Trans-Baikal conifer forests

Trans-Baikal conifer forests

Trans-Baikal conifer forests
The Trans-Baikal conifer forests stretch across southern Siberia in Russia and into northern Mongolia, centered on the Yablonoi and Khentii Mountains east and south of Lake Baikal in the historic region long called Dauria or Transbaikal. This mountainous taiga is a transitional zone where the dark-needled forests of western Siberia meet the light-needled larch forests of the east, with Dahurian larch (Larix gmelinii), Siberian pine (Pinus sibirica), and Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) dominating the slopes while bunchgrass-and-fescue steppe occupies the warmest lowlands. The climate is dry-winter subarctic (Koppen Dwc), bringing long, very cold winters with little snow and cool summers. The ecoregion shelters notable wildlife including white-naped cranes and the vulnerable Siberian musk deer, and is safeguarded by several protected areas, among them the UNESCO World Heritage site of Lake Baikal and Russian zapovedniks (strict nature reserves). Gardeners may recognize understory natives such as Rhododendron dauricum, an early-flowering ornamental shrub of these forests.
RESOLVE 718
Palearctic
77,407 sq mi
Boreal Forests/Taiga
Tipo de paisaje
Boreal Forests/Taiga
Región vegetal
Palearctic
Huella de la región
77,407 sq mi
Presión sobre el hábitat
Nature Could Reach Half Protected (Dinerstein NNH 2)
Usa esto como el patrón general de plantación para la región: The vast northern forest belt of spruce, fir, pine, and larch, defined by long, severe winters and short growing seasons. Often underlain by permafrost and wetlands, the taiga forms one of the world’s largest terrestrial carbon stores. Para las decisiones de jardín, combina ese contexto con la lista de plantas de abajo y luego acota según las restricciones de luz, agua, suelo y tamaño maduro de tu sitio.

Range & origins

Ubicación de Trans-Baikal conifer forests en el mapa mundial
Marcador situado dentro del polígono RESOLVE 2017 en 51.0°N, 109.9°E.
La región a través del tiempo
Huella moderna
RESOLVE 2017 mapea 77,407 sq mi
Este límite es una huella ecológica moderna para Trans-Baikal conifer forests, no una línea permanente en el planeta. Resulta útil para el contexto actual de plantas y fauna porque sigue patrones recurrentes de vegetación, clima, relieve y perturbaciones.
Por qué aquí
Condiciones de boreal forests/taiga
La región se ubica en el reino Palearctic y se clasifica como boreal forests/taiga. La altitud, la humedad, el fuego, los suelos, las costas y el uso humano del suelo pueden hacer que el paisaje real sea más variado de lo que sugiere un único color en el mapa.
Presión de cambio
Nature Could Reach Half Protected
Plotwright muestra esto como la huella actual de RESOLVE. A lo largo de décadas o siglos, el calentamiento, las perturbaciones, las especies invasoras, el uso del suelo y la restauración pueden desplazar el borde vivo de una región aunque el mapa de referencia permanezca fijo.

Colecciones de plantación

Recetas de plantación terminadas donde cada miembro puede con el rango climático de esta región. La insignia de ajuste usa la planta más sensible de la colección, así que una colección resistente es un punto de partida más seguro que cualquier ejemplar destacado por sí solo.
Resistente al clima · 2 plantas
Bright shade foundation
A part-shade planting with shrub structure and low foliage contrast.
Annabelle hydrangea
Coral bells
+4
Resistente al clima · 8 plantas
Climate-resilient natives for warming zones (eastern NA)
A pollinator-supporting palette of eastern North American natives with broad hardiness ranges and wide native distributions. Built for gardeners who want a planting that can handle warming zones without giving up wildlife value.
Switchgrass
Little bluestem
Common milkweed
Black-eyed Susan
Wild bergamot
Sweet Joe-Pye weed
Cutleaf coneflower
New England aster
+5
Resistente al clima · 9 plantas
Native pollinator border (eastern US)
A continuous-bloom native pollinator strip for eastern North America. Covers spring through frost with host + nectar plants spanning monarchs, native bees, hummingbirds, and specialist Lepidoptera. Little bluestem provides the matrix grass + Hesperiidae host.
Butterfly weed
Common milkweed
Purple coneflower
Wild bergamot
Scarlet bee balm
Little bluestem
Sweet Joe-Pye weed
Swamp sunflower
Smooth blue aster
Resistente al clima · 4 plantas
Sunny pollinator border
A durable sunny border with summer bloom, seedheads, and upright winter texture.
English lavender
Purple coneflower
Black-eyed Susan
Switchgrass

