Great Lakes Basin desert steppe


The Great Lakes Basin desert steppe ecoregion covers the enclosed basin centered on Uvs Lake, a saline, endorheic basin in northwestern Mongolia. A portion of the ecoregion stretches across the region into Russia. The lake district is important for migrating birds, waterfowl, and seabirds. The ecoregion is in the Palearctic realm and the deserts and xeric shrublands biome. It has an area of.

Location and description

The ecoregion stretches approximately 500 km west to east, and 600 km north to south, to encompass the Uvs Lake Basin in northwestern Mongolia and borderlands in Russia. Aside from the lakes, the terrain is gently cloping clay and gravel, mostly at elevations of 700 meters to 2,000 meters. The mountains on the margins reach up to above sea level. Intersperse are tracts of bare sand, bogs, and rock outcrops.

Climate

The climate of the ecoregion is cool semi-arid. This climate is characterized by high variation in temperature, both daily and seasonally; with low precipitation and cool winters. Average annual precipitation in the Uvs Nuur region is 167 mm. Average temperature in January is, and in July is

Flora and fauna

The basin is an area of great diversity, because it incorporates many transition zones - such as steppe to desert, fresh-water to salt-water, and low-altitude to high-altitude. Floral communities associated with all of these central Asian biomes are represented. Species diversity is also high because the area is relatively untouched by human development. It is an isolated area, with no history of extensive resource exploitation or intensive farming. The only significant human presence has been in mobile pastoral use.

Protections

There are several significant nationally protected area that reach into this ecoregion: