Asia - plant geography
Farthest to the north, in Siberia, is the Arctic tundra with
species-poor heaths and bogs. Further south is the gradual forest
tundra (taiga) and coniferous forest. In Russia and Western Siberia
the northern forest border is formed by an eastern breed of spruce
and in Eastern Siberia by larch.
The boreal coniferous forest grows in a wide belt in central
Siberia between approximately 45 ° and 70 ° and is dominated by
spruce, pine, birch, elm and willow. The growth period is about
three to five months and the annual rainfall is 350-700 mm;
approximately 2/3 of the zone have permafrost,
and large areas are covered by the marshes. The flora is uniform and
relatively species-poor.

Deciduous forest occurs in Western Siberia as a mosaic between
the coniferous forest in the north and the steppe in the south, but
is found especially in the temperate parts of East Asia, i.e. in
central and northeastern China and in most of Japan. These forests
are richer in species than similar deciduous forests in Europe and
North America, but are often dominated by species from the same
genera, such as oak, chestnut, elm, ash, walnut, maple and linden. A
number of genera, such as hickory, trumpet and tulip tree, occur in
East Asia and North America, but disappeared from Europe during the
ice ages. Many ornamental shrubs originate from the East Asian
deciduous forest area, e.g. species of rose, cherry, lilac,
Forsythia and Spiraea. To the north and in mountainous areas is a
larger tinge of conifers. Above the tree line, species-rich alpine
meadows are found in Japan and especially in China.
In southern Japan and the southern part of central China, the
deciduous forests are becoming species-rich, evergreen forests with
species from the families Lauraceae (laurel), Theaceae (tea),
Magnoliaceae (magnolia) and Hammamelidaceae (witch hazel). Among the
bare-seeded plants, some peculiar "living fossils" occur: Ginkgo
(temple tree) and Metasequoia (spruce). Bamboo species can dominate
locally. China is believed to have approximately 30,000 species of
seedlings or almost three times as many as Europe. In most of the
lowlands, the natural vegetation has been replaced by cultivated
areas.
The Pontic-Central Asian region includes very large areas of
steppe, semi-desert and desert from southern Ukraine and Russia
through the Iranian highlands and Central Asia to the Pamir, Tibet
and Gobi. The southern Russian black soil areas were previously
characterized by grass steppes, which were often dominated by
feather grass and had a rich spring flowering of bulbous plants, but
they are now for the most part cultivated. The Iranian highlands and
adjacent areas are dominated by steppes and semi-deserts with many
thorny cushion plants in genera such as Cousinia and Astragalus. The
area is relatively rich in species, e.g. there are approximately
9000 species of seedlings in Iran alone. The plateaus of the Pamir,
Tibet, and Gobi are dry and barren; the species-poor vegetation is
characterized by grasses, wormwood and species in the saltwort
family. This family is also common in the salt-affected lowland
areas north of the Caspian Sea.
In the eastern Himalayas (Sikkim), mountain rainforest grows at
altitudes between approximately 900 and 2000 m; it contains both
tropical elements such as screw palms and bamboo and northern
temperate genera such as Castanopsis and Lithocarpus (from the beech
family). The rainforest is replaced by a coniferous forest zone and
in the fog zone (approximately 2600 to 4000 m) by Rhododendron
scrub. In the alpine area there is a rich meadow vegetation with,
for example, many species of cow dung and mountain heaths with low
shrubs of barberry, juniper and species in the heather family. The
vegetation boundary is about 5700 m above sea level.
According to
countryaah,
large parts of Southeast Asia are characterized by rainforests and
monsoon forests, which are among the Earth's most species-rich
vegetation types. Important families are the screw palms, the ginger
family, the dipterocarpus family and the fig family. The area is
very rich in orchids, especially epiphytic species. Among epiphytic
rainforest plants is also found the insectivorous Nepenthes. Pepper,
cinnamon, mango, breadfruit and sago palm originate from here, and
so do sugar cane and coconut palm. In drier areas, such as in the
interior of Thailand, forests are deciduous; here grows teak. In the
Philippines and New Guinea there is a certain Australian touch, e.g.
Casuarina (iron wood) and Eucalyptus, on high mountains also species
from genera that usually occur in northern temperate regions, e.g.
buttercups and starlings. Along the Malabar coast of India is
tropical rainforest with bamboo and palm trees. In large parts of
the Indian Peninsula, the original vegetation is savannah-like with
acacias and other genera in the pea flower family; in the northwest
there are desert-like areas.
