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Flora of the Mediterranean with California, Chile, Australia and South Africa

cover imageThe lands that border the Mediterranean Sea have – for the most part – a similar climate: hot, dry summers and mild, wet winters. Climatologists have identified four other regions in the world with a similar pattern, including most of California and parts of Australia, Chile, and South Africa.
The floras of these regions encompass intense speciation, so that on approximately 2% of the world’s land mass one finds over 12% of the world’s plant species, many of them endemic. Exploring these floras is a new book, Flora of the Mediterranean by Christopher Gardner and Basak Guner Gardner.
This is a rich photo guide; one could just enjoy the many, stunning close-ups in this large format book (12×10″). However, that would mean missing the extensive detail in the text, such as a description of the Mediterranean climate in Australia that begins: “On occasion the botanist is subjected to such an intense bombardment of new species they have trouble assimilating everything in front of them.”
The chapter on California will feel closer to home, as the Pacific Northwest has a modified, or cool Mediterranean climate, colder and wetter in the winter, with less heat in the summer. This allows us to grow successfully many of the plants from these regions in our gardens.
All images in this book are in situ and a bonus is a short but pithy description of techniques for photographing plants in the wild. While it’s not a lending book, I encourage taking some time with this book, or the authors’ earlier Flora of the Silk Road (2014), in the Miller Library.

Published in the January 2020 Leaflet for Scholars, Volume 7, Issue 1