajat alpine meadow AfghanistanHindu Kush alpine meadow AfghanistanKarakoram West Tibetan Plateau alpine steppe Afghanistan China India PakistanKhangai Mountains alpine meadow MongoliaKopet Dag woodlands and forest steppe Iran TurkmenistanKuh Rud and Eastern Iran montane woodlands IranMediterranean High Atlas juniper steppe MoroccoNorth Tibetan Plateau Kunlun Mountains alpine desert ChinaNorthwestern Himalayan alpine shrub and meadows China India PakistanOrdos Plateau steppe ChinaPamir alpine desert and tundra Afghanistan China Kyrgyzstan TajikistanQilian Mountains subalpine meadows ChinaSayan alpine meadows and tundra Mongolia RussiaSoutheast Tibet shrub and meadows ChinaSulaiman Range alpine meadows Afghanistan PakistanTian Shan montane steppe and meadows China Kazakhstan KyrgyzstanTibetan Plateau alpine shrublands and meadows ChinaWestern Himalayan alpine shrub and meadows India NepalYarlung Zambo arid steppe ChinaPalearctic tundra ecoregionsvteArctic desert Russia Svalbard Norway Bering tundra RussiaCherskii Kolyma mountain tundra RussiaChukchi Peninsula tundra RussiaKamchatka Mountain tundra and forest tundra RussiaKola Peninsula tundra Norway RussiaNortheast Siberian coastal tundra RussiaNorthwest Russian Novaya Zemlya tundra RussiaNew Siberian Islands arctic desert RussiaScandinavian montane birch forest and grasslands Finland Norway SwedenTaimyr Central Siberian tundra RussiaTrans Baikal Bald Mountain tundra RussiaWrangel Island arctic desert RussiaYamalagydanskaja tundra RussiaPalearctic Mediterranean forests woodlands and scrub ecoregionsvteAegean and Western Turkey sclerophyllous and mixed forests Greece North Macedonia TurkeyAnatolian conifer and deciduous mixed forests TurkeyCanary Islands dry woodlands and forests SpainCorsican montane broadleaf and mixed forests FranceCrete Mediterranean forests GreeceCyprus Mediterranean forests CyprusEastern Mediterranean conifer sclerophyllous broadleaf forests Israel Jordan Lebanon Syria TurkeyIberian conifer forests SpainIberian sclerophyllous and semi deciduous forests Portugal SpainIllyrian deciduous forests Albania Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia Greece Italy SloveniaItalian sclerophyllous and semi deciduous forests France ItalyMediterranean acacia argania dry woodlands and succulent thickets Morocco Canary Islands Spain Mediterranean dry woodlands and steppe Algeria Egypt Libya Morocco TunisiaMediterranean woodlands and forests Algeria Libya Morocco TunisiaNortheastern Spain and Southern France Mediterranean forests France Monaco SpainNorthwest Iberian montane forests Portugal SpainPindus Mountains mixed forests Albania Greece North MacedoniaSouth Apennine mixed montane forests ItalySoutheastern Iberian shrubs and woodlands SpainSouthern Anatolian montane conifer and deciduous forests Israel Jordan Lebanon Syria TurkeySouthwest Iberian Mediterranean sclerophyllous and mixed forests Portugal SpainTyrrhenian Adriatic sclerophyllous and mixed forests Croatia France Italy MaltaPalearctic deserts and xeric shrublands 2 Afghan Mountains semi desert AfghanistanAlashan Plateau semi desert China MongoliaArabian Desert Egypt Israel Iraq Jordan Kuwait Palestine Saudi Arabia YemenAtlantic coastal desert Mauritania Western SaharaAzerbaijan shrub desert and steppe Azerbaijan Georgia IranBadghyz and Karabil semi desert Afghanistan Iran Tajikistan Turkmenistan UzbekistanBaluchistan xeric woodlands Afghanistan PakistanCaspian lowland desert Iran Kazakhstan Russia TurkmenistanCentral Afghan Mountains xeric woodlands AfghanistanCentral Asian northern desert Kazakhstan UzbekistanCentral Asian riparian woodlands Kazakhstan Turkmenistan UzbekistanCentral Asian southern desert Kazakhstan Turkmenistan UzbekistanCentral Persian desert basins Afghanistan IranEastern Gobi desert steppe China MongoliaGobi Lakes Valley desert steppe MongoliaGreat Lakes Basin desert steppe Mongolia RussiaJunggar Basin semi desert China MongoliaKazakh semi desert KazakhstanKopet Dag semi desert Iran TurkmenistanMesopotamian shrub desert Iraq Iran Israel Jordan SyriaNorth Saharan steppe and woodlands Algeria Egypt Libya Mauritania Morocco Tunisia Western SaharaParopamisus xeric woodlands AfghanistanPersian Gulf desert and semi desert Bahrain Kuwait Oman Qatar Saudi Arabia United Arab EmiratesQaidam Basin semi desert ChinaRed Sea coastal desert Egypt SudanRed Sea Nubo Sindian tropical desert and semi desert Egypt Jordan Oman Saudi Arabia YemenRegistan North Pakistan sandy desert Afghanistan Iran PakistanSahara desert Algeria Chad Egypt Libya Mali Niger Sudan Western SaharaSouth Iran Nubo Sindian desert and semi desert Iran Iraq PakistanSouth Saharan steppe and woodlands Algeria Chad Mali Mauritania Niger SudanTaklimakan desert ChinaTibesti Jebel Uweinat montane xeric woodlands Chad Egypt Libya SudanWest Saharan montane xeric woodlands Algeria Mali Mauritania NigerReferences Edit Sclater Philip Lutley 1858 On the general geographical distribution of the members of the class Aves Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 2 7 130 145 doi 10 1111 j 1096 3642 1858 tb02549 x Eric Dinerstein David Olson et al 2017 An Ecoregion Based Approach to Protecting Half the Terrestrial Realm BioScience Volume 67 Issue 6 June 2017 Pages 534 545 1 General references EditAmorosi T Contributions to the zooarchaeology of Iceland some preliminary notes in The Anthropology of Iceland eds E P Durrenberger amp G Palsson Iowa City University of Iowa Press pp 203 227 1989 Buckland P C et al Holt in Eyjafjasveit Iceland a paleoecological study of the impact of Landnam in Acta Archaeologica 61 pp 252 271 1991 http www Merriam Webster com http www Canadianbiodiversity mcgill ca http www bbc co uk nature ecozones Palearctic ecozone Edmund Burke III The Transformation of the middle Eastern Environment 1500 B C E 2000 C E in The Environment and World History ed Edmund Burke III and Kenneth Pomeranz Berkeley University of California Press 2009 82 84 External links EditPalearctic realm at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Travel information from Wikivoyage Avionary 1500 Bird species of the Western and Central Palaearctic in 46 languages Map of the ecozones http www bbc co uk nature ecozones Palearctic ecozone https web archive org web 20150923233335 http www economicexpert com a Tigris htm http www Merriam Webster com http www Canadianbiodiversity mcgill ca Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Palearctic realm amp oldid 1141801241, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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