The biota and its adaptations
- Related Topics:
- Arctic
- polar ecosystem
- Arctic tundra
- alpine tundra
- Subarctic region
In Arctic and alpine tundras, the number of species of plants and animals is usually small when compared with other regions, yet the number of individuals per species is often high. Food and feeder relationships are simple, and they are more subject to upset if a critical species disappears or decreases in number. Many tundra species cannot be found elsewhere, and thus the biome is an important contributor to global biodiversity despite its low species number.
Although this section focuses on plants and animals, the tundra also hosts abundant bacteria and fungi, which are essential to proper ecosystem functioning in the biome. Several studies using DNA sequencing and analysis have discovered many novel microbial groups in tundra soils. These microbial communities are active under the snow, and their composition changes dramatically from winter and spring to summer in response to changes in soil temperature, moisture, carbon availability, and the nature of carbon-containing substrates (the surfaces upon which microbes live). Microbes and fungi play a key role in biogeochemical processes, such as nutrient regeneration and the carbon cycle.
Plant life
The vegetation of many alpine tundras and over most of the Arctic tundra tends to be greenish brown in colour. While plants do not remain in flower for more than a few days or weeks in these environments, the blossoms are generally large in relation to the size of the plant and are rather colourful, especially in alpine habitats. The foggy tundras found along coastal areas produce matted and grassy landscapes. Algae and fungi are found along rocky cliffs, and rosette plants grow in rock cornices and shallow gravel beds. In the drier inland tundras, spongy turf and lichen heaths develop.
Across the southerly Arctic tundra, which is marked by vast areas of low relief, boggy peat soils with an abundance of lakes and meandering rivers prevail. These coastal plain areas are dominated by sedges and cotton grass, and mosses including Sphagnum are common. On slightly elevated sites, often only 15 to 60 cm (6 to 24 inches) above the wet peaty soils, low willows (Salix), grasses, and rushes occur. Taller willows, grasses, and plants in the sunflower and legume families (Asteraceae and Leguminosae, respectively) are common on the sands and gravels of riverbanks, but vegetation is quite sparse on higher lands, foothills, and Arctic mountains.
In Arctic and alpine tundra ecosystems, the plant communities are influenced by soil drainage, snow cover and time of melt, and localized microclimates that differ from one another in temperature, wind, soil moisture, and nutrients. On gentle slopes where soil has developed, extensive meadows occur. On windswept ridges, cushion plants dominate. On rocky slopes and peaks, plants are found in scattered patches where there is a bit of soil and some snow cover in winter. In higher mountains, having much snow, ice, and exposed rock, lichens and mosses manage to grow on rocks. Vascular plants usually end at or just below the line of permanent snow.
The transition from mountain forest to the shrub- and herb-dominated alpine tundra at higher elevations is very similar to the transition from the coniferous forest belt to the Arctic tundra at higher latitudes. The alpine transition, however, occurs over only 100 metres (330 feet) or so of vertical rise. Timberline trees are mostly spruce (Picea), fir (Abies), and pine (Pinus), with very few deciduous tree species. Willow clumps less than 60 cm (about 24 inches) tall are common in the krummholz (a transitional zone of scattered clusters of stunted trees) and beyond, where snowdrifts are extensive. Willows are also common along streams, in the lee of rocks, and in basins or on the lee side of ridges where winter snow is deeper.
With plant growth and many aspects of animal activity confined to two to four months of the year, when temperatures are above freezing, evolution has favoured a rapid completion of life cycles. Tundra organisms are opportunistic. Many species of plants are perennials that flower within a few days after the snow begins to melt, and some produce ripe seed within four to six weeks. Very few species are annuals. Plants 2.5 to 7.5 cm (1 to 3 inches) tall typically flower first, because they are in the warmer air layers near the soil surface. During cloudy periods, in shade, and at night, flower temperature is very similar to that of the surrounding air. In sunlight, however, flowers may be about 2–10 °C (4–18 °F) warmer than the air around them. Some plants that freeze while in flower when sudden storms hit continue to develop and produce seed upon thawing. Many plants set few seeds and depend mostly upon runners or underground stems for increasing their numbers, such as a number of Arctic species in the heath family (Ericaceae). A few species produce bulblets that develop roots and shoots on the parent plant before they drop to the ground. The hairy flower stalks of cottongrass (Eriophorum), lousewort (Pedicularis), and willows retain warm air, raising the temperature near the stalks by 3–9 °C (5–15 °F); this ability is an important adaptation for flowering in areas where air temperatures may approach the freezing point.