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Tundra

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About the Tundra Species Diversity About 1700 types of plants in the arctic tundra Vegetation: Grasses, mosses, lichens, sedges, shrubs, trees include birches and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tundra


1
Tundra
A. Schetinnikova
2
About the Tundra
Temperature Average Yearly
Temperature16 F Average Winter Temperature
-10 F Summer Temperatures 35-55
F Precipitation Annual
precipitation, including melting snow, is 18
inches Solar Insolation Tundra does not
have traditional seasons, only a lengthy winter
and a brief mild season. Limiting Factors
Plant growth is hampered by the layer of
permafrost, or permanently frozen subsoil.
3
Species Diversity
  • About 1700 types of plants in the arctic tundra
  • Vegetation Grasses, mosses, lichens, sedges,
    shrubs, trees include birches and willows
  • Mammals Caribou, arctic foxes and hares, polar
    bears, lemmings, porcupines, mountain goats and
    elk in the alpine tundra
  • Birds Snowy owls, falcons, snow geese, tundra
    swans, ptarmigans, ravens

4
Food Chain of the Tundra
5
Unique Facts about the Tundra
  • There are two types of tundra arctic tundra and
    alpine tundra
  • Arctic tundra is more common and is located from
    the north pole to the forests of the taiga
  • Alpine tundra is located in high elevations
  • Throughout the winter, the tundra gets only a few
    hours of sunlight. In the summer, the tundra can
    get up to an entire day of sun.

6
The Tundra
  • By T. Cohen

7
Tundra Biome Information
  • Temperature -40C to 18C
  • Precipitation 150 to 250 mm of rain per year
  • Solar Insulation
  • Winters long, dark, and cold
  • Mean temperatures below 0C for 6 to 10 months of
    the year
  • Summers Short season, Long days
  • Top layer of soil thaws a few inches down
  • Provides a growing surface for the roots of
    vegetation
  • Rain and fog water gathers in bogs and ponds
  • Limiting Factors low temperatures, the little
    water is frozen, permafrost affects vegetation,
    animal enzymes cannot function in cold

8
Tundra Species Diversity
  • Vegetation
  • Permafrost prevents drainage of excess moisture
  • Growing season is short and can last up to 60
    days
  • Low diversity Few plants could survive extreme
    temperatures, lack of water, and low soil
  • lichens, mosses, sedges, perennial forbs, and
    dwarfed shrubs, heaths, birches and willows
  • Trees that do manage to grow stay close to the
    ground
  • Insulated by snow during the cold winters

9
Tundra Species Diversity
  • Animal Life lower diversity due to extreme
    conditions
  • Result Residents adapt to environment
  • Morphological adaptations
  • large, compact bodies
  • thick Insulating cover of feathers or fur
  • pelage and plumage that turns white in winter,
    brown in summer
  • Physiological adaptations
  • ability to accumulate thick deposits of fat
    during the short growing season
  • Fat acts as insulation store of energy for use
    during the winter, when animal species remain
    active.
  • Population adaptations
  • cyclical fluctuations in population size
  • Predator populations and plant populations
    respond in kind to the peaks and crashes of the
    herbivore populations.

10
Food Chain
Tundra food chains are short and highly
susceptible to changes
  • Polar Bear

Woodland Caribou
Reindeer Lichen
11
Interesting facts
  • Permafrost
  • temperatures are so cold that there is a layer of
    permanently frozen ground below the surface (6
    in.)
  • The Precipitation levels - 150 to 250 mm of
    rain/yr
  • Includes melted snow
  • Less than most deserts
  • Still usually wet though the low temperatures
    cause evaporation of water to be slow
  • Snowfall is actually advantageous to plant and
    animal life as it provides an insulating layer on
    the ground surface
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