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The Tundra
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Tundra Located north of the Arctic Circle
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Tundra Frigid temperatures in the winter - with little or no sunlight.
Temperatures range from 0 to 10 C year round! Precipitation less than 100 mm (10 cm) per year The frozen desert!
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Summer in the tundra A few weeks above freezing – short summers!
24 hours of daylight/day Plants must act fast!
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Tundra - conditions Only the top few centimeters of soil thaw
Underneath = permafrost, a layer of soil that is permanently frozen Trees cannot grow here
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Tundra Dominated by tough grasses, shrubs, lichens and herbs.
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Tundra Dotted with bogs and swamps during summer
Wet areas = breeding grounds for swarming insects such as……..
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Mosquitoes
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Blackflies
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And the birds that eat them
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And the birds that eat other things
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Vegetation of the Tundra
Mosses and lichens Grow without soil
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Vegetation - adaptations
Plants– very shallow roots Help anchor them against the icy winds
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Vegetation of the Tundra
Examples: Campion and gentian
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Vegetation of the Tundra
Grow close to the ground Absorb heat from the soil Keeps out of the wind
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Woody plants and perennials
Willow and juniper – but in dwarf forms Grow flat or along the ground
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Animals of the Tundra Abundant food – especially insects
NO reptiles or amphibians!
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Animal adaptations Burrow underground Camouflage Well insulated!
Avoid bad conditions by Migration Hibernation
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The tundra swan
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The tundra swan Migrates : Breeds in the tundra during the summer
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Animals of the Tundra Caribou
Migrate throughout the tundra in search of food and water
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Animals of the Tundra Hunters - wolves, ermine, fox, owl – camouflage!
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Musk ox
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Musk ox Grows two layers of fur – one short and one long
Air gets trapped in the short layer of fur and is warmed by the body The trapped air acts as insulation The long fur protects against wind and water
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Musk ox Layer of fat Hooves that are large and hard to break through ice.
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The Musk Ox – leftover from the ice age
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The Musk Ox (from Planet Earth)
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lemmings Small rodents Can give birth every 5 weeks!
Live in burrows under or in the snow in winter
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lemmings Food for plenty of predators! ……..like the ermine
But – don’t always believe what you hear!
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lemmings
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Threats to the Tundra One of the most fragile biomes
Relatively simple food chains – easy to disrupt Land is easily damaged and slow to recover
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Oil – Prudhoe Bay in northern Alaska
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Oil exploration Transportation damages the permafrost
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Pollution Caused by spills, leaks of oil or other toxic materials
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