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Taiga Biome

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Taiga Biome By: Alyssa McCartt and Jenna McCarty General Climate The taiga is a wet subarctic forest that begins where the Tundra ends. The taiga climate is dominated ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Taiga Biome


1
Taiga Biome
  • By Alyssa McCartt and
  • Jenna McCarty

2
General Climate
  • The taiga is a wet subarctic forest that begins
    where the Tundra ends. The taiga climate is
    dominated by cold arctic air. Because of earth's
    tilt, the taiga is turned away from the sun in
    the winter. Therefore, less of the sun's
    radiation reaches the ground to warm it up.
  • Winters are long, cold and dark with lots of snow
    that lasts for six to seven months. Summer is a
    rainy, hot and short season in the taiga when
    the daylight can be up to 20 hours long. Fall is
    the shortest season and spring brings flowers,
    the frozen ponds melt, and
  • the animals come out from hibernation.

3
General Climate
  • The taiga climate has an average annual rainfall
    of 12 - 33 inches. The average precipitation for
    the summer is between 10-20 inches. The average
    precipitation for the winter is between 20-40
    inches. The type of precipitation that falls in
    the taiga climate are rain in summer andmostly
    snow in winter.
  • Winter's LOW is -65F.Winter's HIGH is 30
    F.Summer's LOW is 30 F.Summer's HIGH is 70 F.
  • The latitude range is between 50-60 North
    latitude.

4
Flora
  • There are two major types of taiga, closed
    forest, consisting of many closely-spaced trees
    with mossy ground cover, and lichen woodland,
    with trees that are farther-spaced and lichen
    ground cover.
  • The forests of the taiga are coniferous,
    dominated by larch, spruce, fir, and pine.
    Evergreen species in the taiga (spruce, fir, and
    pine) have a number of adaptations specifically
    for survival in harsh taiga winters, though
    larch, the most cold-tolerant of all trees, is
    deciduous. Jack Pine have cones which only open
    to release their seed after a fire, dispersing
    their seeds onto the newly cleared ground.

5
Fauna
  • Some types of adaptations in the animals are
    migration, heavier coats of fur, and some change
    color, such as the snow-shoe rabbit. Mice and
    moles live in tunnels under the snow. Some
    animals that live in the taiga are bears, badger,
    beavers, reindeer, foxes, wolverine and
    squirrels. Many birds migrate to the taiga during
    the spring because there are so many insects to
    feed on after the snow melts.

6
Wheres the Taiga Biome located?
7
Plants in the Taiga
  • White Poplar
  • Eastern Red Cedar
  • Jack Pine
  • White Spruce
  • Black Spruce

8
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9
Animals in the Taiga
  • Snowshoe Hare
  • River Otter
  • Gray Wolf
  • Bald Eagle
  • Red-Tailed Hawk
  • Great Gray Owl
  • Lake Whitefish
  • Northern Pike
  • Lake Trout
  • Round Whitefish

10
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11
Adaptations
  • Animal adaptations
  • Most animals migrate to warmer climates once the
    cold weather climates set in.
  • Some animals have adapted by hibernating when
    temperatures drop.
  • Other animals have adapted by producing a layer
    of insulating feathers or fur to protect them
    from the cold.
  • Plant Adaptations
  • Evergreens use a wide variety of physical
    adaptations. Some of these adaptations include
    their shape, leaf type, root system, and color.
  • Lichens and mosses, but most plants are
    coniferous trees like Pine, White Spruce,
    Hemlock, and Douglas fir.
  • There are not a lot of species of plants in the
    taiga because of the harsh conditions.

12
Dominant Animals
  • Lynx---Colored Fox---Great Grey Owl---Red-Tailed
    Hawk---Least Weasel.

13
FOOD WEB of the TAIGA Lynx Snowshoe
Hare Canopy tree seeds Cream-Colored
Fox Grouse Tall shrubs Great Grey
Owl Voles Sedges Red-Tailed Hawk Red
Squirrels Medium shrubs Least Weasel Crossbills
Small trees
14
References
  • Day, Trevor.Biomes of the Earth.Taiga.New
    YorkInfobase Publishing,2006.Print.
  • Sayre, April Pulley.Taiga.Brookfield,
    ConnecticutThe Millbrook Press, Inc.,1994.Print.
  • http//www.rbcarlton.com/forestadaptations.htm
  • http//farm2.static.flickr.com/1070/531826509_1542
    5b82c5.jpg
  • http// www.blueplanetbiomes.org/taiga.htm
  • http//www.cwru.edu/artsci/engl/VSALM/mod/whipple/
    site/draft_2/images/eurasian_lynx.jpg
    farm2.static.flickr.com/1070/531826509_15425b82c5.
    jpg
  • http//www.birds-of-denmark.dk/images/lapugle234af
    ront.jpg
  • http//www.birds-of-denmark.dk/images/lapugle234af
    ront.jpg
  • http//www.mulder-natuurlijk.nl/Siberia20200520e
    ngels.htm
  • http//wilds.mb.ca/taiga/tbsfaq.html
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