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Phytochorion

A phytochorion, in phytogeography, is a geographic area with a relatively uniform composition of plant species. Adjacent phytochoria do not usually have a sharp boundary, but rather a soft one, a transitional area in which many species from both regions overlap. The region of overlap is called a vegetation tension zone.

In traditional schemes, areas in phytogeography are classified hierarchically, according to the presence of endemic families, genera or species, e.g., in floral (or floristic, phytogeographic) zones and regions,[1] or also in kingdoms, regions and provinces,[2] sometimes including the categories empire and domain. However, some authors prefer not to rank areas, referring to them simply as "areas", "regions" (in a non hierarchical sense) or "phytochoria".[3]

Systems used to classify vegetation can be divided in two major groups: those that use physiognomic-environmental parameters and characteristics and those that are based on floristic (i.e. shared genera and species) relationships.[4] Phytochoria are defined by their plant taxonomic composition, while other schemes of regionalization (e.g., vegetation type, physiognomy, plant formations, biomes) may variably take in account, depending on the author, the apparent characteristics of a community (the dominant life-form), environment characteristics, the fauna associated, anthropic factors or political-conservationist issues.[5]

Explanation

Several systems of classifying geographic areas where plants grow have been devised. Most systems are organized hierarchically, with the largest units subdivided into smaller geographic areas, which are made up of smaller floristic communities, and so on. Phytochoria are defined as areas possessing a large number of endemic taxa. Floristic kingdoms are characterized by a high degree of family endemism, floristic regions by a high degree of generic endemism, and floristic provinces by a high degree of species endemism. Systems of phytochoria have both significant similarities and differences with zoogeographic provinces, which follow the composition of mammal families, and with biogeographical provinces or terrestrial ecoregions, which take into account both plant and animal species.

The term "phytochorion" (Werger & van Gils, 1976)[6] is especially associated with the classifications according to the methodology of Josias Braun-Blanquet, which is tied to the presence or absence of particular species,[7] mainly in Africa.[8]

Taxonomic databases tend to be organized in ways which approximate floristic provinces, but which are more closely aligned to political boundaries, for example according to the World Geographical Scheme for Recording Plant Distributions.

Early schemes

In the late 19th century, Adolf Engler (1844-1930) was the first to make a world map with the limits of distribution of floras, with four major floral regions (realms).[9][10] His Syllabus der Pflanzenfamilien, from the third edition (1903) onwards, also included a sketch of the division of the earth into floral regions.[11]

Other important early works on floristics includes Augustin de Candolle (1820),[12] Schouw (1823),[13]Alphonse de Candolle (1855),[14] Drude (1890),[1] Diels (1908),[15] and Rikli (1913).[16]

Good (1947) regionalization

 
Good (1947) floristic kingdoms

Botanist Ronald Good (1947) identified six floristic kingdoms (Boreal or Holarctic, Neotropical, Paleotropical, South African, Australian, and Antarctic), the largest natural units he determined for flowering plants. Good's six kingdoms are subdivided into smaller units, called regions and provinces. The Paleotropical kingdom is divided into three subkingdoms, which are each subdivided into floristic regions. Each of the other five kingdoms are subdivided directly into regions. There are a total of 37 floristic regions. Almost all regions are further subdivided into floristic provinces.[17]

Takhtajan (1978, 1986) regionalization

Armen Takhtajan (1978, 1986), in a widely used scheme that builds on Good's work, identified thirty-five floristic regions, each of which is subdivided into floristic provinces, of which there are 152 in all.[18][19][20][21]

Holarctic Kingdom

I. Circumboreal region

1 Arctic province
2 Atlantic Europe province
3 Central Europe province
4 Illyria or Balkan province
5 Pontus Euxinus province
6 Caucasus province
7 Eastern Europe province
8 Northern Europe province
9 Western Siberia province
10 Altai-Sayan province
11 Central Siberia province
12 Transbaikalia province
13 Northeastern Siberia province
14 Okhotsk-Kamchatka province
15 Canada incl. Great Lakes province

