Balkan mixed forests


The Balkan mixed forests are a terrestrial ecoregion of southeastern Europe according to both the WWF and Digital Map of European Ecological Regions by the European Environment Agency. It belongs in the temperate broadleaf and mixed forests biome and the Palearctic realm.

Geography

The Balkan mixed forests cover much of the valleys, plains and mountain slopes of the eastern Balkans, mainly Bulgaria, on different altitude, except higher parts of the Rila-Rhodope and Balkan, Mountains, where they are substituted by the Rodope montane mixed forests. It extends from approximately the Drina valley to the coasts of the Black, Marmara and Aegean Seas and occupy 224,400 km² in Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, North Macedonia, Serbia, Romania, Greece, Kosovo and Turkey. The ecoregion is surrounded by the Euxine-Colchic deciduous forests, Aegean and Western Turkey sclerophyllous and mixed forests, Pindus Mountains mixed forests, Dinaric Mountains mixed forests, Pannonian mixed forests, Carpathian montane conifer forests, Central European mixed forests, as well as the East European forest steppe and Pontic steppe.

Climate

The climate of the ecoregion is mostly of Köppen's humid subtropical to humid warm summer continental type, with wet winters. Some areas of relatively high rainfall have been considered a temperate rainforest relict.

Flora

Several species of deciduous oaks dominate most of the ecoregion's forests, interspersed higher up mountainsides mostly with European beech and such conifers as Scots pine, Bosnian pine, Macedonian pine, silver fir and Norway spruce. The highest peaks support alpine tundra vegetation.
Phytogeographically, the ecoregion is shared between parts of the Central European, Illyrian and Euxinian provinces of the Circumboreal Region within the Holarctic Kingdom.