In physical
geography, 'tundra' is an area where the
tree growth is hindered by low temperatures and short growing seasons. The term "tundra" comes from
Kildin Sami ''tūndâr'' 'uplands, tundra, treeless mountain tract'. There are two types of tundra: arctic tundra (which also occurs in Antarctica), and alpine tundra.
In tundra, the
vegetation is composed of dwarf shrubs,
sedges and
grasses,
mosses, and
lichens. Scattered trees grow in some tundra. The
ecotone (or ecological boundary region) between the tundra and the forest is known as the
tree line or timberline.
Arctic tundra

Map of arctic tundra

Tundra coastal vegetation in Alaska, during the summer
Arctic tundra occurs in the far
Northern Hemisphere, north of the
taiga belt. The word "tundra" usually refers only to the areas where the subsoil is
permafrost, or permanently frozen soil. (It may also refer to the treeless plain in general, so that northern
Sápmi would be included.) Permafrost tundra includes vast areas of northern
Russia and
Canada [2]. The polar tundra is home to several peoples who are mostly
nomadic reindeer herders, such as the
Nganasan and
Nenets in the permafrost area (and the
Sami in
Sápmi).
The arctic tundra is a vast area of stark landscape, which is frozen for much of the year. The soil there is frozen from 25-90 cm (9.8-35.4 inches) down, and it is impossible for trees to grow. Instead, bare and sometimes rocky land can only support low growing plants such as
moss,
heath, and
lichen. There are two main seasons, winter and summer, in the polar Tundra areas. During the winter it is very cold and dark, with the average temperature around -28 °C (-18.4°F), sometimes dipping as low as -50 °C (-58°F). However, extreme cold temperatures on the tundra do not drop as low as those experienced in taiga areas further south (for example, Russia's and Canada's lowest temperatures were recorded in locations south of the treeline). During the summer, temperatures rise somewhat, and the top layer of the permafrost melts, leaving the ground very soggy. The tundra is covered in marshes, lakes, bogs and streams during the warm months. Generally daytime temperatures during the summer rise to about 12°C (53.6°F) but can often drop to 3°C (37.4°F) or even below freezing. Arctic tundras are sometimes the subject of
habitat conservation programs. In Canada and Russia, many of these areas are protected through a national
Biodiversity Action Plan.
The tundra is a very windy area, with winds often blowing upwards at 48–97 km/h (30-60 miles an hour). However, in terms of precipitation, it is desert-like, with only about 15–25 cm (6–10 inches) falling per year (the summer is typically the season of maximum precipitation). During the summer, the permafrost thaws just enough to let plants grow and reproduce, but because the ground below this is frozen, the water cannot sink any lower, and so the water forms the lakes and marshes found during the summer months. Although precipitation is light, evaporation is also relatively minimal.
The
biodiversity of the tundras is low: 1,700 species of vascular plants and only 48 land mammals can be found, although thousands of insects and birds migrate there each year for the marshes. There are also a few fish species such as the flat fish. There are few species with large populations. Notable animals in the arctic tundra include
caribou (
reindeer),
musk ox,
arctic hare,
arctic fox,
snowy owl,
lemmings, and
polar bears (only the extreme north)
[3].
Due to the harsh climate of the arctic tundra, regions of this kind have seen little human activity, even though they are sometimes rich in natural resources such as
oil and
uranium. In recent times this has begun to change in
Alaska,
Russia, and some other parts of the world.
A severe threat to the tundras, specifically to the permafrost, is
global warming. Permafrost is essentially a frozen
bog - in the summer, only its surface layer melts. The melting of the permafrost in a given area on human time scales (decades or centuries) could radically change which species can survive there
[4].
Another concern is that about one third of the world's soil-bound
carbon is in
taiga and tundra areas. When the permafrost melts, it releases carbon in the form of
carbon dioxide, a
greenhouse gas. The effect has been observed in Alaska. In the
1970s the tundra was a carbon sink, but today, it is a carbon source
[5].