II. Eastern Asiatic region

16 Manchuria province
17 Sakhalin-Hokkaidō province
18 Japan-Korea province
19 Volcano-Bonin province
20 Ryūkyū or Tokara-Okinawa province
21 Taiwan province
22 Northern China province
23 Central China province
24 Southeastern China province
25 Sikang-Yuennan province
26 Northern Burma province
27 Eastern Himalaya province
28 Khasi-Manipur province

III. North American Atlantic region

29 Appalachian province (forested areas extending east to include the piedmont and west to the start of the prairies)
30 Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain province
31 North American Prairies province

IV. Rocky Mountain region

32 Vancouverian province
33 Rocky Mountains province

V. Macaronesian region

34 Azores province
35 Madeira province
36 Canaries province
37 Cape Verde province

VI. Mediterranean region

38 Southern Morocco province
39 Southwestern Mediterranean province
40 South Mediterranean province
41 Iberia province
42 Baleares province
43 Liguria-Tyrrhenia province
44 Adriatic province
45 East Mediterranean province
46 Crimea-Novorossijsk province

VII. Saharo-Arabian region

47 Sahara province
48 Egypt-Arabia province

VIII. Irano-Turanian region

49 Mesopotamia province
50 Central Anatolia province
51 Armenia-Iran province
52 Hyrcania province
53 Turania or Aralo-Caspia province
54 Turkestan province
55 Northern Baluchistan province
56 Western Himalaya province
57 Central Tien Shan province
58 Dzungaria-Tien Shan province
59 Mongolia province
60 Tibet province

IX. Madrean Region

61 Great Basin province
62 Californian province
63 Sonoran province
64 Mexican Highlands province

Paleotropical Kingdom

X. Guineo-Congolian region

65 Upper Guinean forests province
66 Nigeria-Cameroon province
67 Congo province

XI. Usambara-Zululand region

68 Zanzibar-Inhambane province
69 Tongoland-Pondoland province

XII. Sudano-Zambezian region

70 Zambezi province
71 Sahel province
72 Sudan province
73 Somalia-Ethiopia province
74 South Arabia province
75 Socotra province
76 Oman province
77 South Iran province
78 Sindia province

XIII. Karoo-Namib region

79 Namibia province
80 Namaland province
81 Western Cape province
82 Karoo province

XIV. St. Helena and Ascension region

83 St. Helena and Ascension province

XV. Madagascan region

84 Eastern Madagascar province
85 Western Madagascar province
86 Southern and Southwestern Madagascar province
87 Comoro province
88 Mascarenes province
89 Seychelles province

XVI. Indian region

90 Ceylon (Sri Lanka) province
91 Malabar province
92 Deccan province
93 Upper Gangetic Plain province
94 Bengal province

XVII. Indochinese region

95 South Burma province
96 Andamans province
97 South China province
98 Thailand province
99 North Indochina province
100 Annam province
101 South Indochina province

XVIII. Malesian region

102 Malaya province
103 Borneo province
104 Philippines province
105 Sumatra province
106 Java province
107 Celebes province
108 Moluccas and West New Guinea province
109 Papua province
110 Bismarck Archipelago province

XIX. Fijian region

111 New Hebrides province
112 Fiji province

XX. Polynesian region

113 Micronesia province
114 Polynesia province

XXI. Hawaiian region

115 Hawaii province

XXII. Neocaledonian region

116 New Caledonia province

Neotropical Kingdom

XXIII. Caribbean region

117 Central America province
118 West Indies province
119 Galápagos Islands province

XXIV. region of the Guayana Highlands

120 The Guianas province

XXV. Amazon region

121 Amazonia province
122 Llanos province

XXVI. Brazilian region

123 Caatinga province
124 Central Brazilian Uplands province
125 Chaco province
126 Atlantic province
127 Paraná province

