WWF ecoregion
The WWF ecoregions were published in 2001 by the USA section of the WWF environmental foundation as a model of worldwide ecoregions from a nature conservation perspective. A revised version appeared in 2004.
The WWF classification defines an ecoregion as “a relatively large area of the earth's surface that can be geographically delimited according to the potential composition of species, communities and environmental conditions before major land use changes”. As with all biogeographical models , an artificial boundary is drawn here too, since the transitions between the regions are in reality more or less fluid.
In contrast to the classic ecoregion term, which is defined exclusively by the shape of its plant formations (and is therefore largely synonymous with the biome term), the WWF model is based on a combination of different biogeographical concepts.
Derivation
An essential working basis for the WWF model were the systems of biogeographical regions developed in 1975 by Miklos Udvardy for the IUCN and in 1979 by Evelyn Crystal Pielou , the delimitation of which had already been created for the needs of global nature conservation planning. The models by Eric Dinerstein et al. (1995) and Taylor Ricketts et al . Were also used. The aforementioned authors already referred to a combination of the shape of the (originally existing) vegetation forms and the specific species composition of the flora and fauna kingdoms .
In a ten-year process involving hundreds of different experts, an exemplary system of 825 land ecoregions (terrestrial) was created, which are subdivided into 14 major habitat types (formative main biomes) and seven biogeographical realms. The definition of a further 426 freshwater ecoregions and 232 marine ecoregions is also new.
aims
The WWF ecoregions were developed in order to be able to assign biological analyzes (especially on species diversity and biodiversity ) to specific and sensibly selected areas. The aim is to make them comparable from a nature conservation point of view: Representative habitats can be defined, protection strategies can be developed more easily and grievances can be identified.
From the outset, therefore, the inclusion of the current condition (status) due to the anthropogenic influence was decisive. Accordingly, a largely unaffected ecoregion represents the original ecosystems . In the areas with different degrees of hemerobia (deviation due to cultivation), the description of the ecoregion corresponds to the ideal model for nature conservation.
These mission statements contain the following criteria:
- Biodiversity
- endemic species
- unique genera , families , relic species , rare biotope types and the like
- extraordinary ecological or evolutionary phenomena (e.g. moors , large wintering areas for many bird species, etc.)
- global rarity of the most important habitat types
The WWF Terrestrial Ecoregions
- The first sorting criterion for the ecoregions are the main biomes “Tundra”, “Taiga”, “Desert” etc. In some cases they can be subdivided again using the name of the region; z. B. "Polar Desert" as a sub-item of "Tundra". (The main biomes are comparable to the zonobiomes according to Walter & Breckle).
- The names are based on the large vegetation zones . This may be confusing, because the WWF ecoregions often break their boundaries due to the aforementioned, overarching approach. Therefore, several types of vegetation per region (in order of importance) are often listed in the table. (Example: “Greenland's high arctic tundra”, despite its assignment to the tundra, extends from the dwarf trauma tundra to the almost vegetation-free cold desert . The various types of vegetation, however, contain a very similar range of species, which thrive very densely and luxuriantly in the south and only relic-like in the north of the region and is poor to find.)
- The second sorting criterion are the biogeographical realms "Nearctic region", "Australasian region" etc. (similar to the fauna realms ) in connection with the respective continents.
- The third sorting criterion is the location of the ecoregions, which here (in contrast to the WWF sorting) are sorted from the north “in the reading direction” from west to east.
- The names of the ecoregions were z. Partly freely translated or expanded for better orientation. The column “Weblinks” shows a direct link to the corresponding original WWF website. Next to it there is a link to a detailed cartographic representation of the region, which also shows the areas that are still largely wild according to the study Last of the wild .
Tundra
Nearctic region of North America
Name of the ecoregion | km² | Types of vegetation | status | Web links |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. High Arctic tundra of the Canadian archipelago | 463,600 | Cold desert , highly polar tundra | intact | WWF / card |
2. High Arctic tundra in Greenland | 303,500 | Cold desert , low polar tundra | intact | WWF / card |
3. Arctic coastal tundra on the Beaufort Sea | 98,200 | Low polar tundra | intact | WWF / card |
4. Central Arctic tundra of Canada | 1,032,900 | High u. Low polar tundra | intact | WWF / card |
5. Tundra of the Davis Highlands of Baffin Island | 87,800 | Cold desert , highly polar tundra | intact | WWF / card |
6. Central coastal tundra of eastern Baffin Island | 9,100 | Cold desert | intact | WWF / card |
7. Greenland's Lower Arctic tundra | 170,900 | Low polar tundra , hardwood forest tundra | intact | WWF / card |
8. Arctic foothills tundra of northern Alaskas | 129,000 | Low polar tundra | intact | WWF / card |
9. Alaska's Brook Range Mountain Tundra | 159,500 | Mountain tundra | intact | WWF / card |
10. Canada's Lower Arctic tundra | 796,400 | Mountain tundra | intact | WWF / card |
11. Inner Yukon and Alaska mountain tundra | 232,600 | Mountain tundra , taiga | intact | WWF / card |
12. The lowland tundra of the Bering Sea coast of Alaska | 151,000 | Hardwood forest tundra , low polar tundra | intact | WWF / card |
13. Highland tundra of the Bering Sea coast of Alaska | 97,400 | Hardwood forest tundra , mountain tundra | intact | WWF / card |
14. Mountain tundra between Ogilvie u. Mackenzie River | 208,500 | Mountain tundra , softwood forest tundra | intact | WWF / card |
15. Mountain tundra of the Elias range of Alaska | 151,800 | Mountain tundra , coniferous forest tundra , taiga | intact | WWF / card |
16. Mountain tundra of the Pacific Coast Mountains | 132,600 | Alpine mountain tundra , taiga , mountain coniferous forest | intact | WWF / card |
17. Tundra of the Alëuts | 5,400 | Hardwood forest tundra | intact | WWF / card |
18. Mountain tundra of the Torngat Mountains Labradors | 32,400 | Low polar tundra | intact | WWF / card |
Palearctic region of Eurasia
Name of the ecoregion | km² | Types of vegetation | status | Web links |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. Polar deserts in the Barents u. Kara Sea | 161,400 | Cold desert | intact | WWF / card |
2. Tundra of the Taimyr Peninsula a. Central Siberia | 954,700 | Cold desert , all types of tundra , softwood forest tundra | endangered * ↓ | WWF / card |
3. Polar desert of the New Siberian Islands | 36,800 | Cold desert | intact | WWF / card |
4. Tundra of Northwest Russia a. South Novaya Zemlyaz | 284.100 | all types of tundra , hardwood forest tundra | endangered | WWF / card |
5. Tundra of the Yamal u. Gydan Peninsulas | 412.100 | High u. Low polar tundra , forest tundras | endangered * ↓ | WWF / card |
6. Coastal Tundra of Northeast Siberia | 222,500 | High u. Low polar tundra | intact | WWF / card |
7. Wrangel Island polar desert | 7,500 | Cold desert | intact | WWF / card |
8. Bergtundren u. Mountain birch forest of Scandinavia | 243.200 | Mountain tundra , hardwood forest tundra | endangered | WWF / card |
9. Tundra of the Kola Peninsula | 58,800 | Mountain tundra , hardwood forest tundra | endangered | WWF / card |
10. Mountain tundra of the Tscherski u. Kolyma Mountains | 556,600 | Mountain tundra , softwood forest tundra | intact | WWF / card |
11. Tundra Chukotkas | 298,400 | Mountain tundra , low polar tundra | intact | WWF / card |
12. Tundra on the Bering Sea coast of Siberia | 474.200 | Low polar and mountain tundra , coniferous forest tundra | intact | WWF / card |
13. Tundra Dauriens | 217,600 | Alpine mountain tundra , summer green taiga | intact | WWF / card |
14. Berg- u. Kamchatka Forest Tundra | 119,400 | Softwood forest tundra , Alpine mountain tundra | intact | WWF / card |
(*) The WWF comes to an apparently ↓ worse or ↑ better assessment for this region than the studies " Last of the wild " or " Intact forest landscapes ", which are based on extensive data surveys (compare cartographic implementation in the article Wilderness )
Australasian region of Australia
Name of the ecoregion | km² | Types of vegetation | status | Web links |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. Tundra islands in the sub-Antarctic South Pacific | 1,800 | Low polar tundra , temperate deciduous forest | intact | WWF / card |
Antarctic region
Name of the ecoregion | km² | Types of vegetation | status | Web links |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. Tundra islands in the sub-Antarctic Indian Ocean | 8,300 | Sub-Antarctic meadow tundra | endangered | WWF / card |
2. Tundra islands in the sub-Antarctic South Atlantic | 24,400 | Sub-Antarctic meadow tundra | intact | map |
3. Coastal tundra of West Antarctica | 1,146,600 | Cold desert , moss and Lichen Tundra | intact | WWF / card |