Regiones de plantación similares

Explora otras regiones con un ritmo similar de veranos calurosos y secos. Sus listas de plantas pueden sugerir especies y combinaciones que vale la pena comparar.
RESOLVE 710 - Palearctic
East Siberian taiga
The East Siberian taiga is one of the largest unbroken tracts of boreal forest on Earth, sprawling across the heart of central and eastern Siberia in Russia from the Yenisei River westward to the Verkhoyansk, Kolyma, and Dzhugdzhur mountain ranges in the east. It is overwhelmingly a forest of larch, with Siberian larch in the west and south and Dahurian larch to the north and east, mixed in places with dark conifers such as Siberian spruce, Siberian pine, Siberian fir, and Scots pine, alongside broadleaf birches and aspen. The climate is harshly continental and subarctic, with cold mean annual temperatures and most of the ecoregion underlain by permanent permafrost that shapes its drainage and rooting conditions. This vast wilderness supports globally important populations of brown bear, grey wolf, wolverine, sable, and reindeer, and its flagship species is the Siberian musk deer. The forest understory carries low-growing acid-loving plants including marsh Labrador tea, bilberry, and cranberry, evergreen shrubs of the heath family that hint at the sour, frozen ground these northern boreal genera tolerate.
Boreal Forests/Taiga
Zonas 3a-6b
+8.2°F para 2070
1,510,508 sq mi
Nivel NNH 2
RESOLVE 711 - Palearctic
Iceland boreal birch forests and alpine tundra
This ecoregion spans the entire island of Iceland in the North Atlantic, lying just south of the Arctic Circle on volcanic terrain with basaltic soils. Much of it is tundra and sparsely vegetated arctic desert, with vegetation concentrated in the coastal lowlands and interwoven with woodlands of white (downy) birch, Betula pubescens, much of it shrub-like and under two meters tall; rowan and tea-leaved willow are the other characteristic native woody plants, and forest now covers only about one percent of its original extent after centuries of timber cutting and sheep grazing. Most of the region has a tundra climate, with no month averaging above 10 degrees Celsius, though the Gulf Stream keeps conditions milder than the latitude would suggest. It is renowned for birdlife, with over three hundred species recorded, many of them migrants, and the pink-footed goose serves as its flagship species, while the Arctic fox is the only land mammal native to the island. For cold-climate gardeners, its hardy native genera, including birch (Betula), rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), and willow (Salix phylicifolia), are familiar ornamental and amenity plants.
Boreal Forests/Taiga
Zonas 8b-10b
+5.2°F para 2070
35,314 sq mi
Nivel NNH 2
RESOLVE 712 - Palearctic
Kamchatka taiga
The Kamchatka taiga forms a conifer "island" within the central valley of the Kamchatka Peninsula in far-eastern Russia, set along the Kamchatka River between the Sredinny Mountains to the west and the Eastern Ranges to the east. It is the easternmost outpost of Siberian-style taiga, where comparatively continental conditions in the sheltered Central Kamchatka Depression allow stands of Dahurian larch (Larix cajanderi), Yeddo spruce (Picea jezoensis), and Asian white birch (Betula platyphylla) to grow, giving way to Erman's birch at higher elevations. The climate is humid continental with cool summers, and the wider peninsula carries some of the heaviest cloud cover on Earth. The region is renowned for its Kamchatka brown bears, the largest in Eurasia, which feast on the salmon that crowd the rivers each year; the sockeye salmon is its flagship species.
Boreal Forests/Taiga
Zonas 5a-7a
+7.5°F para 2070
5,876 sq mi
Nivel NNH 2
RESOLVE 713 - Palearctic
Kamchatka-Kurile meadows and sparse forests