Asia - Climate
Large parts of Asia are far from the sea, and the continent is
characterized by a continental climate with very large differences
between summer and winter. This is especially true of Siberia, but
also large parts of China and the rest of Central Asia; West Asia
also has a continental climate. In South Asia, it is hot all year
round, and seasonal differences are manifested by precipitation,
rainy season and dry season. Around the equator there are areas
completely without seasons (e.g. Singapore).
In winter, it is extremely cold in Siberia and Central Asia, and
every winter a large and stable high pressure is formed here. In
summer it is hot and the air pressure is usually low. These
differences in air pressure are the cause of the winds'
characteristic change with the seasons: In summer, humid winds blow
in over the continent, the summer monsoon, and in winter dry winds
blow from the high pressure over the sea, the winter monsoon (see
monsoon). It is especially southern and eastern Asia from India to
Japan that is affected by these winds ("Monsoon Asia").
The temperature variations in Asia are very large. The
northeastern regions of Siberia are some of the coldest in the world
in winter; the average January temperature in Ojmjakon is -50 °C. In
the large coniferous forest area, the winter temperatures are -10 °C
to -30 °C, and here there are short but warm summers. In the
tropical regions of South Asia it is 25-30 °C most of the year, and
in the Middle East some of the world's highest temperatures reach
above 50 ° C.
There are also large differences in precipitation, both the
average annual precipitation and the distribution in months. The
world's rainiest region is located in Monsoon Asia. Cherrapunji in
the Indian state of Meghalaya receives an average of 11,437 mm per
year. This heavy rainfall falls in prolonged cloudbursts from April
to August, while December and January are almost dry. Part of the
rain falls in connection with powerful tropical cyclones, which form
over the warm oceans and hit the coastal landscapes with destructive
force. Almost every year, many people die in Bangladesh during the
floods; the rest of Monsoon Asia is also regularly affected by these
storms. The inland plateaus in eastern China, on the other hand, lie
in rain, and here fall below 100 mm per year; The Himalayan
mountains prevent the summer monsoon from reaching.
The effect of the thermal highs and lows is amplified by the
high-lying jet streams. Eastward equatorial jet streams contribute
some of the energy that triggers the very powerful summer monsoon,
and in winter the shift of the global circulation pattern to the
south causes subtropical western jet streams to form branches north
and south of the Himalayan-Tibet. East of the highlands, they
converge and strong dynamic high pressures occur, which together
with the energy from the general thermal winter high pressure over
the continent results in the dry NE monsoon.
Asia - wildlife
The majority of Asia, together with Europe, is the Palaearctic
region. India and Baghdad with surrounding islands make up the
Oriental region, while the southwestern part of the Arabian
Peninsula belongs to the Afrotropic region. In the Palaearctic part
of Asia, there are no major endemic groups due to the contact with
Europe - and in earlier geological periods also with North America.
Along the Arctic coast there are several species of auks in large
numbers. Here also live walruses and polar bears, which together
with the polar fox and reindeer of the tundra are widespread
throughout the North Pole (circumpolar). The bird life on the tundra
is poor in species. In the taiga live wolves, brown bears and
wolverines, mammals, which are also found in northern Europe, but in
addition there are sable. Of birds, bull and lapland owl typical.
In the steppe and desert areas south of the taiga live steppe
antelopes (saiga), steppe marmots, steppe squirrels and hamsters as
well as birds such as stairs, larks and steppe eagles. Asia's
mountain ranges house numerous animal species within many animal
groups, see Himalayas and the Caucasus.
In the deciduous forests of East Asia, the oriental fauna is
beginning to make a serious impact with e.g. leopard and tiger; but
the boundary between the Palaearctic and the Oriental region is
fluid. In the mountains of northern Thailand, there are steelworms
and bumble bees, which are typical representatives of the
Palaearctic region, while the wildlife down in the valleys is
distinctly oriental. Further west, the Himalayas draw a sharp
boundary between the two regions.
In its species composition, the oriental part of Asia's fauna is
clearly different from the Palaearctic, but it has many similarities
with the afrotropic fauna; Among the common animal groups that are
not found elsewhere are rhinos, elephants, hyenas, rhinoceros birds
and sunbirds. The species richness of South Asia's rainforests is
colossal, surpassed only by the fauna of South American forests. |