6 Major Biomes of The World
6 Major Biomes of The World
6 Major Biomes of The World
Discussed!
Some of the major biomes of the world are as follows:
1. Desert Biome:
A desert usually has less than 25 cm of rain per year. Deserts are also
characterized by intense sunshine and very hot days (40°C and
upward) at least during summer; and the evaporation rate is very high.
Nights are generally cold, even in summers, and daily variations in
temperature reach extremes found in no other environment. Desert
life is usually well adapted to the dry weather.
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Most annual plants in the desert are small. They grow rapidly, bloom
and produce seeds all within a few days after a rain. Since the growing
season is greatly restricted, such plants live relatively small. Many
perennial desert plants have small leaves, or none at all, or their leaf
surfaces are often reduced to spines and thorns, minimizing water loss
by evaporation. Some have very long roots, reaching deeply buried
water. Others, like the cacti, absorb water rapidly after a rain and store
the same in spongy internal tissues.
However, some animals like the camel are adapted to extreme desert
conditions. Animals, which match their internal temperature to that of
their environment, the so-called cold-blooded animals, live more
easily in the desert. Desert animals are generally small, and they
include many burrowing forms, which may avoid the direct heat of the
Sun. In all deserts small rodents are numerous and almost all are
burrowers. The kangaroo rat (Dipodomys) is a desert animal
depending on bipedal, leaping locomotion. Snakes and lizards are
common in all deserts.
2. Grassland Biome:
In a grassland biome, the vegetation is dominated by grasses, which
may grow to about 2 m in the moist areas and 0.2 m in arid regions of
the grassland biome. It is not an exclusively tropical biome but
extends into much of the temperate zone as well. The more or less
synonymous terms “prairie” (in North America), “pampas” (South
America), “steppes” (in Central Asia) “puszta” (Hungary) and many
other regional terms underscore the wide distribution of this biome.
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The grassland ungulates are cursorial. Hares and rodent are also
common primary consumers in the grasslands. Many rodents, like the
prairie dogs and other ground squirrels or the pocket gophers, are
burrowing or fossorial animals. Australian grasslands have herbivores
very different in appearance and relationships but ecologically similar.
Trees in such forests are normally so crowded together that they form
a continuous overhead canopy of branches and foliage, which cuts off
practically all the sunlight, much of the rain water and wind. As a
result, the forest floor is very humid and quite dark and, therefore,
plants that require only a minimum of light populate it.
Apart from the forest trees themselves climbing Lianas and Epiphytes
are quite characteristic of the tropical rain forests. Rooted in the dark
forest floor, lianas are climbing vines, which use the standing trees as
supports upon which they climb toward the canopy where they spread
their leaves in the light. Epiphytes grow on other plants. Orchids,
ferns, and many other epiphytes form veritable aerial gardens among
the high branches of the trees of rain forests.
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The rest of the year the trees are bare. Common trees of the deciduous
forest are beech, tulip, sycamore, maple, oak, hickory, elm, poplar, and
birch. Chestnuts were also formerly common. A deciduous forest
differs from a rain forest in that trees are spaced at considerable
distance from one another and there are only few species of trees.
Compared with the hundreds of tree species in a rain forest, there may
be only about 10 or 20 in a deciduous forest.
The arboreal martens are locally as common here as in the taiga, and
the raccoon (absent in Eurasia) is especially abundant in deciduous
forests of North America. Throughout the world these forests are also
rich in tree squirrels. Among mammals of the North American
deciduous forests, over a third of the species are mainly arboreal.
Tree-nesting birds are also abundant and woodpeckers are
characteristic of this biome. The leaf and mold-covered forest floor
supports many species of invertebrates and fungi.
5. Taiga Biome:
North of the deciduous forests and the grasslands across northern
Europe, Siberia, and Canada, stretches the taiga (northern coniferous
forest biome). It is also called the boreal forest biome. This is a biome
of long, severe winters and of growing seasons limited largely to the
few months of summer. The vegetation is extremely frost-tolerant, as
temperatures may fall to – 60° C during the winter. The precipitation
is in the range of 40-100 cm. Hardy conifers, spruce in particular, are
most representative of the flora; and moose, wolves, and bears of the
fauna.
The taiga is largely a zone of forests, which differ from other types of
forests in that they usually consist of single species of coniferous tree.
Thus, over a large area, spruce, for example, may be the only kind of
tree present. Among other coniferous trees, alder, birch, and juniper
thickets are common. They might be found in an adjacent equally
large area. Many of the larger herbivorous vertebrates, such as the
moose (elk), snowshoe hare, and grouse depend on broad leaved
developmental communities of spruce forest.
The seeds of conifers provide important food for many animals such as
squirrels, siskins, and crossbills. In taiga, seasonal periodicity is
pronounced and populations tend to oscillate. The snowshoe hare-lynx
cycles are classic examples. Smaller mammals are much more varied
than in the tundra. Black bears, wolves, and martens are more
common in this biome that elsewhere.
Fishers, wolverines, lynex and some rodents such as the northern vole
are practically confined to it. Squirrels and birds also thrive in
coniferous forests. Most of the birds here, however, are summer
breeders and migrate southward in the autumn. The many species of
insects remain dormant during the severe winters.
6. Tundra Biome:
In Asia, Europe, and North America a vast northern zone encircling
the Arctic Ocean is known as the tundra. This biome lies north of the
taiga. The tundra has the arctic climate, which is cold, and there may
be continuous night during the winter season and continuous daylight,
of comparatively low intensity, during the summer. Some distance
below the surface, the ground is permanently frozen.
This is called permafrost. Above the ground, frost can form even
during the summer; plants often freeze solid and remain dormant up
to the growing season. The latter is very brief, as in the deserts; but in
the tundra the chief limiting factor is temperature, and not water
supply. However, alpine tundra does not contain permafrost.
However, the life does not end at the northern margin of the tundra
but extends farther into the ice and bleak rock of the soilless polar
region. Polar life is almost exclusively animal, and it is not really
terrestrial in any way but is based on the sea {e.g. walrus, seals,
penguins).