This Palearctic ecoregion occupies the Russian Far East, covering the coastal zones of the Kamchatka Peninsula, the northern Kuril Islands, and the Commander Islands. Despite sitting in the boreal forests/taiga biome, it is defined less by dense conifer stands than by open, parkland-like country: sparse "stone birch" forests of Betula ermanii, dwarf thickets of Siberian dwarf pine and Siberian alder, expanses of moss-and-lichen tundra, and famously tall-herb meadows where giant meadowsweet (Filipendula camtschatica), Angelica ursina, and Parasenecio hastatus can top three meters. The climate is cool and oceanic, with mild brief summers, cold snowy winters, and abundant Pacific moisture that falls fairly evenly through the year. The region supports an exceptionally large brown bear population sustained by salmon-rich streams, vast seabird colonies, and breeding fur seals, with the Steller's sea eagle as its flagship bird. For gardeners in cool, damp climates, its native tall-herb flora includes ornamental moisture-lovers such as Filipendula meadowsweet.
Boreal Forests/Taiga
Zonas 6a-10a
+6.1°F para 2070
56,554 sq mi
Nivel NNH 2
RESOLVE 714 - Palearctic
Northeast Siberian taiga
The Northeast Siberian taiga stretches across northeastern Russia between the Lena and Kolyma rivers, a vast Palearctic boreal landscape framed by the Verkhoyansk and Chersky ranges and underlain throughout by permafrost. Its sparse forests are dominated by Dahurian larch, accompanied by dwarf Siberian pine and silver birch, with seasonal thaw depressions called Alasy supporting meadow vegetation. The climate is extreme subarctic, with long, brutally cold winters and short warm summers; this is among the coldest inhabited regions of the Northern Hemisphere, with recorded lows reaching about minus 68 degrees Celsius. Thanks to its remoteness and difficult access, it remains one of the largest tracts of virgin boreal forest on Earth, home to flagship species such as the Amur lemming and the critically endangered Siberian crane, though only a small fraction is protected and climate change and logging pose growing threats. Gardeners in cold climates may recognize silver birch (Betula) among its native flora, valued as a hardy ornamental.
Boreal Forests/Taiga
Zonas 3b-7b
+9.4°F para 2070
435,133 sq mi
Nivel NNH 2
RESOLVE 715 - Palearctic
Okhotsk-Manchurian taiga
The Okhotsk-Manchurian taiga is a boreal forest ecoregion of the Russian Far East, spanning the lower Amur River and its wetlands, the west coast of the Sea of Okhotsk, and more than half of the rugged Sikhote-Alin range along with parts of the Badzhal and Dzhugdzhur mountains. It is the southernmost taiga in Eurasia, where "light taiga" of Dahurian larch at lower elevations gives way to "dark taiga" of Yeddo spruce and fir higher up, mixed with broadleaf trees such as Manchurian oak, Manchurian ash, and Amur linden. Pacific maritime influence brings warmer winters and cooler summers than the continental interior, with heavy snow cover of one to two meters near the coast by winter's end. The ecoregion is notable for blending northern Okhotsk-Kamchatka species with southern Manchurian flora and fauna, supporting reindeer, Siberian musk deer, brown bears, and the critically endangered Kaluga sturgeon of the lower Amur. Gardeners may recognize ornamentally familiar genera native here, including birch and linden.
Boreal Forests/Taiga
Zonas 3b-9a
+8.2°F para 2070
155,298 sq mi
Nivel NNH 2

Fuentes y citas

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Para planes de clase, artículos o notas de plantación regionales que usen esta página de Plotwright. Para citar el marco de ecorregiones subyacente o un perfil editorial específico, usa las tarjetas de fuentes de abajo.
Plotwright. (n.d.). Trans-Baikal conifer forests (Trans-Baikal conifer forests). Retrieved 2026, June 24, from https://plotwright.com/regions/resolve-718
Fuentes para esta región
Esta página cita primero a Plotwright por la vista compilada y luego enumera las páginas de fuentes del marco, el clima y la edición originales para que los lectores puedan citar el material original directamente.
RESOLVE 2017 Terrestrial Ecoregions (Dinerstein et al.)
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Bioma + reino
Área
Nivel NNH
One Earth
One Earth
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