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PERFECT HITS | +NaN | |
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LONGEST STREAK | +NaN | |
TOTAL | + |
Often overlooked, these relatively arid regions of earth take second or third place to forests
or grasslands when it comes to beauty contests.
Too dry for trees to flourish, we’re left with a mix of shrubs and grasses, spanning
the subtropics to the temperate latitudes.
Having a surprising biodiversity considering their parched appearance, these areas are
known by an equally diverse set of names, from scrub or scrubland, to bush, brush
matorral and chaparral.
A place of heat and drought, yet still abundant life, these are the shrublands of our planet.
Shrublands are a relatively open form of country that regularly experiences drought.
The defining vegetation is shrubs and grasses.
Shrubs, like trees, are woody plants that possess lignin that allows the plant to retain
the growth of previous years and build upon it with new growth the following year, as
opposed to grasses and other plants that die back and must start again from rootstock or
even new seed in the next growing season.
In contrast to trees, however, shrubs are stunted in growth, and typically do not exceed
5 metres in height from a single stem, or 10 metres if multi-stemmed.
But where shrubs lack height, they make up for in hardiness, and in comparison to trees
are much more drought-tolerant, allowing them to thrive in many regions of the world where
trees are absent.
These areas are always the result of a severe dry season, or irregular patterns of rain
that lead to very long droughts, but occur in two very different climate types.
In the case of the subtropics, shrublands are simply transitions between the savannah
and desert, where alternate wet and dry seasons exist, but where the wet season is of insufficient
weight or length to allow tree growth.
Such Koppen climate zones in this case would be in the crossover of Tropical Savannah (Aw),
and Hot Semi Arid (BSh) areas.
But shrublands are best known for being found in the temperate latitudes of the Mediterranean
basin and in other parts of the world that have the Mediterranean climate of a hot, dry
summer and a cool wet winter (Csa).
Despite being temperate, this unique climate, the only one with a dry summer and wet winter,
creates a particular stress on plants, where the dry season occurs at the hottest time
of the year - evapotranspiration from the plants is greatest when the least amount of
water is present in the soil.
No trees are able to survive these conditions, despite the winter rain, and so instead, we
find a mix of shrubs and grasses.
If we consult our Holdridge Lifezones chart, we can find these areas as desert scrub, spanning
the tropics through to more temperate regions, but always where the annual rainfall is relatively
low.
Shrubs can also exist as the principal vegetation in the transition between boreal forest and
tundra in the far polar latitudes.
But as these conditions are so different to the other two mentioned, and are principally
a result of insufficient summer temperatures, we’ll discuss these areas in the relevant
future episode.
With such severe dry seasons, it’s no surprise that fires are common in these regions, and
at some point all of us will have seen on the news brushfires threatening the fringes
of Los Angeles or in parts of the Mediterranean.
Growing up in Adelaide, Australia, which is within this biome, I personally recall seeing
a blackened sky on the horizon as fires would engulf the surrounding brush after a long
dry summer.
So where in the world do we find the shrublands?
Well, as mentioned, they occur in the subtropical transition zones between savannah and desert,
and also in the Mediterranean climate zones of the temperate latitudes.
We’ll first take a look at the subtropical scrub areas, starting with the band that surrounds
the Sierra Madre mountains of Mexico, from Texas down to central Mexico on the eastern
side, and from Chihauhua down to Jalisco in the west.
On the NE tip of Brazil we find an extensive thorn scrub known as Caatinga or “White
Forestâ€, which is brought about due to fast draining soils and irregular rainfall patterns
and droughts, and is the driest part of this large country.
In the heart of South America, running down the eastern side of the Andes in a wide plain
from Bolivia, through Paraguay to Argentina, we have the extensive scrubland known as El
Gran Chaco, probably the largest such contiguous area on Earth.
Onto Africa and subtropical scrub acts as a transition between the Savannah to the South
and the Sahara desert to the north in a narrow band that runs almost exactly east-west.
Southern Ethiopia, Somalia and northern Kenya also have extensive scrub areas, as do parts
of Botswana and Namibia, again acting as transitions between Savannah and desert.
In India – we have two distinct bands of scrub, one in West India which is a transition
between the Thar desert of the west, and the more fertile plains of the centre.
The other runs down the central and eastern part of the Deccan plateau, and is formed
due to rain shadow from the prevailing SW Monsoon.
The last area that features subtropical scrub occurs in northern Australia, again acting
as a transition zone between the northern savannah and semi-arid heart of the island continent.
In the five Mediterranean climate zones of our planet we have the other, temperate, form
of shrublands, resulting from hot and dry summers.
In Southern California, this is known as Chaparral, and still extensively covers the hills from
Santa Barbara, through Los Angeles, and San Diego and down past Tijuana into the northern
Baja peninsula.
In Central Chile we have a narrow strip of scrub between the Pacific Ocean and the Andes
mountains known as Mattoral, named by settlers after the equivalent biome found in Spain.
In the Mediterranean basin itself, we have the largest area of temperate scrub, running
from southern Portugal in the West, into the Mattoral that covers large parts of Spain,
while in north Africa, the northern parts of Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia are dominated
by this biome.
In Southern France, the scrub is known as Maquis and Garrigue, depending on elevation
and vegetation density.
