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Eastern European bigness characterizes also the organic
life of the Ukraine. But it follows, from the location of
the country, that the Ukraine has a much more varied
plant and animal geography than the proper Russian
territory, despite the latter's much greater extent.
In the Ukraine, the borders of three main divisions of
plant-geography of Europe meet the Mediterranean
division, the steppe region, and the forest region, with their
transition regions. Besides, we meet in the Ukraine three
mountain regions the Carpathian, the Crimean, and the
Caucasian. In respect to flora, the Ukraine possesses only
a few endemic species. To be sure the great ice period
covered only comparatively small areas of the Ukraine
with its glacier, but the polar flora undoubtedly prevailed
in the entire country at that time. After the withdrawal
of the glacier, steppes first appeared in its place, which
then, especially in the Northwest, were forced to make
room for a forest flora that had immigrated from Central
Europe and Siberia. Hence, despite the considerable
area of the Ukraine, so few endemic species.
Since those primeval days, only a very few natural
changes have occurred in the vegetation of the Ukraine.
However, man, thru his cultural activity, has wrought
many changes in the plant-world of the country.
The forest region occupies barely one-fifth of the Uk-
rainian territory, only the northwestern and northern
borderlands. The southeastern border of the forest region
extends from the Prut and Dniester on the western bound-
ary of Pokutye and Podolia in a curve to the source of the
Buh, then near the northern boundary of the Dnieper
Plateau east as far as Kiev, and thence toward the northeast
as far as the source of the Aka. This boundary, however,
is not sharp. In numerous peninsulas the compact forest
penetrates the adjacent transition region toward the
southeast. On the other hand, this forest boundary
coincides almost exactly with the northern boundary of
the black soil. The soil of the forest region is in general
poor. Only in higher places we find fertile turf ; beyond that
sandy soil and the podsol, rich in quartz, predominate.
The prevailing plant formation in this region is the
forest. It once covered the entire region and was thinned
to any great extent only within the last two centuries.
What these primeval forests were like we can now tell in
only a few districts of the Polissye and in the famous virgin
forest of Biloveza, which lies in the extreme northwest
corner of the Ukrainian territory. Here we see the primeval
forest in its mighty size and beauty. In wind-fallen woods,
several meters high, rotten, decaying stumps cover the
ground. Their roots stand up high into the air above
swampy holes and vast masses of rotting remains of plants.
Above this swampy fen rise, like a vast mass of pillars, the
knotty trunks of century-old oaks and lindens, ash and
aspen, and the slender pine and fir. High above the ground
their branches intertwine. All strive up toward the sun,
for a continuous semi-darkness reigns below. Shrub and
herb vegetation thrives only in clearings; beyond that only
last year's leaves, needles, and a mysteriously glowing decay
cover the ground. Dead silence, only occasionally
broken by the hammering of a woodpecker or by the
timid voice of a bird, reigns everywhere, making all the
more impressive the mighty roaring of the lofty crowns
in the storm.
As to their composition, the woods of the Ukrainian
forest region are mixed, altho local conditions cause one or
the other species of tree to predominate. The Ukrainian
forest region may be divided into two regions by a line
running thru Lublin southeast toward Lutzk. Southwest
of this line extends the Central European forest zone,
northeast of it the Northern European forest zone.
The Central European forest zone embraces the entire
Pidhirye in the Ukraine, the southern part of the Rostoche,
and the western spurs of Volhynia and Podolia. It is
distinguished by a greater variety of tree species. Here,
upon damp, loamy hills, entire forests of beech are found,
on the Carpathian foothills the pine, and singly or in
small groups, the larch, the yew, the maple, etc. In the
Northern European zone all these trees disappear, due to
the increasing continentality of the climate. The pre-
dominating species of tree here is the pine, which forms
large woods everywhere on sandy soil, then the birch,
which always accompanies the pine, the fir on sandy soil,
the oak and white beech on loamy soil. There is an
admixture of a considerable number of alders on swampy
ground, aspens, lindens, elms, maples, ash and wild apple,
pear and cherry trees. Hazel bushes, willow (salix caprea),
mountain ash, raspberry and blackberry bushes comprise
the thick underbrush in these mixed forests, and contribute
a great deal to the beauty of the woods, together with grass
and herb vegetation, especially in numerous clearings. In
truer evergreen forests the underbrush usually is very poor.
