Altai montane forest and forest steppe


The Altai montane forest and forest steppe ecoregion covers patches of the subalpine forest belt on the Altai Mountains, crossing the border region where Russia, Kazakhstan, Mongolia and China meet. The region has high biodiversity, as it is located in transition zones between different ecoregions, altitudes, and climate zones. It is in the Palearctic realm, with a Cold semi-arid climate. It covers.

Location and description

The ecoregion stretches 1,500 km, from the Belukh Range of the Altai mountains on the Russia-Kazakhstan border in the northwest, to the Gobi-Altai in Mongolia to the southeast. The ecoregion slices through the Altai at the sub-alpine elevations, leaving out the alpine peaks above, and the lakes and valleys below. To the south of the Altai are the cold, arid regions of central Asia, and to the north are the forests and wetlands of Siberia.

Climate

Because of its altitude distance from the ocean, the ecoregion has a cold semi-arid climate. This indicates a local climate characterized by cool summers, and cold, dry winters. These climate regions tend to be found at higher elevations in the middle of continents, with wide differences between day and night temperatures.

Flora

Bands of conifer forests tend to be found on the cooler, wetter northern slopes of the mountains, with desert-steppe vegetation more predominant on the southern slopes. The forests in the southeast of the region include larch and larch-cedar stands. Mid-elevation grasses are dominated by tundra fescue and prairie junegrass. Desert-steppe vegetation in the south often features European feather grass, wild onion, Anabasis breviloa, and fringed sagebrush. This is only a representative list, however, as the biodiversity in the area is very high. The World Wildlife Federation notes that the endemism of the area is higher than that of the Pyrenees or Alps.

Fauna

As a meeting zone of forest species from the north, and southern species from the south, the Altai mid-elevations exhibits high numbers of species. The most numerous of the southern small mammals are the Gray marmot, the Tarbagan marmot, and Lagomorpha. The area is home to several globally threatened species, such as the Snow leopard.

Protections

Officially protected areas in the ecoregion include: