Biomes are around the hold world. They are very important to care of them, so we can admired and share with others...
Tropical Rain Forest
- The trees are very tall and of a great variety of species. One rarely finds two trees of the same species growing close to one another.
- The vegetation is so dense that little light reaches the forest floor.
- Most of the plants are evergreen.
- The branches of the trees are festooned with vines and epiphytes.
The greenness of the tropical rain forest suggests a high net productivity, but this is deceptive. They are two problems:
- The high rainfall leaches soil minerals below the reach of plant roots.
- The warmth and moisture cause rapid decay so little humus is added to the soil.
Exceeds all the other biomes in the diversity of its animals as well as plants. Most of the animals – mammals, reptiles, birds, insects — live in the trees. The closest thing to a tropical rain forest in the continental United States are the little wooded "islands" found scattered through the Everglades in the southern tip of Florida. Their existence depends on the fact that it never freezes, and they often escape the fires that periodically sweep the Everglades.
Taiga is named after the biome in Russia.
- It is a land dominated by conifers.
- It is populated by an even more limited variety of plants and animals than is the temperate deciduous forest.
- In North America, the moose is such a typical member that it has led to the name: "spruce-moose" biome.
- Before the long, snowy winter sets in, many of the mammals hibernate, and many of the birds migrate south.
- Although the long days of summer permit plants to grow luxuriantly, net productivity is low.
It is located at extreme latitudes, the trees of the taiga become stunted by the austerity of the subarctic climate. They disappear leaving a land of bogs and lakes.
- The climate is so cold in winter that even the long days of summer are unable to thaw the permafrost beneath the surface layers of soil.
- Sphagnum moss, a wide variety of lichens, and some grasses and fast-growing annuals dominate the landscape during the short growing season.
- Caribou feed on this growth as do vast numbers of insects.
- Swarms of migrating birds, especially waterfowl, invade the tundra in the summer to raise their young, feeding them on a large variety of aquatic invertebrates and vertebrates.
- As the brief arctic summer draws to a close, the birds fly south, and all but a few of the permanent residents, in one way or another, prepare themselves to spend the winter in a dormant state.
1 comentario:
Me gusta el diseƱo, pero las fotos son muy comunes, ya que aparecen las mismas en algunos de los otros bloggers, deverian de ser mas variadas las fotos...
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