There are a great many swamp forests in the Ukrainian
forest region. In the Carpathian foothills they are called
lasi, and are quite common there, but in the Polissye they
are most widely developed. There they are usually com-
posed of pines, with which, however, the swampy ground
does not agree very well. The alders and willows, however,
grow all the better.
The second important formation of the forest region are
the luhi. They usually stretch thru the wide, flat river
valleys of the region. These are luxurious meadows with a
beautiful growth of grass and herbs set with single trees
and clusters of trees. In dry places the oak usually
grows, in damp places the alder.
The third typical plant formation is that of the swamps.
They are widely developed in the forest region of the
Ukraine, especially in the flat river valleys of the Rostoche
and Volhynia. Polissye is the greatest swamp country in
Europe. Regular moors, made up of peat mosses, alternate
even in the Polissye region with meadow moors, in which
swamp grass and herb vegetation predominates.
The forest region has played a significant part in the
history of the Ukraine. When the Turkish nomad tribes,
using the steppe district of the Ukraine as a convenient
military road, destroyed the work of Ukrainian civilization
in the steppe region, the Ukrainian people retreated into
the forests and swamps of the north and west, advancing
toward the southeast again, at the proper moment, to
reinhabit the ravaged and desolated lands. This circle of
events repeated itself frequently in the history of the
Ukraine.
Today the woods of the Ukraine forest region are greatly
thinned, so that they take up more than one- third of the
total surface only in the Polissye. Cutting down and rooting
up of the woods some centuries ago was, without a doubt,
an important part of the work of civilization. But now
things are different. Now the forest is considered a very
important part of a well organized cultural section, and is,
therefore, carefully preserved in the truly civilized lands
of Europe. In the beautiful forests of the Ukraine, however,
a reckless exploitation is going on, and the evil results are
already apparent, r especially in the sparsely wooded borders
of the forest region, as well as in the entire country
surrounding the steppe. The rivers have become small in
volume of water, the sources dried up, and the ravines
annually transform thousands of hectars into desert land.
And this is happening in the granary of Europe, which
some 300 years ago made foreign travelers marvel at its
incredible fertility.
All the rest of the Ukraine, as far as the foothills of the
Yaila and the Caucasus, is occupied by the steppe region.
The limits of this region, as we have said, are not distinct.
In peninsula and island formations the forest penetrates
toward the southeast. In this direction the forest islands
become constantly rarer and smaller, so that the Russian
plant-geographers have felt called upon to insert two
transition zones between the real forest and the real steppe
the zone of the exterior steppe and the zone of the tran-
sitional steppe. The actual steppe region is supposed to
begin at the line which extends thru Kishinev and Katerin-
oslav to the bend of the Don. This division may be
criticized, however, since it at most, fits present conditions
brought about in the last 200 years by the destruction of
forests on the part of men. The historical sources of the
Ukraine tell of large woodlands, which, in the 16th, 17th
and 18th Centuries, still extended along the sources of the
Inhul and Inhulez, along the Tasmin, on the river divides
between the left-hand tributaries of the Dnieper, etc.
They were not forest terraces, not mere strips of woods
confined to river valleys; they covered the divides far and
wide, as well as the broad tableau sheds lying between
rivers. For this reason care must be taken in sketching
the boundaries of the steppe. We therefore comprehend both
the above mentioned transition zones into one, for which we
would suggest the name luhi zone, because the luh, a
meadow studded with scattered groups of trees and little
groves, must have been the predominating plant formation
of this transition country.
The typical soil of the transition country, as well as of
the steppe region, is the black earth (Ukr. chornozem, Russ.
chernozyom). Every Ukrainian is familiar with this
blackish, ever fertile soil, which cannot be duplicated the
world over and which makes the Ukraine the granary of
Russia. The black earth is a product of the transformation
of loess, with a strong admixture of the products of decom-
position of plants. In places it attains a depth of 2 m.
and over.
The black-earth region extends longitudinally thru the
Ukraine, embracing over three-fourths of its territory.
The northern boundary of the black-earth region passes
from Lemberg along the north border of the Podolian and
Dnieper Plateau as far as Kiev, and then northeast to the
bend of the Aka, south of Kaluga. The southern boundary
describes a line drawn thru the Boh and Dnieper deltas to
their limans and the city of Mariupol. The entire Kuban
plain and the plateau of Stavropol also belong to the region
of black earth. Along the northern border of the black-
earth region extends a transition zone of about 100 kilo-
meters width, whose black earth contains 4 to 6 % decaying
plant matter. South of this lies the wide main area of the
black earth with 6 to 10% decaying matter. On the sea
and along the lower Dnieper the region ends with another
transition zone, whose brownish black earth contains
4 to 6% of decaying matter. On the Sea of Azof and in
Southern Crimea the brown dry steppe soil, with numerous
islands of saline soil (solonchaki) and a peculiar vegetation,
inclined to absorb salt, prevails. These are present also in
the remaining black earth region, and there are also islands
and strips of saline earth along the rivers and the seashore.
In the steppe region, the steppe is not the only plant
formation. Above all we must differentiate between the
meadow-steppe of the transition zone and the real steppe
of the south, as well as the desert steppe in some districts
of Crimea and the Caucasus. Besides this shrub formation,
meadow-woods (luhi) and real forests are found in the
steppe region.
In the vegetation of the meadow-steppe, grasses and
herbs take the first place. Of the grasses the stippa
species are the most characteristic {Ursa, kovil) ; of the
herbs, the lily-like growths. The growth of grass in the
northern part of the steppe region is very luxuriant and
thick, and attains great heights, altho the times in which
a rider and his horse might disappear in the grass belong to
the past. High weeds and thistles (buriani, bodiaki) form
thickets of great luxuriance. In the spring, when the
fresh young grass begins to sprout up and the blossoming
herbs convert the steppe into a carpet of flowers, when
everything is resplendent with the fulness of life and beauty,
then the Ukrainian steppe presents a wonderful picture.
But this picture is not lasting. The heat and the drought
transform the fresh, green, primitive color into yellow and
brown. Grasses and herbs wither and die away, and only
the roots and seeds preserve the living power of the plant,
surviving the autumnal drought and the severe cold of
winter, once more to wrap the steppe in its bridal gown in
the spring.
In the southern part of the steppe region the plant
covering is not so luxurious as in the north, and the grasses
and herbs grow in isolated little bushes, between which
the bare ground of the steppe remains visible. The saline
earth appears much oftener, with its gray-green vegetation
of salt plants, and we often find sand areas, which begin to
suggest the desert steppes of the Caspian steppe country.
A characteristic plant formation in the entire steppe
region is comprised by the bushes (bairaki, chahart),
which generally consist of heavily tangled thickets of wild
cherry (prunus chamacerosus, viskennik), spiral (tavolha),
snowball (calina) , almond shrub {amygdalus nana, bobovnik),
etc. They generally grow in the steppe balkas, or near
them, and cover extended areas.
The Ukrainian steppe, despite contrary current
opinion, does not lack tree growth. In the region of the
real steppe, to be sure, we meet only forest terraces, which
extend along the river courses, but in the transition zone
we still find woods and groves, which not only appear in
river valleys, but also cover the plateaus between these. The
oak, the white beech, the maple, the poplar, the wild apple
and pear trees, are the chief representatives of the tree
species of the woods of this section. Even the pine ventures
as far as the district of Kharkiv.
Besides the forest terraces, the rivers of the steppe
region are accompanied by the formation of the so-called
plavni. They are thickets of sedge and reeds, with luxuri-
ant willow and alder growth; in drier places, which are
flooded only during high-water time, real oak forests are
added. With pleasure the eye of the traveler, wearied
by the uniformity of the steppe, rests upon them.
As to the origin of the steppes of the Ukraine, scholars
differ. Every one of them thinks he has found the only
correct explanation. In reality, the origin and preservation
of the Ukrainian steppes can be traced to the combined
action of various causes. In the first place there is the
continental dry climate. The amount of rainfall is too
slight for the development of forest-flora; the drought of
the summer and fall too long.
