enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Boreal ecosystem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boreal_ecosystem

    A few fish species include salmonids, smelts, sticklebacks, lamprey and sculpins. [8] For salmon these systems are vital: relying on the riparian systems within boreal ecosystems for multiple life stages in both the beginning and the end of their life cycle, sockeye rely on the provided freshwater environments as eggs, fry and adult stages. [9]

  3. Taiga of North America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taiga_of_North_America

    Taiga (boreal forests) has amazing natural resources that are being exploited by humans. Human activities have a huge effect on the taiga ecoregions mainly through extensive logging, natural gas extraction, and mine-fracking. This results in the loss of habitat and increases the rate of deforestation.

  4. Taiga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taiga

    The taiga experiences relatively low precipitation throughout the year (generally 200–750 mm (7.9–29.5 in) annually, 1,000 mm (39 in) in some areas), primarily as rain during the summer months, but also as snow or fog. Snow may remain on the ground for as long as nine months in the northernmost extensions of the taiga biome. [25]

  5. Interior Alaska–Yukon lowland taiga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interior_Alaska–Yukon...

    This is a region of spruce taiga forest covering much of the central and northern interior of the U.S. state of Alaska and Yukon, Canada, from the Bering Sea and Beaufort Sea coasts to the Richardson Mountains in the east with the Brooks Range to the north and the Alaska Range to the south. This is an area of low hills and flatlands from sea ...

  6. Alaska Peninsula montane taiga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alaska_Peninsula_montane_taiga

    This ecoregion is a mountainous area of ridges up to 1200m between peaks up to 2500m, located on the southern, Pacific Ocean side of the Alaska Peninsula from Cook Inlet west through the Kodiak Archipelago to Unimak Island at the beginning of the Aleutian Islands chain, while the area around Cook Inlet at the head of the peninsula is the neighboring Cook Inlet taiga ecoregion.

  7. Kamchatka Taiga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamchatka_Taiga

    The Kamchatka Taiga ecoregion (WWF ID: PA0604) is a "conifer island" in the middle of the Kamchatka Peninsula, along the Kamchatka River. It is the easternmost example of Siberian taiga. The region has unusual ecological conditions, a "snow forest" that combines low temperatures, high humidity and boreal forest with heavy snowfall.

  8. Mid-Canada Boreal Plains Forests - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid-Canada_Boreal_Plains...

    The Mid-Canada Boreal Plains Forests is a taiga ecoregion of Western Canada, designated by One Earth.It was previously defined as the Mid-Continental Canadian Forests by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) categorization system, before it was modified by One Earth, the successor to WWF.

  9. Scandinavian and Russian taiga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scandinavian_and_Russian_taiga

    The Scandinavian and Russian taiga is an ecoregion within the taiga and boreal forests biome as defined by the WWF classification (ecoregion PA0608). [1] It is situated in Northern Europe between tundra in the north and temperate mixed forests in the south and occupies about 2,156,900 km 2 (832,800 sq mi) in Norway, Sweden, Finland and the northern part of European Russia, being the largest ...