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The Cold Climate
A biome is the type of habitat in certain places, like mountain
tops, deserts, and tropical forests, and is determined by the climate
of the place. The taiga is the biome of the needleleaf forest. Living
in the taiga is cold and lonely. Coldness and food shortages make
things very difficult, mostly in the winter. Some of the animals in
the taiga hibernate in the winter, some fly south if they can, while
some just cooperate with the environment, which is very difficult.
(Dillon Bartkus)
Taiga is the Russian word for forest and is the largest biome in the
world. It stretches over Eurasia and North America. The taiga is
located near the top of the world, just below the tundra biome. The
winters in the taiga are very cold with only snowfall. The summers
are warm, rainy, and humid. A lot of coniferous trees grow in the
taiga. The taiga is also known as the boreal forest. Did you know
that Boreal was the Greek goddess of the North Wind?
The taiga doesn't have as many plant and animal species as the
tropical or the deciduous forest biomes. It does have millions of
insects in the summertime. Birds migrate there every year to nest and
feed.
Here is some information about the temperatures and weather in the
taiga. The average temperature is below freezing for six months out
of the year. The winter temperature range is -54 to -1° C (-65 to 30°
F). The winters, as you can see, are really cold, with lots of snow.
Temperature range in the summer gets as low as -7° C (20° F). The
high in summer can be 21° C (70° F). The summers are mostly warm,
rainy and humid. They are also very short with about 50 to 100 frost
free days. The total precipitation in a year is 30 - 85 cm (12 - 33
in) . The forms the precipitation comes in are rain, snow and dew.
Most of the precipitation in the taiga falls as rain in the summer.
The main seasons in the taiga are winter and summer. The spring and
autumn are so short, you hardly know they exist. It is either hot and
humid or very cold in the taiga.
There are not a lot of species of plants in the taiga because of the
harsh conditions. Not many plants can survive the extreme cold of the
taiga winter. There are some lichens and mosses, but most plants are
coniferous trees like pine, white spruce, hemlock and douglas fir.
Coniferous trees are also known as evergreens. They have long, thin
waxy needles. The wax gives them some protection from freezing
temperatures and from drying out. Evergreens don't loose their leaves
in the winter like deciduous trees. They keep their needles all year
long. This is so they can start photosynthesis as soon as the weather
gets warm. The dark color of evergreen needles allows them to absorb
heat from the sun and also helps them start photosynthesis early.
Evergreens in the taiga tend to be thin and grow close together. This
gives them protection from the cold and wind. Evergreens also are
usually shaped like an upside down cone to protects the branches from
breaking under the weight of all that snow. The snow slides right off
the slanted branches.
The taiga is susceptible to many wildfires. Trees have adapted by
growing thick bark. The fires will burn away the upper canopy of the
trees and let sunlight reach the ground. New plants will grow and
provide food for animals that once could not live there because there
were only evergreen trees.
Animals of the taiga tend to be predators like the lynx and members
of the weasel family like wolverines, bobcat, minks and ermine. They
hunt herbivores like snowshoe rabbits, red squirrels and voles. Red
deer, elk, and moose can be found in regions of the taiga where more
deciduous trees grow.
Many insect eating birds come to the taiga to breed. They leave when
the breeding season is over. Seed eaters like finches and sparrows,
and omnivorous birds like crows stay all year long.

Köppen
Classification & Biomes
| Cold
Climate |
Dry Climate
|
Temperate Climate |
Tropical Climate
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