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(2008) Vegetation and land cover in the Arctic

Authors
Ahlenius H.
Source
UNEP/GRID-Arendal (11)
Type
W - Webpage (410)
Peer Review
1 - High (2301)
Audience
G - Generalist (1722)
Notes

Vegetation and land cover in the Arctic. The land mass in the Arctic – Greenland and parts of Canada, Alaska, Russia and the Nordic countries – surrounds the Arctic Ocean. In the low Arctic, down to the temperate regions, the taiga coniferous forests represents a vast band of deep forests. North of the taiga, the tundra of the Arctic – with low vegetation, shrubs and various degrees of permafrosts spreads out. Beyond the tundra, there might be barren regions with only rock and few plants. Greenland, Franz Josef Land, Novaya Zemlya and the northern islands of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago are covered in ice – glaciers and the Greenland ice sheet

World_link Resources online

Folder Categories
Impacts on Biomes and Habitats Plants
 
Tag_blue Keywords
Arctic vegetation land cover
 
 
Map Regions
Arctic
 

Entered by: Susana Fernandez, 2/2009

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