TUNDRA BIODIVERSITY - ENVIRONMENT

News: Tundra diversity decline seen with sea ice disappearance

 

What's in the news?

       Tundra diversity, including plants, lichens and fungi, declined over a 15-year experiment in the Arctic due to warming temperatures mediated by the disappearance of sea ice.

 

Key takeaways:

       The findings offer support for the idea that encouraging herbivore diversity in the tundra could temper some of the impacts of climate warming.

 

Tundra Biome:

       Tundra means a “barren land”. Tundra ecosystems are treeless regions where environmental conditions are very severe.

 

Characteristics:

1. Harsh climatic conditions (cold and windy):

       Winters are long and very severe.

       Summers are cool and brief.

2. Precipitation - Scanty rainfall, precipitation is mainly in the form of snow.

3. Soil - Permafrost or soil that remains frozen all year round and is also scarce of nutrients.

4. Low biotic diversity

Types of Tundra:

Arctic Tundra

Alpine Tundra

Distribution: It extends as a continuous belt below polar ice cap and above tree line in the northern hemisphere. In the southern hemisphere, it is limited to some parts of Antarctica and Falkland islands.

Distribution: It is found at any latitude in a high altitude area.

Examples: Alaska, Canada, Russia, Greenland, Iceland, and Scandinavia.

Examples: The Himalayas, the Alps, Tibetan Plateau, The Caucasus Mountains, the American Cordillera etc.

Flora: Mosses, lichens, sedges, cotton grass, sedges, dwarf heath, willows, birches

Flora: Mosses, sedges, liverworts, grassy vegetation.

Fauna: Arctic foxes, polar bears, caribou, musk-ox.

Fauna: Pikas, marmots, mountain goat, reindeer, musk ox, arctic hare, caribous, lemmings and squirrel.