A minor cause is the salt content of the steppe-soil,
which, however, is apparent only in places. On the other
hand, the shape of the ground is very important. Where the
land is level, where the dry steppe winds have free play
and the rainwater cannot easily dissolve and wash away
the salt of the soil, the steppe prevails. Where the land is
cut by river valleys and balkas, however, there is more
shelter from wind, more moisture, and no salt in the soil,
so that conditions are given which are favorable for the
development of tree vegetation. For this reason not
only the valleys of the rivers, but also the balkas, which
but seldom carry water, have always had tree growth, and
even woods and groves. The trees which are planted there
thrive very well, while attempts at cultivation in the real
level steppe almost regularly fail. The most important
foundation for the existence of steppes, however, is their
character as remains of the old post-glacial steppe formation.
Since the beginnings of the alluvial epoch, its territory is
being won by the forest, which is constantly pushing
forward toward the south and southeast, using the river
valleys as the main lines of advance. In this advance toward
the south, the forest has now been stopped by man before it
was able to reach the shore of the Black Sea and the Sea
of Azof.
Man has wrought many changes in the steppe region.
In the first place he has entered into the struggle between
the woods and the steppe in opposition to the woods.
The ancient Ukrainians of the Kiev state rooted out great
areas of forest and reclaimed them for civilization. On the
other hand, the nomad tribes, roaming the steppes ever
since man can remember, repeatedly destroyed forests
with fire, in order to obtain good pasture for their herds
and to break down the best defense of the agricultural
Ukrainian population. In the 16th Century began the
deforestation of the transition zone thru the progressing
colonization movement of the Ukrainians, under the
protection of the Cossack organization. But even in the
18th Century there were still great forests in the transition
zone, which have since entirely disappeared. The in-
tensive colonization movement of the 19th Century put an
end to them. At the same time the hand of man attacked
the steppe formation. Today only very small parcels of
steppe are in their original condition. The steppe grasses
have yielded place to an increasingly intensive cultivation of
grain grasses; the place of the natural steppe has been
usurped by the cultivated steppe, with its waving fields
of grain and inevitable dreary stubble fields. With the
progressive destruction of forests this cultivated steppe
of man's fields constantly moves toward the north and west
of the Ukraine, favoring the accompanying migration of
the steppe-plants and steppe animals into Central Europe.
Entirely independent is the position of the Ukrainian
flora in the southern slope of the Yaila and the Caucasus.
They belong really to the Mediterranean Sea region. The
mild climate here has matured a flora of an entirely southern
type, with many evergreen trees and shrubs peculiar to the
Mediterranean region. Yet the vegetation of this district
can only be considered as the advance guard of the real
Mediterranean vegetation, for the representatives of
the northern flora by far predominate over the southern
species of plants, particularly in the forests which develop
in higher altitudes.
Besides the just discussed plant-geographical regions
and zones of the plain, the Ukraine has three
mountain regions the Carpathian, the Crimean and the
Caucasian.
The foot of the Carpathians is covered by mixed and
leafy forests. White beech, birch, linden, aspen and pine
comprise these forests. At one time the oak predominated
here, as it still does on the southern slope of the mountain
range. On higher ridges of the Low and High Beskid,
mixed forests of beech and fir are found. At the upper tree
limit of the High Beskid the beech appears almost exclu-
sively in forest formation. The trees become constantly
smaller and more gnarled, and at a height of 1000 m. we
meet only beech brush. On the southern side of the
mountain range pure beech woods prevail.
In the Gorgani we soon distinguish two forest zones.
The lower one has principally beech woods, with an admix-
ture of firs and maples; the upper one consists almost entire-
ly of fir woods. Their upper limit usually lies at a height
of from 1500 to 1600 m., but the zekoti (seas of sandstone
boulders), which cover all the higher peaks and ridges,
reduce the upper tree limit a great deal in some places.
In the Chornohory, a similar division of the forest zone
prevails. Oak forests, with thick underbrush, cover the
foot of the range on both slopes. Above the oak woods lies
the zone of mixed forests, in which white and red beech,
birch, ash, maple and firs predominate. Above the
height of 1300 m. lies the upper tree zone, which is made
up of stocks of fir entirely. The upper tree limit lies at a
height of 1700 m. The milder climate of the Chornohory
matures a much more luxurious and a richer vegetation
than in other parts of the Ukrainian Carpathians.
In the forest zones of the Carpathians, great complex
primeval forests have survived to a great extent. They lie
in inaccessible places, which the bandit axe of the profes-
sional forest destroyer has not yet penetrated. The
Carpathian virgin forest is, perhaps, the most beautiful
plant formation of the Ukraine. Giant firs, as much as
60 m. in height and six feet thick, raise their dark green
slender pyramids above rocky slopes and immense wind-
fallen woods, in which the modern firs lie in piles. Thick
shrubbery covers the clearings, while in the eternal semi-
darkness of the thickets, on rocky ground covered with
needles, just an occasional pillow of moss may be found.
A second plant-formation of the Carpathians is that of
the dwarf-shrubs. They develop above the forest limit and
cover wide areas in the Gorgani and Chornohori. Moun-
tain fir (zerep), accompanied by juniper (in the Beskyds
and Gorgani) and by dwarf-alder bushes {lelich, in the
Chornohory), in thickets which are impassible in places.
The formerly widely distributed stone pine has become
rare, since its fragrant wood is preferred by the mountain-
dwellers for all sorts of woodwork.
The third plant formation of the Carpathians are their
mountain meadows (polonini). They lie above the forest
limit and begin to appear at the source of the San. Toward
the southeast they become constantly more luxuriant and
more frequent. The grass and herb growth of the polonini
is very varied and rich, especially in the so-called zarinki,
that is, parts of the mountain meadows where hay is
made. The polonini are of great importance to the inhabi-
tants of the mountains. Great herds of horses, cattle and
sheep remain here all summer. The polonini are peopled,
and a life of great privation a hard life but free develops
in primitive dairy huts, with never dying camp-fires.
In the mountains of Crimea we find, in the main, the
same arrangement of plant zones. At some height above
sea-level the forest zone begins. White and red beech, oak,
and two species of pine appear here in forests. Only on
the broad peak surfaces we find poor mountain meadows
with thick but short grasses. The name of these mountain
pastures (yaila) has been transferred to the entire mountain
chain.
In the Caucasus we find, within Ukrainian territory,
only the forest zone of this mountain system. The forests
often attain a height of 2500 m., and consist of various
kinds of oak, beech, elms, linden, maple and ash. Above
the forest limit we meet with a low shrub formation and
the beautiful, wonderfully rich grass and herb growth
which cover the mountain meadows of the Caucasus,
rising, at a height of 2900 3500 m., to the snow border.
The animal-geographical conditions of the Ukraine
are much simpler than the plant-geographical. The
Ukraine, like the rest of Europe, belongs to the holarctic
region, and despite the extent of the land, only slight
differences in the fauna are found, these being due to
the floral and morphological differences of the mountains,
forests and steppes of the Ukraine.
Since the ice age, the animal world of the Ukraine has
experienced no lesser changes than the plant world. In
the ice period many mighty beasts of prey (cave bear, cave
lion, cave hyena, etc.) lived here, besides thick-skinned
animals (mammoth, rhinoceros), together with the an-
cestors of the present animal world and various polar
forms. All these animals are either altogether extinct, or
they followed the receding glacier to the north. On the
other hand, together with the post glacial steppe, a steppe-
fauna spread out from south and east, which then gradually
had to make way for the forest fauna advancing southward
with the forests.
From this time on, the Ukrainian fauna suffered only
very slight natural changes. On the other hand, the
artificial changes produced by the hand of man have been
all the greater. Many species which were dangerous as
beasts of prey or useful for food or skins, have either been
entirely exterminated by man or greatly limited in their
spread. In destroying the forests and putting cultivated
steppes and fields in their place, he has, to a great extent,
beaten the way to the heart of Central Europe for the
animals of the steppe. But his activity has been rather to
exterminate than to change, and he has destroyed the once
wonderful animal life of the Ukraine.
