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PLANT LIFE
The insularity of Sardinia has
determined the evolution of a very specific and
occasionally original plant life, i.e. endemisms, thus
demonstrating the particularity and uniqueness of
their environments. For this reason, further study and
protection of the island’s fauna is fundamental.
Endemisms or native plant species are,
therefore, characterised by a circumscribed habitat
and low probability of diffusion beyond this. They can
be living relics of ancient, now extinct flowers, (palaeoendemisms)
or of more recent genesis (neoendemisms)
resulting from climatic, habitational
or genetic changes. Cont’d
a)
Plants
which are known only in Sardinia;
b)
Plants which are common in Sardinia and
Corsica;
c)
Plants
which can be found in Sardinia, in Corsica and in the
Balearic Islands;
d)
Plants
which can be found in Sardinia, in Sicily and in other
places of the Mediterranean Sea.
The vegetation of the target area is
composed of the typical species of the Mediterranean
habitat, where the climate is warm and humid with two
rainy seasons and the absence of frost in winter.
Plant life revives from the end of autumn up to the
late springtime. In the summertime, when the plants
must go through periods of drought, they slow down
their activities or even rest.
We can distinguish several “climax”
(final stage of the evolution of the plants in a
certain habitat):
1)
Climax
of the coastal shrubs (“macchia”) that prefer heat and
aridness (from the sealevel up to an altitude of 400
metres, on the sunny side, towards south-south-east):
the most common species is the juniper tree (Juniperus
phoenicea L.), whose coastal variety is predominant.
It grows from the foot of the cliffs up to 400/500
metres, where the Quercus ilex and the Juniperus
oxycedrus L. begin to prevail.
2)
Climax
of the sclerophyllus evergreens that prefer heat and
aridness (from 400 to 500 metres): its typical species
are: the Pistacia lentiscus L., the Olea europea L.,
the variety Miller-Brot, the Calicotome villosa Pouret
and the Phillyrea angustifolia L.; we can find the
following combinations: oleo-lentiscetum, oleo-euphorbietum
dendroidis.
The forest.
In the north, the spread of the forest
plants called “Mediterranean sclerophyllus evergreens”
is limited by the low winter temperatures. The
dominant species of trees in the Mediterranean regions
are evergreen oaks and the Pinus sp (absent in the
target area), evergreen trees like junipers (Juniperus
sp), heathers (Erica sp) and the cist (Cistus sp).
During the last centuries, man’s
activities, like deforesting and the creation of
pasture etc., have decisively influenced the
vegetation of the area of Cala Gonone: the Quercus
ilex (holm oak) has been substituted by a pseudo
climax of junipers (Juniperus phoenicea). Today, man
doesn’t influence the natural environment any more; a
fact that stabilizes the actual situation of the
vegetation that is composed of junipers (70-75%) and
some Euphorbia dendroides, Pistacia therebintus, Olea
europaea, Phyllirrea latifolia etc. in-between. On the eastern slope of the area, in
the deepest little valleys, the forest has got a
typical physiognomy: in dry and arid zones the arbutus
(Arbutus unedo L.) and even rarer types of heathers
(Erica arborea L.) have substituted the holm oak (Quercus
ilex L.) and form a high vegetation of shrubs. If
there are no further negative factors that could
worsen the quality of the soil, it will be possible to
make the authentic forest revive with the help of some
sporadic pollen of the holm oak. One can find not only
the jumble of sclerophyllus evergreens but also some
types of deciduous trees like the ash-tree (Fraxinus
ornus L.).
The holm oak forest is less common in
the coastal areas – except for some sporadic spots;
single, very old specimen can be found on the “gariga”
of the steep coast where the rock face is nearly
vertical. Single groups of holm oaks (Quercus ilex)
and junipers of remarkable dimensions stand where
karstic hollows guarantee their water-supply. Often
they don’t exceed the height of bushes and have got
thick trunks: this is a sign of their extreme
physiological situation due to the lack of water and
good soil.
The shrubs (“macchia”) .
The natural shrubs and low trees that
don’t exceed 4 metres in height (F.A.O. 1982) are
called “macchia”. It is an area thickly covered with
low sclerophyllus evergreens that reach a height of 1
or 2 metres; far apart from another there are sporadic
holm oaks, whereas other species like the Juniperus
phoenicea L., the Phillyrea latifolia, the Arbutus
unedo – extremely rare because of the alkaline quality
of the soil – are the plants which usually cover the
limestone rocks. In the interior of the fossil canyon
of Fuili a vegetation has come into being whose
dominant species is the Nerium oleander and – of
secondary importance – the Pistacia lentiscus with
enormous and very old specimen.
The
gariga.
The gariga is the result of man’s
intense activities: tree-felling, fire and the
following intense use of the soil as pasture land. The
impoverishment of the macchia, the absence of the
arbutus (Arbutus unedo L.) and the sporadic presence
of phillyrea (Phillyrea s.l.) and lentisk
(Pistacia lentiscus L.) have created a partly
open vegetation of herbs and shrubs which can be
defined irregular because of the protuding rocks. The
elimination of the sclerophyllus plants has favoured
the development of a rich, heliophile (sun-seeking)
and non-seasonal vegetation of herbs which makes the
reafforestion more difficult. Many thanks to the agency
of natural and cultural tourism „Zente
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