*Boreal Forest (Taiga)

Description

If you go north far enough, and stick a forest down, you get Taiga. Boreal Forests consist mainly of coniferous evergreen trees. The term 'taiga' originates in Russia, but has come to be used in North America also. Think the great wooded lands in Northern Canada and Russia.

Notes

Climate

General Notes

With harsh winters and short summers, the taiga is a place of extreme temperatures. In Verkhoyansk, Russia, there have been recorded extremes of 32C and -60C. Humidity is high, also.

The growing season in a forest is typically around 50-100 days (2-4 months)

Year

average yearly high: 20C
average yearly low: -50C
average yearly precipitation: 40-100 cm (mostly snow)

Summer

average daily high:
average nightly low:
average daily precipitation:

Winter

average daily high:
average nightly low:
average daily precipitation:

Flora (Plant life)

General Notes

The trees in the boreal forest are typically coniferous, with dark, needle-like leaves which are extremely cold tolerant. They remain on the tree year-round, allowing them to take advantage of the sun as soon as it's warm enough, rather than wasting all spring growing leaves.

The cone-shape of most coniferous trees allows heavy loads of snow to shed off. This prevents branches from breaking off.

Common Species

Uncommon Species

Rare Species

Fauna (Animal life)

General Notes

Common Species

Uncommon Species

Rare Species


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Copyright © 1999-2000 by Shawn P. Vincent. All material distributed under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation Licence.

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This page (which can be found at URL http://www.svincent.com/MagicJar/Biomes/BorealForest.html) was generated at Saturday, March 25, 2000 8:14:45 AM EST