Of the higher animal life of the Ukraine on the middle
and lower Dnieper, we are told, in a historical source, almost
incredible facts prevailing about the middle of the 16th
Century. "The Ukraine is so rich in game that bisons,
wild horses and deer are hunted merely for the sake of their
skins. Of their meat only the choicest cuts of chine and
loin are used, all other parts thrown away. Hinds and
young boars are not hunted at all. Roes and wild boars
wander in great herds from the steppes into the woods
in winter, returning to the steppes in summer. During
this season they are killed by the thousands. On all the
rivers, streamlets, brooks, live innumerable beaver colonies.
The bird world is so remarkably rich that enormous quan-
tities of wild goose, wild duck, crane and swan eggs and
young ones are gathered. In the rivers, such great shoals
of fish swarm in the spring that the fishing spear thrown in
stands upright." Another chronicler, of the 17th Century,
tells that he was present when a single throw of the net
at the mouth of the Orel brought 2000 fish to light, of
which the smallest was one foot long.
Of the cat family, the lynx and the wildcat have become
very rare and are met with only in the Carpathians and
the Caucasus; the lynx also in the Polissye country. The
bear, formerly very frequent thruout the Ukraine, is now
also confined to these three regions. On the other hand,
wolves, foxes, badgers, martens, polecats and all sorts of
small animals of prey have survived, altho in very much
smaller numbers. Of the large plant-eating animals the
bison (thanks only to the unusual care on the part of the
government) has survived in the primeval forest of Biloveza,
the moose-deer only in the Polissye, the stag only in the
Carpathians and the Caucasus. On the other hand, there
are still a great many roes and wild boars in the woods.
Of the rodents the hare is still common everywhere, while
the beaver, which at one time inhabited all the rivers of
the Ukraine, is now confined to the most inaccessible
swamps of the Polissye and the Caucasian tributaries of the
Kuban. The bird kingdom, too, has become much poorer
in species. Large birds of prey, like eagles and hawks,
nest only in the Carpathians and in the Caucasus very
seldom in the woods of the plain. The heath fowl and
grouse seek the most inaccessible thickets, and even the
number of small insect and grain-feeders has been greatly
reduced. Of the waterfowl, wild ducks, wild geese, coot,
diving birds, etc., are still very numerous. Cranes and
herons are rare. The former wealth of fish is ruined and
no one takes care of the artificial raising of fish. To be sure,
much fish is still caught, especially in the Dnieper and
Don systems, mainly pike, tench, carp, crucian, shad, etc.,
and trout in the mountain streams; but of the abundance
of even the comparatively recent past, there is no trace.
Sturgeon, sterlet and other sea fish, which formerly came
in great swarms up the Dniester, Boh and Dnieper, are only
seldom found today.
The steppe region has lost even more of its animal
wealth. Above all, the rich higher animal life of the
transition zones, which as late as the 18th Century, provided
food for the populous Zaporog Sich, has quite disappeared.
The tarpani (wild horses), which still inhabited the steppe
in great herds in the 17th Century, are now completely
exterminated. Saiga antelopes (saihaki), once generally
distributed thruout the steppe region of the Ukraine, have
retreated to the Caspian steppe. The smaller game and the
bird world have suffered far less, but the activity of man,
who has changed the steppes into fields and pastures, has
been fatal to them too. The bustard, sandpiper, partridge
and grouse, which formerly inhabited the steppe brush in
great numbers have become rare. The same may be
said of the bird-world of the watercourses and swamps
which once inhabited the river districts of the steppe in
immense swarms. The insectivorous birds, too, have
decreased, and the harmful insects are increasing at a
terrible rate. Only the locust pest, which formerly caused
great damage in agriculture, is now almost gone.
But, in spite of the war of extermination which man is
waging against the animal world of the steppe, animal
species are found which were well able to adapt themselves
to the new circumstances, have become accustomed to man
and have found plenty of food in the fields of the cultivated
steppe (field-mice, marmot, ground squirrels, etc.)- They
have increased greatly and have migrated toward the
west and north, causing great damage to farming.
