Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The eastern forest–boreal transition is a temperate broadleaf and mixed forests ecoregion of North America, mostly in eastern Canada. It is a transitional zone or region between the predominantly coniferous Boreal Forest and the mostly deciduous broadleaf forest region further south.
Boreal forests/taiga: Copper Plateau taiga: United States: Nearctic: Boreal forests/taiga: Eastern Canadian Shield taiga: Canada: Nearctic: Boreal forests/taiga: Eastern Canadian forests: Canada: Nearctic: Boreal forests/taiga: Eastern Canadian forests: Saint Pierre and Miquelon: Nearctic: Boreal forests/taiga: Interior Alaska-Yukon lowland ...
The park lies within the Eastern forest-boreal transition ecoregion, so there is a wide variety of plant life. [4] The park is home to: moose, deer, black bears, wolves, lynx, bobcats, martens and beavers along with over 20 species of reptiles and amphibians. Over 100 species of birds breed, nest or rest within park boundaries.
Appalachian–Blue Ridge forests: United States: Central U.S. hardwood forests: United States: East Central Texas forests: United States: Eastern forest–boreal transition: Canada, United States: Eastern Great Lakes lowland forests: Canada, United States: Gulf of St. Lawrence lowland forests: Canada: Middle Atlantic coastal forests: United ...
The dominant trees of these coastal forests are balsam fir Abies balsamea along with black spruce Picea mariana, white spruce Picea glauca on the shoreline, and paper birch Betula papyrifera and aspen Populus tremuloides where the forest is regrown following logging or other disturbance
This ecoregion is bordered by the oak-dominated Northeastern coastal forests on the coastal plain to the south, the Gulf of St. Lawrence lowland forests on the coasts and islands of the Gulf of Saint Lawrence, and to the north and northeast the Eastern forest-boreal transition and the Eastern Canadian forests.
Allegheny Highlands forests: United States: Appalachian mixed mesophytic forests: United States: Appalachian–Blue Ridge forests: United States: Central U.S. hardwood forests: United States: East Central Texas forests: United States: Eastern forest–boreal transition: Canada, United States: Eastern Great Lakes lowland forests: Canada, United ...
A study on forest transition theory reported that over 60 years (1960–2019), "the global forest area has declined by 81.7 million ha", and concluded higher income nations need to reduce imports of tropical forest-related products and help with theoretically forest-related socioeconomic development and international policies. [34] [35]