Sardinia, Sicily and the west coast of Italy also have this biome, where it is known as La Macchia
Greece is dominated by scrub, where it is known as Phrygana (ΦÏÏγανα), and this
Mediterranean scrub extends into significant parts of Turkey, as well as Cyprus and finally
Lebanon and Israel at the sea’s eastern end.
Most of the southern cape of Africa has narrow band of temperate scrub where it is known
as Karoo or Fynbos, which is the most biodiverse of all scrubland areas, and possessing thousands
of unique species found nowhere else.
Lastly the south-western and south-central parts of Australia have their own form of
temperate scrub in large areas known as Mallee and Kwongan, where dwarf forms of eucalyptus dominate.
Plant species diversity in the shrublands is high.
If we look first at the subtropical scrub areas, starting in Texas and Mexico, to the
east of the Sierra Madre common species such as Mesquite, Yucca and Prickly Pear cacti
can be found.
In the Caatinga "White Forest" of NE Brazil, drought-hardened species such as Joazeiro,
Bombacae and various cacti species such as Facheiro are common.
In the vast Chaco of Bolivia, Paraguay and Northern Argentina, we find parklike vegetation
of palms mixed with grasses in the wetter parts, while in the drier areas, drought hardened
shrubs like senna, as well as a number of cacti species can be found.
In the Sahel of Africa, the long band of scrub to the south of the Sahara, we find dwarf
acacias being the dominant species, while other shrubs include myrrh, and spiny grasses
such as Panicum.
East of the Deccan plateau in India, thorny scrub dominates, with Acacias, being the most
common family also.
Palms can be found in the wetter parts, while the driest areas include hardy species such
as Euphorbia.
In northern Australia, the band of scrub separating the Savannah and desert interior is dominated
again by Acacias, especially the species Mulga while spinifex and triodia grasses cover the ground.
In terms of species and biodiversity, the temperate shrublands are greater than the
subtropical forms, and remarkably so when considering the challenging drought conditions
experienced each summer.
Because the temperate scrub areas are isolated from each other, each of these five zones
has developed unique species that do not exist in the other zones, although there are some
common relations between the areas within each hemisphere – for instance California
and Mediterranean areas both have oaks, while Acacias can be found in Chile, South Africa
and Australia.
Looking in detail at each of these five areas, and in California we can find a variety of
oaks that are stunted due to the summer drought conditions, such as the Coast Live Oak, as
well as a variety of Manzanitas or Bearberrys, Garrya, Rhus and Ceanothus.
In Chile we find Acacia, Baccharis and Prosopis, the latter occurring also on the other side
of the Andes in the Chaco.
As mentioned previously, the Fynbos biome of the South African Cape has the largest
number of scrubland species anywhere, with prominent families including Aspalathus (from
which Rooibos tea is made), Senecio and Erica heathers.
South-west and south-central Australia are dominated by the mallee - dwarf eucalyptus
which invariably grow as multi-stemmed plants from underground tubers.
Other prominent species include Banksia and Conospermum.
Lastly, in Europe and the Mediterranean basin itself, we find a variety of dwarf oaks such
as the Cork and Kermes Oaks, the Arbutus family that includes the strawberry tree (no they
aren’t actual strawberries), Cytisus and Pistacia.
And finally, found throughout the Mediterranean is the most famous of all scrubland plants
– the olive tree (Olea Europaea).
These “trees†are technically shrubs, since they rarely grow beyond 10 metres in
height, and are famed for their fruit which produces oil consumed by humans for millennia.
The plants are highly drought resistant, and can live for thousands of years – that you
could see some of the trees that Caesar or Aristotle may have taken shade under is something
to wonder at.
Since shrubs have adapted to become highly drought and fire tolerant, their foliage is
not very nutritious and often contains toxic chemicals, so animal numbers in these parts
are typically low compared to Savannah or forest.
So while we might not hold the shrublands as dearly as their big brother forests, these
biomes nonetheless get plenty of airtime.
If you’ve ever watched any American television or movies, chances are you’ll have seen
scrubland in outdoor shots, as so many movies of the past were filmed out of Hollywood,
and the countryside surrounding Los Angeles is the type of Mediterranean scrub referred
to as chaparral.
This, incidentally gives us the word for “chapsâ€, because the chaparral, like most shrublands
can often be a giant thicket of thorny shrubs, and leather protection to the legs was necessary
to prevent being scraped to death while on foot or horseback.
And the shrubs of these regions, due to their manageable size compared to trees, and their
hardiness, have become favourites of the average domestic garden not just in regions native
to this biome, but in cooler and wetter climates such as those of the United Kingdom, a long
way from the parched and baked lands of the scrub.
And that is the shrublands.
I hope you enjoyed my presentation of this somewhat underrated biome.
If you did, please like and share this video, and let me know your thoughts in the comments.
Don’t forget to subscribe, so you don’t miss future episodes.
Thanks again for watching, and for the next episode, bring plenty of water, as we’ll
be venturing into driest of all the biomes – the deserts.
Metric | Count | EXP & Bonus |
---|---|---|
PERFECT HITS | 20 | 300 |
HITS | 20 | 300 |
STREAK | 20 | 300 |
TOTAL | 800 |
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