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Why is Taiga absent in the Southern Hemisphere? - Geography

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Question

Why is Taiga absent in the Southern Hemisphere?

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Solution

The taiga (boreal) biome is essentially absent in the Southern Hemisphere because the broad, continuous land at the high latitudes where taiga develops in the north (55–70°N) does not exist in the south those latitudes are mostly open ocean or the ice‑covered continent of Antarctica, so there is no large continuous area of suitable land for a circumpolar boreal belt to form. In addition, southern high‑latitude lands that do exist (southern South America, New Zealand, Tasmania, and parts of Australia) are narrow, fragmented and strongly maritime or mountainous, so their climates are moderated by the ocean (producing temperate rainforests, alpine zones, or tundra rather than extensive continental boreal forest); where cold‑tolerant conifers do occur in the south they are restricted to uplands rather than a wide taiga belt. The standard textbook explanation, therefore, is simply the lack of an appropriately positioned, extensive landmass and the dominant oceanic influence in the corresponding southern latitudes.

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Chapter 18: Natural Regions of the World - SOLVE AND SCORE [Page 214]

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Rachna Sapra Geography [English] Class 9 ICSE
Chapter 18 Natural Regions of the World
SOLVE AND SCORE | Q D. 29. (a) | Page 214
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