As we must dispense with a scientific discussion of
the flora and fauna of the Ukraine, we shall only report
a few esssential facts about the useful plants and domestic
animals.
The Ukraine, according to its soil and its climate, is the
richest grain country of Europe. For wheat the conditions
in the Ukraine are the most favorable, especially in the
southern half of the black-earth region. Rye is raised
more widely in the north and northwest; barley everywhere,
but on a large scale only in the south; oats in the north
and in the Carpathians, where it is often used to make bread.
Buckwheat is distributed chiefly on the northern edge of
the black-earth region; millet thrives well in the entire
Chornozyom region. Corn is raised on a large scale only in
the southwest and in the sub-Caucasus country.
Of pod plants, peas and beans are especially imported;
they are raised not only in vegetable gardens but also in
fields. Of the tuberous plants, the potato is generally
distributed only in the western part of the Ukraine and
increases in importance but slowly in the rest of the coun-
try. Sugar beets are cultivated on great areas of the
Volhynian, Podolian and Dnieper Plateaus. Vegetable
culture embraces all the vegetables of Central Europe,
but is not especially developed. On the other hand, water
melons, canteloupe, cucumbers (particulary in the Southern
Ukraine) are raised in special plantations (bashtani).
Hemp, flax, rape-seed, sunflower, are generally distributed,
and poppy is cultivated not only in gardens but also in
fields. Tobacco culture is very important in the Ukraine,
particularly in the Dnieper Plain.
Thanks to the warm summer and fall, the Ukrainian
climate is well fitted for fruit culture. The orchard is a
necessity to the Ukrainian farmer and is planted and
cared for even under difficult conditions. Fruit culture
flourishes particularly in Pokutye, Podolia (where the
more tender species of apple and pear, as well as apricots,
thrive in the Dniester valley), in Bessarabia, in Crimea and
the sub-Caucasus country, where even peaches and grapes
are added. .The northern limit of the vine extends along
the Dniester, then thru Kamenetz and Katerinoslav to
the bend of the Don. Wine-culture has its main regions in
Bessarabia, in Crimea and in the sub-Caucasus country,
altho South Podolia and the Dnieper valley in the old
Zaporog country do not lack vineyards.
The domestic animals are the same in the Ukraine as in
Central Europe. Only in the extreme south camels and
buffaloes are added. The horned cattle belong chiefly to
the so-called Ukrainian breed, which is distinguished
by its gray color and its size, and is bony and strong-
limbed. It is very well fitted for work and is rich in milk.
On the southwest borders of the Ukraine the Hungarian
great-horned breed is widely distributed. In recent times
the pure Holland, Tirol and Swiss breeds are continually
spreading. The horses of the Ukraine belong to various
mixed breeds. The most beautiful breed of horses, the
Ukrainian, has been raised by the Zaporog Cossacks. It is of
medium size, very strong and fleet, very enduring and useful
for any sort of work. The Chornomoric variety is now
being raised by the Kuban Cossacks and is rightfully
famed thruout Eastern Europe for its high qualities.
Very efficient, too, is the Hutzulian breed of mountain
horses, small of stature but very strong, unsurpassed for
mountain roads and foot-ways. The peasant horses of
Galicia, Volhynia, etc., are, despite their unseemly outward
appearance, really created for the rough roads of their land.
Donkeys and mules are rarities in the Ukraine, also
very few goats are kept. In sheep, however, the Ukraine is
the richest country in Europe. Not only native breeds
(among them the justly famous reshetilivka, as it is called),
but also foreign merino sheep are raised, especially in the
steppes of the Ukraine. Hog raising is very highly develop-
ed. Usually Polish hogs are raised in Western Ukraine,
Russian short-eared hogs in the eastern part, and in
Southern Ukraine, southern crinkled hogs. In barnyard
fowl the Ukraine is the richest land in Eastern Europe.
Also bee culture is very important, especially in the Dnieper
Plain. Silkworm culture, however, is not very important,
altho the mulberry trees find favorable climatic conditions
thruout the Ukraine.
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