XXVII. Andean region

128 Northern Andes province
129 Central Andes province

South African Kingdom

XXVIII. Cape region

130 Cape province

Australian Kingdom

XXIX. Northeast Australian region

131 North Australia province
132 Queensland province
133 Southeast Australia province
134 Tasmania province

XXX. Southwest Australian region

135 Southwest Australia province

XXXI. Central Australian or Eremaean region

136 Eremaea province

Antarctic Kingdom

XXXII. Fernandezian region

137 Juan Fernández province

XXXIII. Chile-Patagonian region

138 Northern Chile province
139 Central Chile province
140 Pampas province
141 Patagonia province
142 Tierra del Fuego province

XXXIV. region of the South Subantarctic Islands

143 Tristan-Gough province
144 Kerguelen province

XXXV. Neozeylandic region

145 Lord Howe province
146 Norfolk province
147 Kermadec province
148 Northern New Zealand province
149 Central New Zealand province
150 Southern New Zealand province
151 Chatham province
152 New Zealand Subantarctic Islands province

Regionalization according to Wolfgang Frey and Rainer Lösch (2004, 2010)

 
Flora regions in Europe
Notes
(with focus on Europe, matching the image on the right)[22][23]
  • The central European region and the central Russian region are sister regions.
  • The border between them is similar to the Fagus sylvatica limit (January, day-time temperature average: above -2 °C).
  • The border between the central Russian region and the boreal region is similar to the Quercus spp. limit (Day-time temperature average: above 10 °C, 4 months per year).
  • The border between the boreal region and the arctic region is similar to the tree line, taiga/arctic tundra limit (July, day-time temperature average: above 10 °C).
  • The border of the Atlantic region is the limit of no frost (average), Gulf Stream influence.
  • The warm islands in the Atlantic ocean are in the Macaronesia region: isolated populations in a more humid environment.
  • The Mediterranean region is similar to the occurrence of wild Olea europea and wild Cistus salviifolius (Olea europea is grown very North in Italy).
  • The border between the submediterranean region and the central European region is similar to the alpine arc (upper Rhone, upper Rhine, lower Danube), a weather barrier.
  • The Pontic region border is similar to the tree line/ steppe limit (less than 450 mm precipitation per year).
  • The Turanian region has a semi-arid climate.

