Geography, asked by Srinithyas, 11 months ago

Hi guys!!!!! Answer the following please.
1. Explain the different types of forests.

2.What are the characteristics of the tropical evergreen forest?

3.What are the features of tropical grassland

Please answer all of them. plz .......

Answers

Answered by shaina8461
1
1) Forests cover 1/3 of the earth’s surface and contain an estimated 3 trillion trees. Forests exist in dry, wet, bitterly cold, and swelteringly hot climates. These different forests all have special characteristics that allow them to thrive in their particular climate.

There are three major forest zones that are separated according to their distance from the equator. These are:

tropical,
temperate,and 
boreal forests 


Tropical forests



Tropical rain forests grow around the equator in South America, Africa, and Southeast Asia. They have the highest species diversity per area in the world, containing millions of different species. Even though they cover only a small part of the earth, they house at least one half of all species. The temperature is stable year-round, around 27°C (60° Fahrenheit). As you can tell from the name, it rains a lot in these forests. Most tropical forests receive at least 200 cm (80 inches) of rain in a year. Tropical forests generally have a rainy and dry season.

Different subcategories within tropical rain forests

Evergreen: rain year-round, no dry season
Seasonal: vegetation evergreen, short dry season
Dry: long dry season in which trees lose leaves
Montane: most precipitation from mist or fog that rises (also called cloud forests), mostly conifers
Tropical and subtropical coniferous: dry and warm climate with conifers adapted to variable weather
Sub-tropical: north and south of tropical forests, trees adapted to resist summer drought

Temperate forests

Temperate forests occur in the next latitude ring, in North America, northeastern Asia, and Europe. There are four well-defined seasons in this zone including winter. In general, the temperature ranges from -30 to 30°C (-22 to 86 F) and the forests receive 75-150 cm (30-60 in) of precipitation per year. Deciduous — or leaf-shedding — trees make up a large proportion of the tree composition in addition to some coniferous trees such as pines and firs. The decaying fallen leaves and moderate temperatures combine to create fertile soil. On average, there are 3-4 tree species per square km. Common tree species are oak, beech, maple, elm, birch, willow, and hickory trees. Common animals that live in the forest are squirrels, rabbits, birds, deer, wolves, foxes, and bears. They are adapted to both cold winters and warm summer weather.


Boreal forests

Boreal forests, also called taiga, are found between 50 and 60 degree of latitude in the sub-Arctic zone. This area contains Siberia, Scandinavia, Alaska, and Canada. Trees are coniferous and evergreen.


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