Floristic province

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A floristic province is a geographic area with a relatively uniform composition of plant species. Adjacent floristic provinces 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.

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[edit] Explanation

Several systems of floristic provinces 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. Systems of floristic provinces 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.

[edit] Floristic kingdoms

Botanist Ronald Good identified six floristic kingdoms (boreal, 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 provinces. The Paleotropical kingdom is divided into three subkingdoms, which are each subdivided into floristic provinces. Each of the other five kingdoms are subdivided directly into provinces. There is a total of 37 floristic provinces. Almost all provinces are further subdivided into floristic regions.

Armen Takhtajan, 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.

[edit] Takhtajan's floristic provinces

[edit] Holarctic Kingdom

[edit] I. Circumboreal Region

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

[edit] II. Eastern Asiatic Region

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

[edit] III. North American Atlantic Region

29 Appalachians
30 Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain
31 North American Prairies

[edit] IV. Rocky Mountain Region

32 Vancouver
33 Rocky Mountains

[edit] V. Macaronesian Region

34 Azores
35 Madeira
36 Canaries
37 Cape Verde

[edit] VI. Mediterranean Region

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

[edit] VII. Saharo-Arabian Region

47 Sahara
48 Egypt-Arabia

[edit] VIII. Irano-Turanian Region

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

[edit] IX. Madrean Region

61 Great Basin
62 California
63 Sonora
64 Mexican Highlands

[edit] Paleotropical Kingdom

[edit] X. Guineo-Congolian Region

65 Upper Guinea
66 Nigeria-Cameroon
67 Congo

[edit] XI. Usambara-Zululand Region

68 Zanzibar-Inhambane
69 Tongoland-Pondoland

[edit] XII. Sudano-Zambezian Region

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

[edit] XIII. Karoo-Namib Region

79 Namibia
80 Namaland
81 Western Cape
82 Karoo

[edit] XIV. St.Helena and Ascension Region

83 St. Helena and Ascension

[edit] XV. Madagascan Region

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

[edit] XVI. Indian Region

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

[edit] XVII. Indochinese Region

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

[edit] XVIII. Malesian Region

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

[edit] XIX. Fijian Region

111 New Hebrides
112 Fiji

[edit] XX. Polynesian Region

113 Micronesia
114 Polynesia

[edit] XXI. Hawaiian Region

115 Hawaii

[edit] XXII. Neocaledonian Region

116 New Caledonia

[edit] Neotropical Kingdom

[edit] XXIII. Caribbean Region

117 Central America
118 West Indies
119 Galápagos Islands

[edit] XXIV. Region of the Guayana Highlands

120 Guayana

[edit] XXV. Amazonian Region

121 Amazonia
122 Llanos

[edit] XXVI. Brazilian Region

123 Caatinga
124 Central Brazilian Uplands
125 Chaco
126 Atlantic Brazil
127 Parana

[edit] XXVII. Andean Region

128 Northern Andes
129 Central Andes

[edit] South African Kingdom

[edit] XXVIII. Cape Region

130 Cape

[edit] Australian Kingdom

[edit] XXIX. Northeast Australian Region

131 North Australia
132 Queensland
133 Southeast Australia
134 Tasmania

[edit] XXX. Southwest Australian Region

135 Southwest Australia

[edit] XXXI. Central Australian or Eremaean Region

136 Eremaea

[edit] Antarctic Kingdom

[edit] XXXII. Fernandezian Region

137 Juan Fernández

[edit] XXXIII. Chile-Patagonian Region

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

[edit] XXXIV. Region of the South Subantarctic Islands

143 Tristan-Gough
144 Kerguelen

[edit] XXXV. Neozeylandic Region

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

[edit] External references

  • Good, Ronald, 1947. The Geography of Flowering Plants. Longmans, Green and Co, New York
  • Takhtajan, Armen, 1986. Floristic Regions of the World. (translated by T.J. Crovello & A. Cronquist). University of California Press, Berkeley.
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