English, asked by hafizsaqib787878, 9 months ago

The... takes up the southern edge of the Sahara

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Answered by skyfall63
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The Savannas takes up the southern edge of the Sahara

Explanation:

  • The African Savanna Biome is a tropical pasture with hot temperatures all year round & the highest seasonal precipitation in the summer. The savannah is distinguished by grasses & small trees which do not shape a closed canopy enabling the sun to reach the ground.
  • In Africa near the equator, the largest savannas are found. One of Africans most popular savannas is Tanzania's Serengeti National Park, renowned for its huge population of wild beasts & zebras.
  • The Sahara is a desert on the continent of Africa. In the south the Sahara is bordered by the "Sahel", a tropical belt of dry savannah with a "summer rainy season" which ranges from east to west throughout Africa.
  • The Sahara is turned into a savannah grassland during the "wet or the green Sahara", and different fauna and flora are more prevalent.   The Sahara then returns to desert conditions during "inter-pluvial arid" times and the flora and fauna are compelled to  withdraw in the north to the Atlas Mountains & in West Africa to the south or in the Nile Valley to the East.

To know more

mention any four features of vegetation of the savannas - Brainly.in

https://brainly.in/question/4109186

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