4. Polar desert of East Antarctica | 2,115,500 | Cold desert | intact | WWF |
Boreal coniferous forest / taiga
Nearctic region of North America
Name of the ecoregion | km² | Types of vegetation | status | Web links |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. Lowland Taiga of the Inner Yukon and Alaska | 443,400 | Evergreen taiga , Nadelhz.-Waldtundra , Bergtundra | intact | WWF / card |
2. Taiga of the Northwest Territories | 345,800 | Nadelhz. Forest tundra , evergreen taiga , mountain tundra | intact | WWF / card |
3. Northern Canadian Shield Taiga | 613,800 | Softwood forest tundra , low polar tundra | intact | WWF / card |
4. Taiga between Muskwa ranges u. Size Slave lake | 262,400 | Evergreen taiga , Nadelhz. Forest tundra , forest steppe | intact * ↑ | WWF / card |
5. Taiga of the Cook Inlet | 27,700 | Softwood forest tundra , Alpine mountain tundra | intact | WWF / card |
6. Taiga of the Copper Plateau | 17,100 | Nadelhz. Forest tundra , evergreen taiga , mountain tundra | intact | WWF / card |
7. Inner Yukon dry taiga | 62,400 | Evergreen Taiga , Alpine Bergtundren | endangered | WWF / card |
8. Taiga of the Northern Cordilleras | 262,900 | Evergreen Taiga , Alpine Bergtundren | endangered * ↓ | WWF / card |
9. Canada's Continental Taiga | 367,800 | Evergreen taiga , deciduous and mixed coniferous forest | endangered | WWF / card |
10. Mountain taiga of the Alaska Peninsula | 47,900 | Evergreen taiga , mountain tundra , deciduous forest tundra | intact * ↑ | WWF / card |
11. Canadian Shield Taiga in the Midwest | 546,000 | Evergreen taiga , softwood forest tundra | endangered | WWF / card |
12. Southern Hudson Bay taiga | 373,700 | Softwood forest tundra , low polar tundra | intact | WWF / card |
13. Eastern Canadian Shield Taiga | 753,700 | Softwood forest tundra , low polar tundra | intact | WWF / card |
14. Taiga of the Central Canadian Shield | 461,800 | Evergreen taiga , softwood forest tundra | endangered * ↑ | WWF / card |
15. Eastern Canada's Taiga | 486,900 | Evergreen taiga , coniferous forest tundra , mixed forest | endangered | WWF / card |
16. Newfoundland Highland Taiga | 16,300 | Softwood Forest Tundra , Evergreen Taiga | intact | WWF / card |
17. Taiga bog of the southern peninsulas of Newfoundland | 2,100 | Evergreen taiga | intact * ↑ | WWF / card |
(*) The WWF comes to an apparently ↓ worse or ↑ better assessment for this region than the studies " Last of the wild " or " Intact forest landscapes ", which are based on extensive data surveys (compare cartographic implementation in the article Wilderness )
Palearctic region of Eurasia
Name of the ecoregion | km² | Types of vegetation | status | Web links |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. Boreal birch forest tundra a. Mountain Tundra Islands | 91,400 | Hardwood forest tundra , low polar u. Mountain tundra | intact * ↑ | WWF / card |
2. Taiga of Northern Europe from Norway to Russia | 2,156,900 | Evergreen taiga , deciduous riparian forests | endangered | WWF / card |
3. Mountain taiga u. -tundra of the Urals | 174,600 | Evergreen taiga , alpine mountain tundra , forest steppe | endangered | WWF / card |
4. Taiga of Western Siberia | 1,670,300 | Evergreen u. Sg. Taiga , summer green alluvial forests | intact * ↑ | WWF / card |
5. Eastern Siberian taiga | 3,899,700 | Sg.- u. Ig. Taiga , coniferous forest tundra , Sg. Alluvial forests | intact * ↑ | WWF / card |
6. Taiga of Northeast Siberia | 1,125,600 | Deciduous taiga , softwood forest tundra | intact * ↑ | WWF / card |
7. Taiga between Lake Baikal u. Mongolia | 200,500 | Evergreen & deciduous taiga , forest steppe | endangered | WWF / card |
8. Taiga of the southeastern Khabarovsk region | 402,000 | Evergreen taiga , deciduous taiga | endangered | WWF / card |
9. Sakhalin Taiga | 68,600 | Evergreen taiga , deciduous taiga | endangered * ↑ | WWF / card |
10. Light forest tundra Kamchatka u. the Kuril Islands | 146,300 | Softwood forest tundra , tundra- like meadows | intact | WWF / card |
11. Isolated taiga Kamchatkas | 15,300 | Evergreen u. Deciduous taiga | intact * ↑ | WWF / card |
(*) The WWF comes to an apparently ↓ worse or ↑ better assessment for this region than the studies " Last of the wild " or " Intact forest landscapes ", which are based on extensive data surveys (compare cartographic implementation in the article Wilderness )
Remarks
- ↑ The names of these realms are largely based on the zoogeographic regions according to Philip Lutley Sclater and Alfred Russel Wallace .
- ↑ An improved map with clear allocation to the ecoregions listed in the tables is still in progress
Individual evidence
- ↑ terrestrial ecoregions . WWF USA website.
- ↑ Global Species: Terrestrial Ecoregions . Bruce Myers' private website, Grand Rapids, USA - database from WWF and Socioeconomic Data and Applications Center (SEDAC). Retrieved March 2, 2013