Antarctic tundra
Antarctic tundra occurs on
Antarctica and on several Antarctic and subantarctic islands, including
South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands and the
Kerguelen Islands. Antarctica is mostly too cold and dry to support vegetation, and most of the continent is covered by ice fields. However, some portions of the continent, particularly the
Antarctic Peninsula, have areas of rocky soil that support plant life. The flora presently consists of around 300-400 lichens, 100 mosses, 25
liverworts, and around 700 terrestrial and aquatic algae species, which live on the areas of exposed rock and soil around the shore of the continent. Antarctica's two flowering plant species, the
Antarctic hair grass (''Deschampsia antarctica'') and
Antarctic pearlwort (''Colobanthus quitensis''), are found on the northern and western parts of the Antarctic Peninsula
[6]
In contrast with the arctic tundra, the Antarctic tundra lacks a large mammal fauna, mostly due to its physical isolation from the other continents. Sea mammals and sea birds, including
seals and
penguins, inhabit areas near the shore, and some small mammals, like
rabbits and
cats, have been introduced by humans to some of the subantarctic islands.
The flora and fauna of Antarctica and the Antarctic Islands (south of 60° south latitude) are protected by the
Antarctic Treaty.
[7]
Tundra also occurs on
Tierra del Fuego and southern
Argentina.
[8] Notable plant and lichen species of this tundra include ''
Neuropogon aurantiaco'',
''Azorella lycopodioides'', ''
Marsippospermum reichei'', ''
Nardophyllum bryoides'', and ''
Bolax gummifera''.
Alpine tundra
Alpine tundra is an
ecozone that does not contain trees because it has high
altitude. Alpine tundra occurs at high enough altitude at any
latitude on Earth. Alpine tundra also lacks trees, but the lower part does not have
permafrost, and alpine soils are generally better drained than
permafrost soils. Alpine tundra transitions to subalpine forests below the
tree line; stunted forests occurring at the forest-tundra
ecotone are known as ''
Krummholz''. Alpine tundra occurs in an 'alpine zone'.
Alpine tundra does not map directly to specific
World Wide Fund for Nature ecoregions. Portions of
Montane grasslands and shrublands ecoregions include alpine tundra.
Because alpine tundra is located in various widely-separated regions of the Earth, there is no animal species found in all areas of alpine tundra.
Some animals of alpine tundra environments include the
Kea parrot,
marmot,
Mountain goats,
chinchilla, and
pika.
Large sections of the
Tibetan Plateau include alpine tundra.
''See also:''
Tree line
Climatic classification
Tundra climates ordinarily fit the
Köppen climate classification 'ET', signifying a local climate in which at least one month has an average temperature high enough to melt snow (0°C or 32°F), but no month with an average temperature in excess of (10°C/50°F). The cold limit generally meets the 'EF' climates of
permanent ice and snows; the warm-summer limit generally corresponds with the poleward or altitudinal limit of trees, where they grade into the
subarctic climates designated 'Dfd' and 'Dwd' (extreme winters as in parts of
Siberia), 'Dfc' typical in
Alaska,
Canada,
European Russia, and
Western Siberia (cold winters with months of freezing), or even 'Cfc' (no month colder than -3°C as in parts of
Iceland and southernmost
South America). Tundra climates as a rule are hostile to woody vegetation even where the winters are comparatively mild by polar standards, as in
Iceland.
Despite the potential diversity of climates in the 'ET' category involving precipitation, extreme temperatures, and relative wet and dry seasons, this category is rarely subdivided. Rainfall and snowfall are generally slight due to the limited capacity of the chilly atmosphere to hold water vapor, but as a rule
potential evapotranspiration is extremely low, allowing soggy terrain of swamps and bogs even in places that get precipitation typical of
deserts of lower and middle latitudes. Scarcity of lushness (by polar standards) of native vegetation of tundra regions depends more upon the severity of the temperatures than upon the scarcity or copiousness of precipitation.
References
1. Natural System of Wrangel Island Reserve
2. The Tundra Biome
3. Tundra
4. Climate Change Impacts:A Changing World?
5. Recent change of Arctic tundra ecosystems from a net carbon dioxide sink to a source, W. C. Oechel et al, , , Nature, 11 February 1993
6. Terrestrial Plants
7. Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty
8. Relationships between geomorphology and vegetation in subantarctic Andean tundra of Tierra del Fuego, , Lisa, Brancaleoni, Polar biology, 2003
See also
★
List of tundra ecoregions from the
WWF
★
Fellfield
★
Steppe-tundra
★
Forest-tundra
External links
★
WWF Tundra Ecoregions
★
The Arctic biome at Classroom of the Future
★
Arctic Feedbacks to Global Warming: Tundra Degradation in the Russian Arctic
★
British Antarctica Survey