Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands
0 sources
Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands
Summary
Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands is an ecoregion[1]. It draws 8 Wikipedia views per month (ecoregion category, ranking #45 of 213).[2]
Key Facts
- Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands is in the country of Morocco[3].
- Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands is in the country of Spain[4].
- Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands's image is recorded as Argan Trees.jpg[5].
- Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands's instance of is recorded as ecoregion[6].
- Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands's instance of is recorded as WWF ecoregion[7].
- Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands's locator map image is recorded as Ecoregion PA1212.png[8].
- Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands's part of is recorded as Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub[9].
- Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands's part of is recorded as Palearctic realm[10].
- Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands's Commons category is recorded as Mediterranean acacia-argania dry woodlands and succulent thickets[11].
- Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03h3lxd[12].
- Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands's WWF ecoregion code is recorded as PA1212[13].
- Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands's One Earth ecoregion ID is recorded as mediterranean-acacia-argania-dry-woodlands-and-succulent-thickets[14].
Body
Geography
Country listings include Morocco[3], a constitutional monarchy[15], in Morocco[16], founded in 1956[17] and Spain[4], a sovereign state[18], in Spain[19], founded in 1715[20]. Part of include Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub[9], a vegetational formation[21] and Palearctic realm[10], a biogeographic realm[22].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include ecoregion[6] and WWF ecoregion[7].
Why It Matters
Mediterranean Acacia-Argania dry woodlands draws 8 Wikipedia views per month (ecoregion category, ranking #45 of 213).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23]