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Purple Spurge
Euphorbia peplis

3.2 Vulnerable

name of participantsBased on: "The Red Book of Israeli Plants - Threatened Plants in Israel" by Prof. Avi Shmida, Dr. Gadi Pollack and Dr. Ori Fragman-Sapir
Update Time: Jan. 1, 2011, 7:39 a.m.

Euphorbia peplis grows in all the Mediterranean
coastal regions
 in
Israel
 the
Acre Valley, Carmel Coast, Sharon and Philistian Plain. The rare species survey conducted in 1994-1995 in the coastal regions of Acre, the Carmel and the Sharon found 6-8 E. peplis sites in each
region. Urban s
ites, which were recorded in
1924-1950 (Bat Galim, Netanya) and in the Kishon Bay (port and industrial
construction), are extinct. In the Philistian Plain, seven sites were known and
four of them have since become extinct, two of them from the Tel Aviv beach. It
is likely that since the survey of the mid-1990s, additional populations have become extinct and the number of sites has decreased even more. Recently (2005) the plant was observed on the Gaza coast near Tel al-Katifa (Oz Golan)

Euphorbia peplis grows on the Mediterranean coast, in the playa zone at a
distance of 5-100 meters from the shoreline
, both on quartz and calcareous sand. E. peplis belongs
to the
Ipomoea imperati and Salsola
tragus
community that is dominant on the unstabilized sandy beach zone. It
grows in exactly the same habitat in its global range: in Turkey it also grows
on the shores of inland and saline lakes.
  

       In 1994-1995,
25 Euphorbia peplis sites  were
counted
along the Mediterranean coast from Akhziv
south to Nitsanim. Increasing  coastal  development  and recreational
activities
are likely to threaten the species further, as it grows on the playa zone frequented by
bathers
.

       E. peplis was once much more common on beaches in Israel.

       The number of E. peplis sites in the Philistian Plain region are diminishing and are rapidly becoming extinct, probably because of the dry conditions and because the area is at the edge of its regional distribution.

      
Information on E. peplis population sizes
is incomplete. Usually a few plants are found
at each site.
The coastal population
of
Shave-Tsion,
which comprises 3000 plants (1994) on an area of 3 hectares, deserves
particular mention.

       Most of populations are
outside nature reserves
, and not a single population is safe from harm. 

Euphorbia peplis
populations should be surveyed
 along the Mediterranean
coast
 and the results compared to those obtained in 1995. Two beaches
should be demarcated and signposted
, one in the north (Shave
Tsion) and one in the south (Nitsanim),
and their populations should be monitored. 

Euphorbia peplis
is a coastal
 plant that grows on the shores of the Mediterranean Sea, the Black Sea and
the southern Caspian Sea
. It also grows in the Atlantic Ocean in the Canary
Islands
, Madeira, and the Azore Islands and on the Atlantic coast of Europe to northern
France. In the Middle East,
 it grows on the Mediterranean shores of Egypt, Israel, Cyprus, Lebanon and Syria and along the entire coast of Turkey. There are
records of the species from northern Sinai, from the Arabian coast and the
Persian Gulf, but they are not certain.

Euphorbia peplis is an annual
plant that grows on the coastal plain on seashore playas. The number of
 its sites decreased significantly, and its populations and habitat are severely
endangered 
because of human activities on the beaches.

name of participantsBased on: "The Red Book of Israeli Plants - Threatened Plants in Israel" by Prof. Avi Shmida, Dr. Gadi Pollack and Dr. Ori Fragman-Sapir

Current Occupancy Map

Current occupancy map for observations per pixel
1000 squre meter pixel 5000 squre meter pixel 10000 squre meter pixel
number of observations 0 0 0
in total pixels 0 0 0

FamilyEuphorbiaceae
ClassificationOn the endangered species list
EcosystemMediterranean Coastal area
ChorotypeMediterranean (Euro-Siberian)
Conservation SiteShave-Tsion Beach

Rarity
1
2
6
Vulnerability
0
4
4
Attractiveness
0
0
4
Endemism
0
0
4
Red number
1
3.2
10
Peripherality 0
IUCN category DD EW EX LC CR EN VU NT
Threat Definition according to the red book Vulnerable
4 (4) districts
Disjunctiveness: High
8.2% of protected sites

Other Species

Leprous-dotted Spurge
Egyptian Spurge
Euphorbia granulata
Grossheim's Spurge, Sinai Spurge