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Flora & Fauna Turkey
Flora & Fauna
The wide variation in topography and climate; the fact
that
Turkey is surrounded by four seas, each with its own
ecological constitution; and the relatively late
development of industry and agriculture has resulted in
an phenomenal wealth of plant and animal life within
Turkey’s borders. This extraordinary degree of
biodiversity was augmented during the Ice Age, when
northern animals strayed south seeking warmer climes, and
many remained in their new homelands.
Turkey is also
situated on the main migratory routes for birds between
Asia, Africa and Europe, thus
increasing the number of species found here.
Anatolia as a
Gene Centre
Turkey has almost as many species of wild flowers as the rest
of Europe combined; of the over 9000 species so far
identified more than one third are native to the country,
many found nowhere else on earth.
Turkey is regarded as
an important gene centre for many cultivated crops, whose
wild ancestors can still be found growing in Anatolia.
The defence mechanisms and disease resistence of the wild
forms tend to be more highly developed than those of the
cultivated plants and can be transmitted through
biotechnology. The wild forms remain a fundamental
reference source when developing new and improved
strains.
Turkey is the home of over thirty species of
wild wheat, along with barley, chickpeas, lentils,
apricots, figs, cherries and many types of nuts. A large
number of ornamental flowers were cultivated from Turkish
wild forms, including most famously the tulip but also
the crocus, snowdrop, and lily.
Anatolia is similarly rich in fauna, with over 80,000
species. It is the original homeland for the fallow deer,
the pheasant and the domestic sheep. Lions, tigers and
leopards once prowled freely across the Anatolian steppe.
Today, the mountains and national parks still abound with
wildlife, such as brown bears, wild boar, lynx, wolves,
water buffalo, the occasional leopard and over 400
species of birds, several of them endangered.
Turkey's
Mediterranean and Aegean coasts provide refuge for the
endangered monk seal and the logger-head turtle. Of the
world's 300 remaining monk seals, 50 live in Turkish
waters.
Floral Regions
Much of the coastal and more temperate areas of
Turkey are
covered in maquis (dwarf forest) or Red Pines, which
require little water to tide them over dry summers. They
are, however extremely susceptible to the forest fires
which destroy around 20,000 hectares of
Turkey's forests
annually. At higher altitudes woods of plack pine, fir
and cedar grow. The mild ,Mediterranean climate enables
the valleys and lowlands to grow a range of tropical
fruit. As tastes in urban centers broaden to include more
'exotic' fruit, the market garden industry has responded
by expanding its range which in recent years has included
homegrown kiwis, bananas, avocado and mushrooms. The
Aegean region in particular is known for its olives,
grapes, cotton and tobacco.
The higher slopes of the verdant Black Sea region are thick
with beech, oak, maple, alder, Scots Pine, and Oriental
Spruce, while the narrow coastal strip and lower slopes
are used to grow tea, hazelnuts, flax, maize, cherries
and plums. All of these plants are suited to a temperate
climate with plenty of rain -- never a problem in the
Black Sea region.
Steppe is the most common landscape in
Turkey today,
stretching all the way from Thrace to the Iran/Iraq
border. Thousands of years of deforestation and erosion
has increased it from 15% to 35% of the total land area
of
Turkey. Steppe is characterised by the diversity of
life which it sustains, especially in spring, when the
rolling landscape is carpeted in a multicoloured
profusion of delicate featured but hardy flowers,
including daisies, crocuses, violets and poppies. This
landscape has been the inspiration of carpet and kilim
weavers for centuries. Much of
Turkey's western and
central steppe is used for the cultivation of cereals,
sunflowers and sugar beet, as well as pasture land for
large herds of cattle and flocks of sheep. The further
east one moves the more sparse and barren the landscape
becomes, with alternating arid, semi-desert lowlands and
towering mountain peaks.
Wetlands are extremely valuable ecosystems which are found in
abundance in
Turkey. Although they do not have the
diversity of the steppe, they make up for this in an
organic productivity as high as tropical rain forests. By
international definition, there are nineteen Grade A
wetlands in
Turkey, five of which (Kusgolu, Goksu Delta,
Sultansazligi, Lake Burdur and Lake Seyfe) are registered
as wetlands of international importance under the Ramsar
Convention. Rushes and reed, buttercups, water mint,
waterlilies and tamarisks are commonly seen plants while
the waters teem with plankton, algae and water weeds. As
a result of this rich food source, the wetlands are
inhabited by large flocks
of birds, who require hugh amounts of food relative to
body weight in order to survive. Species found include
flamingos, wild ducks and geese, teal, herons and tern,
and numerous endangered species such as the Dalmatian
pelican, pygmy cormorant and the slender billed curlew.
The Southeast is similarily a haven for threatened
species. Biricek is one of only two places left on earth
where the bald ibis nests.
Environmental preservation and conservation is in its infancy
in
Turkey, but many individuals and increasingly the
government are aware of the incredible natural assets
which
Turkey posesses, and of the urgency of protecting
them. Many international conventions have been signed and
many projects are under way to protect threatened species
and habitats. The caretta caretta turtle almost lost its
breeding ground at Dalyan to a hotel development, but
public outrage and international attention had the area
declared an Environment Protection Zone. Other areas of
the coast are also being protected and studies of their
habitats undertaken. Education and research programmes
are being put in place by a number of environmental
protection organisations.
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