Madrean Pine-oak Woodlands
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The Madrean Region (named after the Sierra Madre Occidental) is a floristic region within the Holarctic Kingdom in North America, as delineated by Armen Takhtajan and Robert F. Thorne. It occupies arid or semiarid areas in the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico and is bordered by the Rocky Mountain Region and North American Atlantic Region of the Holarctic Kingdom in the north and in the east, Caribbean bioregion, Caribbean Region of the Neotropical Kingdom in the south. The Madrean Region is characterized by a very distinct flora with at least three endemism, endemic family (biology), families (Fouquieriaceae, Simmondsiaceae, and Setchellanthaceae). Crossosomataceae, Garryaceae, Lennoaceae, Limnanthaceae and Stegnospermataceae have their principal development here; for Onagraceae, Polemoniaceae and Hydrophyllaceae it is the major center of diversity. More than 250 genus, genera and probably more than half of the species of the region are Endemism, endemic to it according to Takhtajan.


Floristic provinces

The region is subdivided into four floristic provinces: *Great Basin Floristic Province, Great Basin Province *California Floristic Province, Californian Province *Sonoran Province *Mexican Plateau, Mexican Highlands Province


Great Basin Province

The Great Basin Floristic Province includes most of the Great Basin, as well as the Colorado Plateau, the Snake River Plain, and Arizona north of the Mogollon Rim. It shares much of its flora with the neighboring provinces and has only a few endemic genus, genera. Species endemism is also moderate (about 25%), but is much more considerable in such genera as ''Astragalus'', ''Eriogonum'', ''Penstemon'', ''Cymopterus'', ''Lomatium'', ''Cryptantha'', ''Chrysothamnus'', ''Erigeron'', ''Phacelia'', ''Castilleja'', and ''Gilia''. The vegetation in the central Great Basin shrub steppe part of the province is dominated by ''Artemisia (genus), Artemisia'' species and Chenopodiaceae genera. The Great Basin montane forests include ancient Pinus longaeva, Great Basin bristlecone pine (''Pinus longaeva'') trees.


Californian Province

The Californian Province occupies Central and Southern California from the seashore to the foothills of the Cascade Range, the Sierra Nevada (U.S.), Sierra Nevada range, and northern parts of Baja California in Mexico. It possesses the most diverse flora within the floristic region. About half of the species are endemic. More than 50 genera (e.g. ''Adenostoma'', ''Bergerocactus'', ''Carpenteria'', ''Cneoridium'', ''Dendromecon'', ''Fremontodendron'', ''Jepsonia'', ''Lyonothamnus'', ''Neostapfia'', ''Odontostomum'', ''Ornithostaphylos'', ''Pickeringia'', ''Romneya'') are endemic or near-endemic as well. ''Arctostaphylos'', Brodiaeinae, ''Calochortus'', ''Caulanthus'', ''Streptanthus'', ''Ceanothus'', ''Cryptantha'', ''Downingia'', ''Dudleya'', Eritrichieae, Eriogonoideae, Gileae, Hydrophyllaceae, Limnanthaceae, ''Lotus (genus), Lotus'', Madiinae, ''Mimulus'', Onagreae, Epilobieae, Orcuttieae, Eschscholzioideae, Platystemonoideae, ''Astragalus'' and ''Cupressus'' have a principal center of diversity within the province. The flora of the Californian Province is partially shared with the spatially distant Chile-Patagonian Region of the Antarctic Kingdom and to a lesser extent Mediterranean Region of the Holarctic Kingdom. The vegetation of the Californian Province is varied. Wetter northern parts of the Californian Province (Northern California and Oregon) as defined by Peter Raven and D.I. Axelrod, as well as by Conservation International, fall under the Rocky Mountain Region in Takhtajan and Thorne's system and don't make parts of the Madrean Region.


Sonoran Province

The Sonoran Province comprises arid areas in the southwestern U.S. and northwestern Mexico from California and Baja California to Texas and Tamaulipas, including the Mojave Desert, Mojave (characterized by ''Yucca brevifolia'', Joshua Tree), Sonora Desert, Sonora and Chihuahua Desert, Chihuahua Deserts. The vegetation is dominated by ''Yucca'', Cactaceae species (''Opuntia'' spp. and other), as well as by ''Larrea tridentata'' (Creosote bush).


Mexican Highlands Province

The Mexican Highlands Province comprises areas in the Mexican Plateau region, including Madrean pine-oak woodlands.


See also

*Madrean Sky Islands


Bibliography

*Thorne, Robert F
Phytogeography of North America North of Mexico
''Flora of North America'', Vol. 1, Ch. 6. {{Flora of the United States by political division Madrean Region, Floristic regions North American desert flora, * Natural history of Mexico Plant communities of the Western United States Plant communities of California Mexican Plateau Madrean Sky Islands mountain ranges, * Natural history of the Colorado Desert Natural history of the Mojave Desert Holarctic