References

  1. ^ a b Drude, O. (1890). Handbuch der Pflanzengeographie. Stuttgart: Engelhorn, [1], [2]. French translation: Manuel de géographie botanique. Paris: P. Klincksieck, 1897. 552 p., [3].
  2. ^ Braun-Blanquet, J. (1932). Plant sociology; the study of plant communities. New York and London, McGraw-Hill, [4].
  3. ^ Linder, Lovett, Mutke, et al. (2005): A numerical re-evaluation of the sub-Saharan phytochoria. Biologiske Skrifter 55: 229-252.
  4. ^ JOLY, C.A., AIDAR, M.P.M., KLINK, C.A., McGRATH, D.G., MOREIRA, A.G., MOUTINHO, P., NEPSTAD, D.C., OLIVEIRA, A.A.; POTT, A.; RODAL, M.J.N. & SAMPAIO, E.V.S.B. 1999. Evolution of the Brazilian phytogeography classification systems: implications for biodiversity conservation. Ci. e Cult. 51: 331-348.
  5. ^ Magno Coutinho, L. (2006) O conceito de bioma. Acta bot. bras. 20(1): 13-23.
  6. ^ Werger, M. J. A. & H. van Gils. 1976. Phytosociological classification problems in chorological border line areas. J. Biogeogr. 3: 49–54, [5].
  7. ^ glossary 2008-04-11 at the Wayback Machine from Bredenkamp, George J.; Granger, J. Ed; Hoffman, M. Timm; Lubke, Roy A.; Mckenzie, Bruce; Rebelo, A. (Tony) & Noel, van Rooyen (February 1998). Low, A. Barrie & Rebelo, A. (Tony) G. (eds.). Vegetation of South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland: A companion to the Vegetation Map of South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland. Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism, Pretoria.
  8. ^ Prance, G. T. (1989). American Tropical forests, in Ecosystems of the World, Vol. 14B. Tropical Rain Forest Ecosystems, (eds H. Lieth and M. J. A. Werger), Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 99–132, [6].
  9. ^ Engler, A. (1879-1882). Versuch einer Entwicklungsgeschichte der Pflanzenwelt. 2 vols., Leipzig.
  10. ^ Cox, C. B., Moore, P.D. & Ladle, R. J. 2016. Biogeography: an ecological and evolutionary approach. 9th edition. John Wiley & Sons: Hoboken, p. 10, [7].
  11. ^ Engler, Adolf (1903). Syllabus der Pflanzenfamilien: eine Übersicht über das gesamte Pflanzensystem mit Berücksichtigung der Medicinal- und Nutzpflanzen nebst einer Übersicht über die Florenreiche und Florengebiete der Erde zum Gebrauch bei Vorlesungen und Studien über specielle und medicinisch-pharmaceutische Botanik (3rd ed.). Berlin: Gebrüder Borntraeger Verlag. p. 233. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  12. ^ de Candolle, Augustin (1820). Essai Élémentaire de Géographie Botanique. In: Dictionnaire des sciences naturelles, Vol. 18. Flevrault, Strasbourg, [8].
  13. ^ Schouw, J. F. (1822). Grundtræk til en almindelig Plantegeographie. Copenhagen, Gyldendalske Boghandels Forlag. German translation: Grundzüge einer allgemeinen Pflanzengeographie, Berlin, 1823, [9].
  14. ^ de Candolle, Alphonse (1855). Géographie botanique raisonnée. Paris: V. Masson, [10].
  15. ^ Diels, L. (1908). Pflanzengeographie. Göschen, Leipzig, [11]; 5th ed. rev. 1958 (F. Mattick), De Gruyter, Berlin.
  16. ^ Rikli, M. (1913). "Geographie der Pflanzen (Die Florenreiche)". In: Handwörterbuch der Naturwissenschaften 4:776–857, [12].
  17. ^ Good, R. (1947). The Geography of Flowering Plants. Longmans, Green and Co, New York, [13]. 2nd ed., 1953, .
  18. ^ Takhtajan, A. 1969. Flowering plants: origin and dispersal. Transl. by C. Jeffrey. Oliver &. Boyd, Edinburgh. 310 pp. [15].
  19. ^ Тахтаджян А. Л. Флористические области Земли / Академия наук СССР. Ботанический институт им. В. Л. Комарова. — Л.: Наука, Ленинградское отделение, 1978. — 247 с. — 4000 экз. DjVu, Google Books.
  20. ^ Takhtajan, A. (1986). Floristic Regions of the World. (translated by T.J. Crovello & A. Cronquist). University of California Press, Berkeley, PDF, DjVu.
  21. ^ Cox, C. B. (2001). The biogeographic regions reconsidered. Journal of Biogeography, 28: 511-523, .
  22. ^ Frey, Wolfgang; Lösch, Rainer (2004). Lehrbuch der Geobotanik. München, Heidelberg: Elsevier, Spektrum. ISBN 3-8274-1193-9.
  23. ^ Frey, Wolfgang; Lösch, Rainer (2010). Geobotanik: Pflanzen und Vegetation in Raum und Zeit (3 ed.). Heidelberg: Spektrum. ISBN 978-3-8274-2335-1.

Bibliography

  • Frodin, D.G. (2001). Guide to Standard Floras of the World. An annotated, geographically arranged systematic bibliography of the principal floras, enumerations, checklists and chorological atlases of different areas. 2nd ed. (1st edn 1984), pp. xxiv, 1100, .Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, [17].

