The
Mediterranean Basin comprises the lands around and surrounded by the
Mediterranean Sea. In
biogeography, the
Mediterranean Basin refers to the lands around the Mediterranean Sea that have a
Mediterranean climate, with mild, rainy winters and hot, dry summers, which supports characteristic
Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub vegetation. As a
rule of thumb, the Mediterranean Basin is the
Old World region where
olive trees grow.

The Mediterranean Basin as the region where olive trees grow

Political Map of the Mediterranean Basin
Geography
The Mediterranean basin covers portions of three continents,
Europe,
Asia, and
Africa.
Europe lies to the north, and three large
Southern European peninsulas, the
Iberian Peninsula,
Italian Peninsula, and the
Balkan Peninsula, extend into the Mediterranean-climate zone. A system of folded mountains, including the
Pyrenees dividing
Spain from
France, the
Alps dividing
Italy from
Central Europe, the
Dinaric Alps along the eastern
Adriatic, and the
Balkan and
Rhodope mountains of the Balkan Peninsula divide the Mediterranean from the temperate climate regions of
Western and
Central Europe.
The Mediterranean Basin extends into
Western Asia, covering the western and southern portions of the peninsula of
Anatolia, excluding the temperate-climate mountains of central Anatolia. It includes the Mediterranean climate
Levant at the eastern end of the Mediterranean, bounded on the east and south by the
Syrian and
Negev deserts.
The northern portion of the
Maghreb region of northwestern Africa has a Mediterranean climate, separated from the
Sahara Desert, which extends across
North Africa, by the
Atlas Mountains. In the eastern Mediterranean the Sahara extends to the southern shore of the Mediterranean, with the exception of the northern fringe of the peninsula of
Cyrenaica in
Libya, which has a dry Mediterranean climate.
Geology and paleoclimatology
The Mediterranean Basin was shaped by the ancient collision of the northward-moving African-Arabian continent with the stable Eurasian continent. As Africa-Arabia moved north, it closed the former
Tethys Sea, which formerly separated Eurasia from the ancient supercontinent of
Gondwana, of which Africa was part. At the same time, about 170 mya in the
Jurassic, a small Neotethys ocean basin formed shortly before the Tethys Sea was closed at the eastern end. The collision pushed up a vast system of mountains, extending from the
Pyrenees in Spain to the
Zagros Mountains in
Iran. This episode of mountain building, known as the
Alpine orogeny, occurred mostly during the
Oligocene (34 to 23 million years ago (
mya)) and
Miocene (23 to 5.3 mya) epochs. The Neotethys became larger during these collisions and associated folding and subduction. About 6 mya during the late Miocene, the Mediterranean was closed at its western end by drifting Arabia, which caused the entire sea to evaporate. The episodes of sea drawdown and reflooding are best known in the
Messinian Salinity Crisis, when the Atlantic reflooded the basin at least 69 times.
The end of the Miocene also marked a change in the Mediterranean Basin's climate. Fossil evidence shows that the Mediterranean Basin had a relatively humid subtropical climate with summer rainfall during the Miocene, which supported
laurel forests. The shift to a Mediterranean climate occurred within the last 3.2 - 2.8 million years, during the
Pliocene epoch, as summer rainfall decreased. The subtropical laurel forests retreated, although they persisted on the islands of
Macaronesia off the Atlantic coast of Iberia and North Africa, and the present Mediterranean vegetation evolved, dominated by coniferous trees and
sclerophyllous trees and shrubs, with small, hard, waxy leaves that prevent moisture loss in the dry summers. Much of these forests and shrublands have been altered beyond recognition by thousands of years of human habitation. There are now very few relatively intact natural areas in what was once a heavily wooded region.
Flora and fauna
Phytogeographycally, the Mediterranean basin together with the nearby Atlantic coast, the
Black Sea coast of northeasten
Anatolia, the southern coast of
Crimea between
Sevastopol and
Feodosia and the Black Sea coast between
Anapa and
Tuapse in
Russia forms the
Mediterranean Floristic Region, which belongs to the Tethyan Subkingdom of the
Boreal Kingdom and is enclosed between the
Circumboreal,
Irano-Turanian,
Saharo-Arabian and
Macaronesian floristic regions. The Mediterranean Region was first proposed by German botanist
August Grisebach in the late 19th century.
