“…In many areas, the valley sides and floors have been eroded to bare rock. Similar to other islands and coastal areas in the Mediterranean region, the vegetation of Malta is influenced by the intense heat and low precipitation experienced during the summer months, as well as the human activity that has increased in the area over the last millennia (Grove and Rackham, 2001; Carroll et al, 2012;Gambin et al, 2016). The three main seminatural vegetation types presently found on the island are maquis (Ceratonia siliqua, Olea europaea, Pistacia lentiscus, Rhamnus alaternus and R. oleoides), garrigue (Thymbra capitata, Erica multiflora, Euphorbia melitensis, Teucrium fruticans and Anthyllis hermanniae) and steppe (Lygeum spartum (clay slopes) Hyparrhenia hirta, Andropogon distachyus, Brachypodium retusum, Stipa capensis, Aegilops geniculata, Carlina involucrata, Notobasis syriaca, Galactites tomentosa, Asphodelus aestivuus, and Urginea pancration); along with some smaller community types, such as woodland and coastal wetlands, as well as freshwater, sand dune and rocky habitats which are all important for the rare endemic species that can be found within them (Schembri, 1997).…”