phytochorion, phytochorion, phytogeography, geographic, area, with, relatively, uniform, composition, plant, species, adjacent, phytochoria, usually, have, sharp, boundary, rather, soft, transitional, area, which, many, species, from, both, regions, overlap, r. A phytochorion in phytogeography is a geographic area with a relatively uniform composition of plant species Adjacent phytochoria do not usually have a sharp boundary but rather a soft one a transitional area in which many species from both regions overlap The region of overlap is called a vegetation tension zone In traditional schemes areas in phytogeography are classified hierarchically according to the presence of endemic families genera or species e g in floral or floristic phytogeographic zones and regions 1 or also in kingdoms regions and provinces 2 sometimes including the categories empire and domain However some authors prefer not to rank areas referring to them simply as areas regions in a non hierarchical sense or phytochoria 3 Systems used to classify vegetation can be divided in two major groups those that use physiognomic environmental parameters and characteristics and those that are based on floristic i e shared genera and species relationships 4 Phytochoria are defined by their plant taxonomic composition while other schemes of regionalization e g vegetation type physiognomy plant formations biomes may variably take in account depending on the author the apparent characteristics of a community the dominant life form environment characteristics the fauna associated anthropic factors or political conservationist issues 5 Contents 1 Explanation 2 Early schemes 3 Good 1947 regionalization 4 Takhtajan 1978 1986 regionalization 4 1 Holarctic Kingdom 4 1 1 I Circumboreal region 4 1 2 II Eastern Asiatic region 4 1 3 III North American Atlantic region 4 1 4 IV Rocky Mountain region 4 1 5 V Macaronesian region 4 1 6 VI Mediterranean region 4 1 7 VII Saharo Arabian region 4 1 8 VIII Irano Turanian region 4 1 9 IX Madrean Region 4 2 Paleotropical Kingdom 4 2 1 X Guineo Congolian region 4 2 2 XI Usambara Zululand region 4 2 3 XII Sudano Zambezian region 4 2 4 XIII Karoo Namib region 4 2 5 XIV St Helena and Ascension region 4 2 6 XV Madagascan region 4 2 7 XVI Indian region 4 2 8 XVII Indochinese region 4 2 9 XVIII Malesian region 4 2 10 XIX Fijian region 4 2 11 XX Polynesian region 4 2 12 XXI Hawaiian region 4 2 13 XXII Neocaledonian region 4 3 Neotropical Kingdom 4 3 1 XXIII Caribbean region 4 3 2 XXIV region of the Guayana Highlands 4 3 3 XXV Amazon region 4 3 4 XXVI Brazilian region 4 3 5 XXVII Andean region 4 4 South African Kingdom 4 4 1 XXVIII Cape region 4 5 Australian Kingdom 4 5 1 XXIX Northeast Australian region 4 5 2 XXX Southwest Australian region 4 5 3 XXXI Central Australian or Eremaean region 4 6 Antarctic Kingdom 4 6 1 XXXII Fernandezian region 4 6 2 XXXIII Chile Patagonian region 4 6 3 XXXIV region of the South Subantarctic Islands 4 6 4 XXXV Neozeylandic region 5 Regionalization according to Wolfgang Frey and Rainer Losch 2004 2010 6 References 7 BibliographyExplanation EditSeveral systems of classifying geographic areas where plants grow have been devised Most systems are organized hierarchically with the largest units subdivided into smaller geographic areas which are made up of smaller floristic communities and so on Phytochoria are defined as areas possessing a large number of endemic taxa Floristic kingdoms are characterized by a high degree of family endemism floristic regions by a high degree of generic endemism and floristic provinces by a high degree of species endemism Systems of phytochoria have both significant similarities and differences with zoogeographic provinces which follow the composition of mammal families and with biogeographical provinces or terrestrial ecoregions which take into account both plant and animal species The term phytochorion Werger amp van Gils 1976 6 is especially associated with the classifications according to the methodology of Josias Braun Blanquet which is tied to the presence or absence