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Vegetation Zones

EQ: What are the 11 vegetation zones around the globe.

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Climate and Vegetation

Words to know:

Ecosystem:

Vegetation:

includes all of the living things (plants, animals and organisms) in a given area, interacting with each other, and also with their non-living environments (weather, earth, sun, soil, climate, atmosphere).

all plant life that grows in a particular area

  • Ecosystems are categorized by dominant types of vegetation called a biome.

  • As a result of the fact that climate determines the type of vegetation, the biomes correlate with climate zones.

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Climate Zones

  • What do you see?
  • What do the different colors represent?

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Vegetation Zones

  • Based on the vegetation zones, what does this thematic map tell us about climate?

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To Access the Reading:

Ms. Sindt’s Google Site

Class Calendar

10/9 Agenda

More Details

Vegetation Reading

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ice cap

  • permanent ice and snow
  • no plant life

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tundra

  • treeless plains with grasses, mosses, and scrubs adapted to a cold climate

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coniferous forest

  • evergreen trees with needles and cones

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mixed forest

  • a mix of coniferous and deciduous trees

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deciduous forest

  • trees with broad, flat leaves that are shed before winter

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temperate grassland

  • short and tall grasses adapted to cool climates

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chaparral

  • small trees and bushes adapted to a mediterranean climate

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desert scrub

  • small trees, bushes, and other plants adapted to a dry climate

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desert

  • arid region with few plants

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tropical grassland

  • grasses and scattered trees adapted to a tropical wet and dry climate

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broadleaf evergreen forest

  • Tall trees with large leaves that remain green all year

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Climate Zones

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Vegetation Zones

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Using North America to explain

Climate Regions and Climate Zones

REVIEW

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Climate varies widely across this large region, which reaches from the chilly Arctic to the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico.

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The northern parts of this landmass fall in tundra and sub-arctic climate zones.

In sub-arctic climates, winters are very long, cold, and snowy. Summers are very short. They may be cool and rainy.

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The tundra climate zone is even more severe. Here it is cold all year, even in summer. Winter temperatures are usually well below 0 degrees Fahrenheit. In summer, the high temperatures may not be far above freezing 32 degrees Fahrenheit.

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Areas with tundra climate get very little rain or snow. Beneath the surface, the ground is always frozen.

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In general, the farther a region is from the equator, the colder the climate will be. Since the northern part of this region is very far from the equator, it is very cold.

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Most of Canada and Alaska have either a tundra or a sub-arctic climate.

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Nearly all of Canada and Alaska have heavy snows in the winter. But the climate warms up as you move farther south.

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On the west coast of British Columbia, the marine west coast climate brings more rain than snow. There, and in the southern part of Canada, summers are warmer and drier.

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The area closest to the continental United States enjoys a mostly humid continental climate. Winters are still freezing cold, but summers can be hot and steamy.

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No part of the continental United States has a tundra or sub-arctic climate.

The climate here can vary greatly, depending on where you are. One state, California, has as many as five different climate zones.

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The Southeast has a humid sub-tropical climate, influenced by the Gulf of Mexico. Hot, rainy summers follow mild winters that see some rain.

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The climate of Florida’s southern tip is tropical wet and dry. There, it is hot all year with both rainy and dry seasons.

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Arid and semiarid climates are common in the Southwest.

This area is hot and dry in the summer and pleasant in the winter, with very little rain.

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Many older people from colder climates choose to retire in the Southwest.

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The rest of the western United States has a variety of climates. The Sierra Nevada and Rocky mountains have a highlands climate.

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Along the northern Pacific Coast, a marine west coast climate brings mild winters and lots of rain.

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Most parts of the Midwest and Northeast have a humid continental climate. People here enjoy four distinct seasons. Summers are quite warm and winters are cold, often with snow and ice storms.

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Just as the climate varies across Canada and the United States, so does the vegetation.

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One widespread vegetation zone in North America is temperate grassland.

Mainly short and tall grasses grow in temperate grasslands.

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Few trees grow in this zone because there is not enough rain. The Great Plains area of the United States and Canada is one of the world’s largest temperate grasslands.

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This area combines a long growing season with fertile soil.

As a result, the Great Plains provide very productive farmland.

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Another special vegetation zone in North America is tundra. This vegetation zone shares a name with the tundra climate zone, where it is cold year-round.

The tundra vegetation zone is like a very cold desert. Few large plants can grow here.

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Like temperate grasslands, the tundra is treeless. Trees cannot send their roots down into the soil because the ground is frozen.

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Only very low grasses, mosses, and scrub cover the ground during the short summer. They provide food for the grazing animals that live on the tundra.

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The tundra spreads across the far northern islands and coasts of Canada. Much of Alaska’s land is tundra as well.

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In the ice cap on Alaska’s highest peaks and glaciers, no plant life grows at all.

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Most of Canada and the rest of Alaska are covered in coniferous forests, filled with trees such as cedar, fir, pine, and spruce. The needle-like leaves of these trees stay green all year.

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The warmer climate in southeastern Canada supports mixed forest. Here you find a mix of both coniferous and deciduous trees.

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The vegetation of the continental United States ranges from tropical palms to desert sagebrush.

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There are thick pine forests in the West, grasses on the central plains, and forested swamps in the South.

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Spreading up and down the East Coast are forests of all types, coniferous, deciduous, and mixed.

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The extreme Southeast, along the Gulf Coast and in Florida’s Everglades, is home to tropical grasslands.

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The tough sawgrass and scattered trees in the Everglades are adapted to the tropical wet and dry climate.

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Mangrove trees grow in the swamps of Everglades National Park in Florida.

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Across the central part of the United States is a wide band of temperate grassland. This area was once thick with prairie grasses.

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However, much of the land has been plowed for farming. It is now covered with fields of corn, wheat, and other crops.

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In the West, coniferous forests blanket the mountains.

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Desert scrub grows throughout the deserts and canyons of the Southwest and Great Basin.

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Along the California coast, chaparral dots the Coast Ranges.