The Tropical Climate
A savanna is a rolling grassland scattered with
shrubs and isolated trees, which can be found between a
tropical rainforest and desert biome. Not enough rain
falls on a savanna to support forests. Savannas are also
known as tropical grasslands. They are found in a wide
band on either side of the equator on the edges of
tropical rainforests.
Savannas have warm temperature year round. There are
actually two very different seasons in a savanna; a very
long dry season (winter), and a very wet season
(summer). In the dry season only an average of about 4
inches of rain falls. Between December and February no
rain will fall at all. Oddly enough, it is actually a
little cooler during this dry season. But don't expect
sweater weather; it is still around 70° F.
In the summer there is lots of rain. In Africa the
monsoon rains begin in May. An average of 15 to 25
inches of rain falls during this time. It gets hot and
very humid during the rainy season. Every day the hot,
humid air rises off the ground and collides with cooler
air above and turns into rain. In the afternoons on the
summer savanna the rains pour down for hours. African
savannas have large herds of grazing and browsing hoofed
animals. Each animal has a specialized eating habit that
reduces compitition for food.
There are several different types of savannas around the
world. The savannas we are most familiar with are the
East African savannas covered with acacia trees. The
Serengeti Plains of Tanzania are some of the most well
known. Here animals like lions, zebras, elephants, and
giraffes and many types of ungulates(animals with
hooves) graze and hunt. Many large grass-eating mammals
(herbivores) can survive here because they can move
around and eat the plentiful grasses. There are also
lots of carnivores (meat eaters) who eat them in turn.
South America also has savannas, but there are very few
species that exist only on this savanna. In Brazil,
Colombia, and Venezuela, savannas occupy some 2.5
million square kilometers, an area about one-quarter the
size of Canada. Animals from the neighboring biomes kind
of spill into this savanna. The Llanos of the Orinoco
basin of Venezuela and Columbia is flooded annually by
the Orinoco River. Plants have adapted to growing for
long periods in standing water. The capybara and marsh
deer have adapted themselves to a semi-aquatic life.
Brazil's cerrado is an open woodland of short twisted
trees. The diversity of animals is very great here, with
several plants and animals that don't exist anywhere
else on earth.
There is also a savanna in northern Australia.
Eucalyptus trees take the place of acacias in the
Australian savanna. There are many species of kangaroos
in this savanna but not too much diversity of different
animals
Plants of the savannas are highly specialized to grow in
this environment of long periods of drought. They have
long tap roots that can reach the deep water table,
thick bark to resist annual fires, trunks that can store
water, and leaves that drop of during the winter to
conserve water. The grasses have adaptations that
discourage animals from grazing on them; some grasses
are too sharp or bitter tasting for some animals, but
not others, to eat. The side benefit of this is that
every species of animal has something to eat. Different
species will also eat different parts of the grass. Many
grasses grow from the bottom up, so that the growth
tissue doesn't get damaged by grazers. Many plants of
the savanna also have storage organs like bulbs and
corms for making it though the dry season.
Most of the animals on the savanna have long legs or
wings to be able to go on long migrations. Many burrow
under ground to avoid the heat or raise their young. The
savanna is a perfect place for birds of prey like hawks
and buzzards. The wide, open plain provides them with a
clear view of their prey, hot air updrafts keep them
soaring, and there is the occasional tree to rest on or
nest in. Animals don't sweat to lose body heat, so they
lose it through panting or through large areas of
exposed skin, or ears, like those of the elephant.
The savanna has a large range of highly specialized
plants and animals. They all depend on the each other to
keep the environment in balance. There are over 40
different species of hoofed mammals that live on the
savannas of Africa. Up to 16 different species of
browsers (those who eat leaves of trees) and grazers can
coexist in one area. They do this by having their own
food preferences, browsing/grazing at different heights,
time of day or year to use a given area, and different
places to go during the dry season.
These different herbivores provide a wide range of food
for carnivores, like lions, leopards, cheetahs, jackals
and hyenas. Each species has its own preference, making
it possible to live side by side and not be in
competition for food.
In many parts of the savannas of Africa people have
started using it to graze their cattle and goats. They
don't move around and soon the grasses are completely
eaten up. With no vegetation, the savanna turns into a
desert. Huge areas of savanna are lost to the Sahara
desert every year because of overgrazing and farming.

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