of particular species 7 mainly in Africa 8 Taxonomic databases tend to be organized in ways which approximate floristic provinces but which are more closely aligned to political boundaries for example according to the World Geographical Scheme for Recording Plant Distributions Early schemes EditIn the late 19th century Adolf Engler 1844 1930 was the first to make a world map with the limits of distribution of floras with four major floral regions realms 9 10 His Syllabus der Pflanzenfamilien from the third edition 1903 onwards also included a sketch of the division of the earth into floral regions 11 Other important early works on floristics includes Augustin de Candolle 1820 12 Schouw 1823 13 Alphonse de Candolle 1855 14 Drude 1890 1 Diels 1908 15 and Rikli 1913 16 Good 1947 regionalization Edit Good 1947 floristic kingdoms Botanist Ronald Good 1947 identified six floristic kingdoms Boreal or Holarctic Neotropical Paleotropical South African Australian and Antarctic the largest natural units he determined for flowering plants Good s six kingdoms are subdivided into smaller units called regions and provinces The Paleotropical kingdom is divided into three subkingdoms which are each subdivided into floristic regions Each of the other five kingdoms are subdivided directly into regions There are a total of 37 floristic regions Almost all regions are further subdivided into floristic provinces 17 Takhtajan 1978 1986 regionalization EditArmen Takhtajan 1978 1986 in a widely used scheme that builds on Good s work identified thirty five floristic regions each of which is subdivided into floristic provinces of which there are 152 in all 18 19 20 21 Holarctic Kingdom Edit I Circumboreal region Edit 1 Arctic province 2 Atlantic Europe province 3 Central Europe province 4 Illyria or Balkan province 5 Pontus Euxinus province 6 Caucasus province 7 Eastern Europe province 8 Northern Europe province 9 Western Siberia province 10 Altai Sayan province 11 Central Siberia province 12 Transbaikalia province 13 Northeastern Siberia province 14 Okhotsk Kamchatka province 15 Canada incl Great Lakes provinceII Eastern Asiatic region Edit 16 Manchuria province 17 Sakhalin Hokkaidō province 18 Japan Korea province 19 Volcano Bonin province 20 Ryukyu or Tokara Okinawa province 21 Taiwan province 22 Northern China province 23 Central China province 24 Southeastern China province 25 Sikang Yuennan province 26 Northern Burma province 27 Eastern Himalaya province 28 Khasi Manipur provinceIII North American Atlantic region Edit 29 Appalachian province forested areas extending east to include the piedmont and west to the start of the prairies 30 Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain province 31 North American Prairies provinceIV Rocky Mountain region Edit 32 Vancouverian province 33 Rocky Mountains provinceV Macaronesian region Edit 34 Azores province 35 Madeira province 36 Canaries province 37 Cape Verde provinceVI Mediterranean region Edit 38 Southern Morocco province 39 Southwestern Mediterranean province 40 South Mediterranean province 41 Iberia province 42 Baleares province 43 Liguria Tyrrhenia province 44 Adriatic province 45 East Mediterranean province 46 Crimea Novorossijsk provinceVII Saharo Arabian region Edit 47 Sahara province 48 Egypt Arabia provinceVIII Irano Turanian region Edit 49 Mesopotamia province 50 Central Anatolia province 51 Armenia Iran province 52 Hyrcania province 53 Turania or Aralo Caspia province 54 Turkestan province 55 Northern Baluchistan province 56 Western Himalaya province 57 Central Tien Shan province 58 Dzungaria Tien Shan province 59 Mongolia province 60 Tibet provinceIX Madrean Region Edit 61 Great Basin province 62 Californian province 63 Sonoran province 64 Mexican Highlands provincePaleotropical Kingdom Edit X Guineo Congolian region Edit 65 Upper Guinean forests province 66 Nigeria Cameroon province 67 Congo provinceXI Usambara Zululand region Edit 68 Zanzibar Inhambane province 69 Tongoland Pondoland provinceXII Sudano Zambezian region Edit 70 Zambezi province 71 Sahel province 