Resource: Arctic Tundra
Media Type:
QuickTime Video
Length: 4m 56s
Size: 7.4 MB
Teachers' Domain, Arctic Tundra, published September 26, 2003, retrieved on ,
http://www.teachersdomain.org/resource/tdc02.sci.life.eco.arctic/
- Background Essay
- Questions for Discussion
- Standards
Ice shapes the landscape of the tundra biome and, somewhat paradoxically, allows for far more plant life to grow in this environment than would otherwise be possible. Precipitation levels in the Arctic (six to ten inches annually) are equivalent to those found in the world's deserts. Thus, water, even in summer, is at a premium. However, because of a permanently frozen underground layer called permafrost, water that falls to the ground as precipitation collects on the surface, rather than moving quickly through the soil and out of reach. This allows a wealth of plants to exist even in the driest parts of the Arctic.
There are about seventeen hundred species of plants in the Arctic, including grasses, mosses, herbaceous plants, and shrubs. All of these have shallow root systems, tend to grow low to the ground, and generally reproduce by budding rather than with flowers and seeds. This last characteristic causes many tundra biome plants to grow in clumps and, in some cases, to become reproductively isolated from related clumps growing nearby.
Indeed, scientists have found significant genetic variation between members of the same species of plant growing within a mile of one another. It is thought that these variations -- which probably correspond to differences in microclimate -- provide a long-term survival benefit, equipping the species as a whole with adaptations that allow at least some individuals to withstand dramatic climate shifts.
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Source: Wild Europe: "Wild Arctic"
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