Aphyllanthaceae, sometimes segregated from
Asparagaceae, is the only plant family
endemic to the region. Among the endemic plant genera are:
The genera
Aubrieta,
Sesamoides,
Cynara,
Dracunculus,
Arisarum and
Biarum are nearly endemic. Among the endemic species prominent in the Mediterranean vegetation are the
Aleppo Pine,
Stone Pine,
Mediterranean Cypress,
Bay Laurel,
Oriental Sweetgum,
Holm Oak,
Kermes Oak,
Strawberry Tree,
Greek Strawberry Tree,
Mastic,
Terebinth,
Common Myrtle,
Oleander,
Acanthus mollis,
Vitex agnus-castus. Moreover, many plant
taxa are shared with one of the four neighboring floristic regions only. According to different vesions of
Armen Takhtajan's delineation, the Mediterranean Region is further subdivided into seven to nine
floristic provinces: Southwestern Mediterranean (or Southern Moroccan and Southwestern Mediterranean), Ibero-Balearian (or Iberian and Balearian), Liguro-Tyrrhenian, Adriatic, East Mediterranean, South Mediterranean and Crimeo-Novorossiysk.
The Mediterranean Basin is the largest of the world's five
Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub regions. It is home to a number of plant communities, which vary with rainfall, elevation, latitude, and soils.
- Scrublands occur in the driest areas, especially areas near the seacoast where wind and salt spray are frequent. Low, soft-leaved scrublands around the Mediterranean are known as garrigue in France, phrygana in Greece, tomillares in Spain, and batha in Israel.
- Shrublands are dense thickets of evergreen sclerophyll shrubs and small trees, and are the commonest plant community around the Mediterranean. Mediterranean shrublands are known as matorral in Spain, macchia in Italy, and maquis in France, Malta and elsewhere around the Mediterranean. In some places shrublands are the mature vegetation type, and in other places the result of degradation of former forest or woodland by logging or overgrazing, or disturbance by major fires.
- Woodlands are usually dominated by oak and pine, mixed with other sclerophyll and coniferous trees.
- Forests are distinct from woodlands in having a closed canopy, and occur in the areas of highest rainfall and in riparian zones along rivers and streams where they receive summer water. Mediterranean forests are generally composed of evergreen trees, predominantly oak and pine. At higher elevations Mediterranean forests transition to mixed broadleaf and tall conifer forests similar to temperate zone forests.
The Mediterranean Basin is home to considerable
biodiversity, including 22,500
endemic vascular plant species.
Conservation International designates the region as a
biodiversity hotspot, because of its rich biodiversity and its threatened status. The Mediterranean Basin has an area of 2,085,292 km², of which only 98,009 km² remains undisturbed.
Endangered
mammals of the Mediterranean Basin include the
Mediterranean Monk Seal, the
Barbary Macaque, and the
Iberian Lynx.
History
Neanderthals inhabited western Asia and the non-glaciated portions of Europe starting about 230,000 years ago. Modern humans moved into western Asia from Africa less than 100,000 years ago. Modern humans, known as
Cro-Magnons, moved into Europe approximately 50-40,000 years ago.
The most recent glacial period, the
Wisconsin glaciation, reached its
maximum extent approximately 21,000 years ago, and ended approximately 12,000 years ago. A warm period, known as the
Holocene climatic optimum, followed the ice age.
Food crops, including
wheat,
chickpeas, and
olives, along with
sheep and
goats, were
domesticated in the eastern Mediterranean in the
9th millennium BCE, which allowed for the establishment of agricultural settlements. Near Eastern crops spread to southeastern Europe in the
7th millennium BCE.
Poppy and
oats were domesticated in Europe from the 6th to the 3rd millennium BCE. Agricultural settlements spread around the Mediterranean Basin.
Megaliths were constructed in Europe from 4500 - 1500 BCE.
A strengthening of the summer
monsoon 9000-7000 years ago increased rainfall across the
Sahara, which became a
grassland, with lakes, rivers, and wetlands. After a period of climatic instability, the Sahara settled into a desert state by the
4th millennium BCE.
Agriculture
Wheat is the dominant grain grown around the Mediterranean Basin.
Pulses and
vegetables are also grown. The characteristic tree crop is the
olive.
Figs are another important fruit tree, and
citrus, especially
lemons, are grown where irrigation is present.
Grapes are an important
vine crop, grown for fruit and to make
wine.
Rice and summer vegetables are grown in irrigated areas.