Towards the end of May, at the onset of summer, the majority of plants in the Soller Botanic Garden begin a period of adaptation to lack of rain, and this gives the Garden a new and distinctive look. This is a natural process for Mediterranean vegetation.
Mediterranean vegetation evolved from tropical and temperate elements and is believes to have originated around 2 million years ago (during the Pleistocene) at the same time that the Mediterranean climate was formed in Europe. Since then, drought and summer heat have been the characteristic of Mediterranean climate. Indeed, in addition to the lands in and around the Mediterranean basin, there are other places in the world which share a Mediterranean climate. Such are California, central Chile, the Cape region of South Africa, and Southern Australia.
During the summer, animals and plants try to avoid losing water as much as they can and to survive using as little energy as possible.
Native Mediterranean plants have adapted perfectly to such hardships. In the Botanical Garden, you can now view this singularity with its typical features.
How do plants cope with this heat in combination with the lack of water?
By following the itineraries in this pamphlet you will begin to understand how our own native plants have adapted to the summer season.
The plan and itineraries are just a guideline. Please refer to the plant labels which, give both the scientific and local names of individual plants in each area, as shown in the Soller Botanic map.
Introduction
Towards the end of spring the dry season sets in. Plants, like animals, have adapted to the two distinctive factors of the Mediterranean climate throughout the summer; heat and drought.
Under these conditions, plants adopt two strategies:
M2: Spiny cushions
These plants have adopted a cushion like, semi-spherical shape, which allows them to maintain a lower temperature and a significantly cooler micro-climate within the cushion, where they suffer less than outer parts exposed to the sun. Another characteristic of these plants is their foliar reduction, hence decreasing transpiration. The presence of spines is common and of great defensive value against herbivores. There are two types of spines. One is formed by the rachis or axis of the leaves once the folioles have fallen, as is the case in the Astragalus balearicus. The other uses the stalks, once the leaves have fallen, as in Launaea cervicornis and Femeniasia balearica. If you look carefully you will see that the "spines" of these cushion like plants, are not really spines, as in the roses, but rather leaves or stalks that have gone through a process of transformation.
M2: The bulbous plants (geophytes)
At the Botanic Garden you will find that a plastic ring surrounds bulbous plants. Lack of water at the onset of the dry season causes green leaves to dry out completely. The plants only survive underground as a bulb, rhizome, or corm, where all necessary nutrients are accumulated. Shortly after the first rain in the following autumn or spring, according to the species, the leaves and flowers will re-emerge again.
M3: Erica multiflora
Heather leaves are very small and almost cylindrical. This diminished surface of the leaves, allows the plant to perform photosynthesis whilst minimizing loss of water through the leaf’s surface.
M4: Quercus ilex
The evergreen oak is, perhaps, the most typical tree of the Mediterranean. It controls transpiration through its leaves. The leaf’s upper part is leathery so it does not shrivel if it lacks water, and the underside is covered with hairs, thus avoiding excessive transpiration. This system helps sustain a more humid microclimate around the transpiring cells or stomates.
M5: Cistus albidus
The pink flowered White Rock-rose is highly inflammable, but the fire hazard becomes a benefit for this bush. Fires quickly activate the germination of its seeds. Its roots grow rapidly in spring when water is available, and they spread across the surface of the ground to make the most of any rainwater before it evaporates. In summer, its leaves, which are covered with a dense white hair to protect its transpiration cells from losing water, wrinkle and loose their turgidity until the plant receives water again. These plants with marcarescent leaves, which are soft and reversibly decaying during the dry season, are called malacophyles.
The balearic St John’s Wort has green leaves throughout the year. It flowers in the more favourable seasons, in spring and autumn. It has glands on its leaves, which can be seen against the light. These glands contain an oily substance, which helps to reduce the transpiration during summer by forming an impermeable layer of ethereal oils, which in turn help maintain the pressure of the water vapour and thus avoiding evaporation.
M5: Santolina chamaecyparissus
The chamomiles, each variety or species of which has a different shade of silvery grey, are typical Mediterranean plants. Their characteristic smell indicates the presence of volatile compounds, which help to control the transpiration, and which in turn maintain a more or less constant water vapour pressure.
M7: Kleinia neriifolia
This plant is endemic from the Canary Islands and it has affinity with the African vegetation. Its characteristics make it dryness conditions resistant: it is a succulent plant and during summer their leaves fall in order to avoid an excessive lost of water. During this season you may find this plant with the bare, with green branches, taking the two meters tall's shrub.
M8 and M9: flora form other Mediterranean islands
The plants from these islnads have adapted themselves to dry and hot summers, as well as Balearic ones. You can find spiny pin cushions like Astragalus tragacantha, circles marking the bulbous plants' location, malacophyllous plants like Phlomis fruticosa and the endemic chamomiles from Corsica and Sardinia (Santolina corsica).
M12 and M13: fruits and vegetables
During the summer, these two beds are his better growing time. In the orchard we can find some traditional varieties of vegetables from Balearic Islands. There is a variety of fruit trees as well; the first on ripening are the apricots and pears, later on, the plums and, at the ens of summer, apples and grapes.
M11: Capparis spinosa
The caper plant is held or spread out in the walls and cliffs. During the whole summer you can see its big flowers, with white petals and purplish staments. You can find caper plant both in the wild as a cultivar. Its buds and the unripe fruits are eatable pickled in vinegar. The buds and the fruit have laxative and appetite-stimulant properties.
In conclusion, one way or another, the plants of the Mediterranean get through the summer with low metabolic activity, in expectation of the cool rains of autumn; for them these represent a new spring.
Visit the Soller Botanical Garden in autumn, locally known as the ‘Winter Spring’ or ‘Second Spring’, when plants awake from their long summer slumber. Then will you see our plants covered once more with young leaves and the first flowers.