Climate of the Alaskan mountains
A host of factors—some peculiar to mountains in general and some specific to Alaska’s high latitude—make it difficult to classify Alaska’s mountains into definite climatic types. On a regional scale the Alaskan mountains span all the climatic zones found in the state. The northern slopes of the Brooks Range fall within the Arctic zone, while its southern slopes and the Alaska, Talkeetna, and Wrangell ranges all fall within the continental zone. Both zones are characterized by long cold winters, short cool summers, moderate summer rainfall, and light snowfall during the winter. The continental zone is generally more arid, with clearer skies and more-extreme temperatures.
The Chugach Mountains, the western Aleutian Range, and the Alaska Peninsula fall within the transitional zone. The mountains of the Aleutian Islands and the remaining southern mountains, in particular those of the panhandle, lie within the maritime zone, the climate being influenced by the warm waters of the Kuroshio (Japan Current). Those two zones have relatively small temperature variations and much cloudiness and precipitation, although the conditions are all less pronounced in the transitional zone. Mean January temperatures range from −20 °F (−29 °C) in the Brooks Range to between 14 and 32 °F (−10 and 0 °C) in the Boundary Ranges of the panhandle. Winter temperatures at or below −50 °F (−46 °C) are not unusual, however, in the mountains of the interior and at higher elevations in the Boundary Ranges. Mean July temperatures range from about 60 °F (16 °C) on the lower slopes of the Brooks Range (and lower still at higher elevations) to about 68 °F (20 °C) in the lower Talkeetnas. With less than 20 inches (500 mm) of annual precipitation, the Brooks Range is the driest of the Alaskan ranges, while the coastal mountains from the Copper River delta area southward through the Alexander Archipelago are the wettest, with precipitation sometimes reaching 200 to 300 inches (5,100 to 7,600 mm) annually.
Plant and animal life
Vegetation at the higher elevations of the mountain ranges, when they are not barren or covered by ice, is usually a ridge type of tundra, or treeless plain. Above the timberline (the upper limit of tree growth), vegetation consists of lichens, grasses, sedges, and heather. Dwarf species of willow and alder also are found, while extensive grasslands occur in the Aleutians, on the Alaska Peninsula, and on the southern slopes of the Alaska Range. In the interior forests the timberline in many places is less than 600 feet (180 metres) above sea level, although it is generally between 1,500 and 2,000 feet (450 to 600 metres). The interior forests, consisting of white spruce and birch or aspen, with mixtures of balsam poplar, occur mostly on the lower slopes of the larger river valleys north of the Alaska Range. In the coastal forests the timberline ranges in elevation from about 2,000 to 3,000 feet (600 to 900 metres) in southeastern Alaska to approximately 1,000 feet (300 metres) in the more northerly and westerly sections.
Tongass National Forest encompasses southeastern Alaska, and Chugach National Forest covers the lower parts of the Chugach, Kenai, and Kodiak mountain areas. Vegetation in the lower elevations is a hemlock-spruce coastal forest. Western hemlock and Sitka spruce extend to about 1,500 feet (450 metres) above sea level, and subalpine species to at least 2,500 feet (760 metres). Tongass National Forest is composed largely of western hemlock, with a much smaller proportion of Sitka spruce and a sprinkling of western red cedar, Alaska cedar, and alpine fir. On the continental flank of those ranges, white spruce and lodgepole pine dominate. Chugach National Forest, in the Prince William Sound section, is predominantly a hemlock forest with some Sitka and white spruce and occasional cottonwood and paper birch.
Several large mammals are native to the Alaskan mountains. Brown (grizzly) and black bears and wolves inhabit the Boundary and St. Elias ranges, the Alaska Range, and the interior. Black bears, absent from the Alaska Peninsula, are found in most of the state. Dall bighorn sheep live high in the mountains from the Kenai Peninsula to the Brooks Range and southeastward in the interior St. Elias and Boundary ranges. Mountain goats are in the Chugach, Kenai, Talkeetna, St. Elias, and Boundary ranges. Moose, though living mostly in the lower elevations, range into high country from the Alaska Peninsula to the Brooks Range. Barren-ground caribou and foxes range over high plateaus and mountain slopes from the Alaska Peninsula to the Arctic. Sitka deer are abundant in southeastern Alaska and in parts of the Prince William Sound region. A number of smaller fur-bearing animals—including lynx, martens, and weasels—are native to all the mountains, as are porcupines.