1 / 18

Climate Zones and Vegetation

Climate Zones and Vegetation. Ch. 2, Sec. 3 Pp. 61-68. Tropical Climates. Area along equator from 23½° N to 23½° S 2 types – rainforest and savannah Rainforest receives 100 inches of rain per year Savannah has wet season and dry season. Tropical Rain Forest Climate.

ginny
Télécharger la présentation

Climate Zones and Vegetation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Climate Zones and Vegetation Ch. 2, Sec. 3 Pp. 61-68

  2. Tropical Climates • Area along equator from 23½° N to 23½° S • 2 types – rainforest and savannah • Rainforest receives 100 inches of rain per year • Savannah has wet season and dry season

  3. Tropical Rain Forest Climate • Year-round rain in some parts • Millions of kinds of plants and animals • Thick forest canopy means little sunlight reaches the forest floor • Largest rain forest is in the Amazon River basin

  4. Tropical Savanna Climate • Southern India and eastern Africa • Rain only falls a few months each year (wet season) • Savannas are broad grasslands with few trees

  5. Mid-Latitude Climates • Most of the world’s people live here • Variety of climates because of a mix of air masses (warm from the Tropics and cool from the polar region) • Temperatures change with the seasons

  6. Marine West Coast Climate • Winters are rainy and mild, summers are cool • Deciduous (lose leaves in fall) and coniferous (evergreen with cones and needles) thrive here

  7. Mediterranean Climate • Mild, rainy winter and hot, dry summers • Chaparral (scrubs) and short trees grow here

  8. Humid Continental Climate • Inland North America, Europe, or Asia • Long, cold, and snowy winters • Short, very hot summers • Deciduous trees and vast grasslands

  9. Humid Subtropical Climate • Rainfall throughout the year, but heaviest during hot, humid summer • Winters are short and mild • Oaks, magnolias, and palms grow here

  10. High Latitude Climates • Mostly in high latitudes of each hemisphere • Generally cold, but some are more severely cold than others.

  11. Subarctic Climates • Very few people live here • Very cold and bitter winters • Temperatures do rise above freezing during summer • Taiga (huge evergreen forests) grow here

  12. Tundra Climates • Closer to the poles • Vast, treeless plains • Harsh and dry • Permafrost – permanently frozen ground • No trees, only sturdy grasses and low bushes

  13. Ice Cap Climate • Antarctica and Greenland • Monthly temperatures average below freezing • No vegetation, but lichens (fungus-like plants and mosses) can live on rocks

  14. Dry Climates • Receive little or no rainfall • Extremely hot during the day and very cold at night • Can be found at any latitude

  15. Desert Climate • Receive less than 10 inches of rain per year • Scattered plants, like scrub and cacti

  16. Steppe Climate • Dry grassland and prairies • Can surround deserts • Russian word meaning “treeless plain” • 10-20 inches of rain per year • Bushes and short grasses

  17. Highland Climate • Cool to very cold, even on the equator • Timberline – last elevation where trees can grow

More Related