Geography, asked by prikanwaaar, 1 year ago

What is the difference between savanna and temperate grassland?

Answers

Answered by Arkhos666
0

Difference Between Savana And Temperate Grasslands :-

SAVANA

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TEMPERATE GRASSLAND

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Answered by avianna
1

HERE'S UR ANSWER MATE

TEMPERATE GRASSLANDS

A “grassland” comes by its name honestly: It’s an ecosystem dominated by grasses, although non-woody plants such as sedges and a wide variety of forbs may be major components as well. There are many synonyms used for this biome: “steppe,” for instance – although woody plants prevail in shrub-steppe communities – and “prairie,” a French-derived term primarily used in North America. Different grassland biomes cover the most acreage in the tropics and subtropics as well as temperate regions under the influence of midlatitude-steppe climates. Where trees or shrubs exist in a true grassland, they tend to be highly localized along rivers or streams, for example, or on isolated outcrops or moist hillsides.

SAVANNA

The most widely accepted modern use of the term “savanna” refers to grassy ecosystems with a significant component of woody-plant cover, either shrubs or trees. Ecologists may refer to “shrub savannas” or “bush savannas” vs. “tree savannas.” These may grow widely scattered or quite closely spaced, but if tree canopies overlap the “savanna” it is a woodland. Although people commonly think of savannas in their tropical or subtropical form – those of sub-Saharan Africa, for example, or of portions of the South American llanos – these communities also exist in a wide variety of ecological settings in temperate zones. Pine or oak savannas, for example, form the transition between forest and grassland in parts of North America or flourish in countrysides regularly impacted by wildfire.

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