72 Sudan province 73 Somalia Ethiopia province 74 South Arabia province 75 Socotra province 76 Oman province 77 South Iran province 78 Sindia provinceXIII Karoo Namib region Edit 79 Namibia province 80 Namaland province 81 Western Cape province 82 Karoo provinceXIV St Helena and Ascension region Edit 83 St Helena and Ascension provinceXV Madagascan region Edit 84 Eastern Madagascar province 85 Western Madagascar province 86 Southern and Southwestern Madagascar province 87 Comoro province 88 Mascarenes province 89 Seychelles provinceXVI Indian region Edit 90 Ceylon Sri Lanka province 91 Malabar province 92 Deccan province 93 Upper Gangetic Plain province 94 Bengal provinceXVII Indochinese region Edit 95 South Burma province 96 Andamans province 97 South China province 98 Thailand province 99 North Indochina province 100 Annam province 101 South Indochina provinceXVIII Malesian region Edit 102 Malaya province 103 Borneo province 104 Philippines province 105 Sumatra province 106 Java province 107 Celebes province 108 Moluccas and West New Guinea province 109 Papua province 110 Bismarck Archipelago provinceXIX Fijian region Edit 111 New Hebrides province 112 Fiji provinceXX Polynesian region Edit 113 Micronesia province 114 Polynesia provinceXXI Hawaiian region Edit 115 Hawaii provinceXXII Neocaledonian region Edit 116 New Caledonia provinceNeotropical Kingdom Edit XXIII Caribbean region Edit 117 Central America province 118 West Indies province 119 Galapagos Islands provinceXXIV region of the Guayana Highlands Edit 120 The Guianas provinceXXV Amazon region Edit 121 Amazonia province 122 Llanos provinceXXVI Brazilian region Edit 123 Caatinga province 124 Central Brazilian Uplands province 125 Chaco province 126 Atlantic province 127 Parana provinceXXVII Andean region Edit 128 Northern Andes province 129 Central Andes provinceSouth African Kingdom Edit XXVIII Cape region Edit 130 Cape provinceAustralian Kingdom Edit XXIX Northeast Australian region Edit 131 North Australia province 132 Queensland province 133 Southeast Australia province 134 Tasmania provinceXXX Southwest Australian region Edit 135 Southwest Australia provinceXXXI Central Australian or Eremaean region Edit 136 Eremaea provinceAntarctic Kingdom Edit XXXII Fernandezian region Edit 137 Juan Fernandez provinceXXXIII Chile Patagonian region Edit 138 Northern Chile province 139 Central Chile province 140 Pampas province 141 Patagonia province 142 Tierra del Fuego provinceXXXIV region of the South Subantarctic Islands Edit 143 Tristan Gough province 144 Kerguelen provinceXXXV Neozeylandic region Edit 145 Lord Howe province 146 Norfolk province 147 Kermadec province 148 Northern New Zealand province 149 Central New Zealand province 150 Southern New Zealand province 151 Chatham province 152 New Zealand Subantarctic Islands provinceRegionalization according to Wolfgang Frey and Rainer Losch 2004 2010 Edit Flora regions in Europe Notes with focus on Europe matching the image on the right 22 23 The central European region and the central Russian region are sister regions The border between them is similar to the Fagus sylvatica limit January day time temperature average above 2 C The border between the central Russian region and the boreal region is similar to the Quercus spp limit Day time temperature average above 10 C 4 months per year The border between the boreal region and the arctic region is similar to the tree line taiga arctic tundra limit July day time temperature average above 10 C The border of the Atlantic region is the limit of no frost average Gulf Stream influence The warm islands in the Atlantic ocean are in the Macaronesia region isolated populations in a more humid environment The Mediterranean region is similar to the occurrence of wild Olea europea and wild Cistus salviifolius Olea europea is grown very North in Italy The border between the submediterranean region and the central European region is similar to the alpine arc upper Rhone upper Rhine lower Danube a weather barrier The Pontic region border is similar to the tree line