Eastern Mediterranean conifer-sclerophyllous-broadleaf forests


The Eastern Mediterranean conifer-sclerophyllous-broadleaf forests, also known as the Eastern Mediterranean conifer-broadleaf forests, is an ecoregion in the eastern Mediterranean Basin. It covers portions of Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Palestine, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia.
The ecoregion has a Mediterranean climate, and is part of the Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub biome.

Geography

The ecoregion covers an area of. In southern Turkey, it occupies the coastal lowlands between the mountains and the Mediterranean, extending from Antalya to Iskenderun and including the Çukurova plain in between. It then extends eastwards through southern Turkey to where the borders of Iraq, Syria, and Turkey meet, and southwards along the eastern Mediterranean through the Levant – western Syria, Lebanon, northern Israel, and the Jordanian Highlands. The Druze Mountains in central Syria are an outlier. Isolated mountaintop pockets are found in the Midian Mountains and Hijaz Mountains of northwestern Saudi Arabia.
The ecoregion is bounded by forest ecoregions to the north in Anatolia, and deserts to the east and south. The ecoregion covers coastal plains, low mountains, and interior plateaus. The higher elevations in the Taurus Mountains to the north, and the Syrian Coastal Mountains, Lebanon Mountains, and Anti-Lebanon Mountains which run parallel to the Eastern Mediterranean coast, are in the Southern Anatolian montane conifer and deciduous forests ecoregion.
Several large cities are in the ecoregion, including Adana, Gaziantep, Antalya, and Mersin in Turkey, Aleppo, Homs, Hama, and Latakia in Syria, Beirut and Tripoli in Lebanon, Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, and Haifa in Israel, Gaza, Hebron, and Nablus in Palestine, and Amman in Jordan.

Climate

The ecoregion has a Mediterranean climate, with a mild, rainy winter and hot dry summer. Rainfall varies across the ecoregion. It is generally higher on coastal-facing slopes, ranging from 1,000-1,250 mm annually near Antalya to 650-850 mm in Mersin, Adana, Iskendurun, and coastal Syria and Lebanon. Rainfall is lowest in the eastern and southernmost parts of the ecoregion, with less than 450 mm annually in eastern Anatolia, the interior of Syria, southern Israel and Palestine, and the Jordanian Highlands.

Flora

Major plant communities in the ecoregion include broadleaf sclerophyllous shrublands, pine forests and Aleppo pine , and dry oak woodlands and steppes.
Turkish pine is more common in the Turkish coastal region, and Aleppo pine in the Levant. Neither pine is found naturally in the eastern Mesopotamian part of the ecoregion.
Maquis is found on coastal slopes in southern Anatolia and along the Levantine coast. Maquis is an open-canopied evergreen woodland, with an understory of shrubs, herbs, grasses, and geophytes. The predominant trees are olive, carob, Palestine oak, pistacio, lentisk, and
Arbutus andrachne''. Much of the maquis has been degraded by frequent fires and over-grazing.
The eastern and southernmost portions of the ecoregion are mostly low shrubland and grassland with a semi-desert character.

Fauna

The golden jackal has become the top predator in most of the ecoregion. The Caracal can be found in the shrublands and mountains, and wild boar in woodlands and forests. The eastern portion of the ecoregion has scattered populations of spotted hyaena and Persian gazelle.
The large predators lion, Syrian brown bear, wolf, and cheetah have been mostly or completely extirpated from over-hunting and habitat loss.

Protected areas

A 2017 assessment found that 1,147 km², or less than 1%, of the ecoregion is in protected areas. Another 1% of the ecoregion had relatively intact habitat but is outside protected areas.
Some protected areas include: