The Temperate Climate
Grassland biomes are large, rolling terrains of grasses,
flowers and herbs. Latitude, soil and local climates for
the most part determine what kinds of plants grow in a
particular grassland. A grassland is a region where the
average annual precipitation is great enough to support
grasses, and in some areas a few trees. The
precipitation is so eratic that drought and fire prevent
large forests from growing. Grasses can survive fires
because they grow from the bottom instead of the top.
Their stems can grow again after being burned off. The
soil of most grasslands is also too thin and dry for
trees to survive.
When the settlers of the United States moved westward,
they found that the grasslands, or prairies as they
called them, were more than just dry, flat areas. The
prairies contained more than 80 species of animals and
300 species of birds, and hundreds of species of plants.
There are two different types of grasslands; tall-grass,
which are humid and very wet, and short-grass, which are
dry, with hotter summers and colder winters than the
tall-grass prairie. The settlers found both on their
journey west. When they crossed the Mississippi River
they came into some very tall grass, some as high as 11
feet. Here it rained quite often and it was very humid.
As they traveled further west and approached the Rocky
Mountains, the grass became shorter. There was less rain
in the summer and the winters got colder. These were the
short-grass prairies.
Grassland biomes can be found in the middle latitudes,
in the interiors of continents. They can have either
moist continental climates or dry subtropical climates.
In Argentina, South America, the grasslands are known as
pampas. The climate there is humid and moist. Grasslands
in the southern hemisphere tend to get more
precipitation than those in the northern hemisphere, and
the grass tends to be the tall-grass variety.
There is a large area of grassland that stretch from the
Ukraine of Russia all the way to Siberia. This is a very
cold and dry climate because there is no nearby ocean to
get moisture from. Winds from the arctic aren't blocked
by any mountains either. These are known as the Russian
and Asian steppes.
In the winter, grassland temperatures can be as low as
-40° F, and in the summer it can be as high 70° F. There
are two real seasons: a growing season and a dormant
season. The growing season is when there is no frost and
plants can grow (which lasts from 100 to 175 days).
During the dormant (not growing) season nothing can grow
because its too cold.
In tropical and subtropical grasslands the length of the
growing season is determined by how long the rainy
season lasts. But in the temperate grasslands the length
of the growing season is determined by temperature.
Plants usually start growing when the daily temperature
reached about 50° F.
In temperate grasslands the average rainfall per year
ranges from 10-30 inches. In tropical and sub-tropical
grasslands the average rainfall per year ranges from
25-60 inches per year The amount of rainfall is very
important in determining which areas are grasslands
because it's hard for trees to compete with grasses in
places where the uppers layers of soil are moist during
part of the year but where deeper layer of soil are
always dry.
The most common types of plant life on the North
American prairie are Buffalo Grass, Sunflower, Crazy
Weed, Asters, Blazing Stars, Coneflowers, Goldenrods,
Clover, and Wild Indigos.
Some common animals in the grasslands are Coyotes,
Eagles, Bobcats, the Gray Wolf, Wild Turkey, Fly
Catcher, Canadian Geese, Crickets, Dung Beetle, Bison,
and Prairie Chicken.
by Sam M. 2000

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