steppe limit less than 450 mm precipitation per year The Turanian region has a semi arid climate References Edit a b Drude O 1890 Handbuch der Pflanzengeographie Stuttgart Engelhorn 1 2 French translation Manuel de geographie botanique Paris P Klincksieck 1897 552 p 3 Braun Blanquet J 1932 Plant sociology the study of plant communities New York and London McGraw Hill 4 Linder Lovett Mutke et al 2005 A numerical re evaluation of the sub Saharan phytochoria Biologiske Skrifter 55 229 252 JOLY C A AIDAR M P M KLINK C A McGRATH D G MOREIRA A G MOUTINHO P NEPSTAD D C OLIVEIRA A A POTT A RODAL M J N amp SAMPAIO E V S B 1999 Evolution of the Brazilian phytogeography classification systems implications for biodiversity conservation Ci e Cult 51 331 348 Magno Coutinho L 2006 O conceito de bioma Acta bot bras 20 1 13 23 Werger M J A amp H van Gils 1976 Phytosociological classification problems in chorological border line areas J Biogeogr 3 49 54 5 glossary Archived 2008 04 11 at the Wayback Machine from Bredenkamp George J Granger J Ed Hoffman M Timm Lubke Roy A Mckenzie Bruce Rebelo A Tony amp Noel van Rooyen February 1998 Low A Barrie amp Rebelo A Tony G eds Vegetation of South Africa Lesotho and Swaziland A companion to the Vegetation Map of South Africa Lesotho and Swaziland Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism Pretoria Prance G T 1989 American Tropical forests in Ecosystems of the World Vol 14B Tropical Rain Forest Ecosystems eds H Lieth and M J A Werger Elsevier Amsterdam pp 99 132 6 Engler A 1879 1882 Versuch einer Entwicklungsgeschichte der Pflanzenwelt 2 vols Leipzig Cox C B Moore P D amp Ladle R J 2016 Biogeography an ecological and evolutionary approach 9th edition John Wiley amp Sons Hoboken p 10 7 Engler Adolf 1903 Syllabus der Pflanzenfamilien eine Ubersicht uber das gesamte Pflanzensystem mit Berucksichtigung der Medicinal und Nutzpflanzen nebst einer Ubersicht uber die Florenreiche und Florengebiete der Erde zum Gebrauch bei Vorlesungen und Studien uber specielle und medicinisch pharmaceutische Botanik 3rd ed Berlin Gebruder Borntraeger Verlag p 233 Retrieved 31 January 2014 de Candolle Augustin 1820 Essai Elementaire de Geographie Botanique In Dictionnaire des sciences naturelles Vol 18 Flevrault Strasbourg 8 Schouw J F 1822 Grundtraek til en almindelig Plantegeographie Copenhagen Gyldendalske Boghandels Forlag German translation Grundzuge einer allgemeinen Pflanzengeographie Berlin 1823 9 de Candolle Alphonse 1855 Geographie botanique raisonnee Paris V Masson 10 Diels L 1908 Pflanzengeographie Goschen Leipzig 11 5th ed rev 1958 F Mattick De Gruyter Berlin Rikli M 1913 Geographie der Pflanzen Die Florenreiche In Handworterbuch der Naturwissenschaften 4 776 857 12 Good R 1947 The Geography of Flowering Plants Longmans Green and Co New York 13 2nd ed 1953 14 Takhtajan A 1969 Flowering plants origin and dispersal Transl by C Jeffrey Oliver amp Boyd Edinburgh 310 pp 15 Tahtadzhyan A L Floristicheskie oblasti Zemli Akademiya nauk SSSR Botanicheskij institut im V L Komarova L Nauka Leningradskoe otdelenie 1978 247 s 4000 ekz DjVu Google Books Takhtajan A 1986 Floristic Regions of the World translated by T J Crovello amp A Cronquist University of California Press Berkeley PDF DjVu Cox C B 2001 The biogeographic regions reconsidered Journal of Biogeography 28 511 523 16 Frey Wolfgang Losch Rainer 2004 Lehrbuch der Geobotanik Munchen Heidelberg Elsevier Spektrum ISBN 3 8274 1193 9 Frey Wolfgang Losch Rainer 2010 Geobotanik Pflanzen und Vegetation in Raum und Zeit 3 ed Heidelberg Spektrum ISBN 978 3 8274 2335 1 Bibliography EditFrodin D G 2001 Guide to Standard Floras of the World An annotated geographically arranged systematic bibliography of the principal floras enumerations checklists and chorological atlases of different areas 2nd ed 1st edn 1984 pp xxiv 1100 Cambridge University Press Cambridge 17 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phytochorion amp oldid 1144516038, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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