The tree-line or timberline is the edge of the habitat at which trees are capable of growing. Beyond the tree-line, they are unable to grow due to inappropriate environmental conditions. There are several types:
At the tree-line, tree growth is often very stunted, with the last trees forming low, densely matted bushes. If it is caused by wind, these are known as krummholz, from the German for 'twisted wood'. The tree line, like many other natural lines (lake boundaries, for example), appears well-defined from a distance, but upon sufficiently close inspection, it is a gradual transition. Trees grow shorter towards the inhospitable climate until they simply stop growing.
| Location | Approx. latitude | Approx. elevation of tree-line | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (m) | (ft) | |||
| Sweden | 68°N | 400 | 1300 | |
| Swiss Alps | 46°N | 2400 | 7900 | |
| New Hampshire, USA | 44°N | 1220 | 4000 | Some peaks with lower treelines due to fire and subsequent loss of soil. |
| Wyoming, USA | 43°N | 3000 | 9800 | |
| Rocky Mountain NP, USA | 40°N | 3500 | 11500 | On warm SW slopes; lower (about 2400 m or 8000 ft) on NE slopes |
| Japanese Alps | 39°N | 2900 | 9500 | |
| Yosemite, USA | 38°N | 3200 | 10500 | West side of Sierra Nevada |
| Yosemite, USA | 38°N | 3600 | 11800 | East side of Sierra Nevada |
| Himalaya | 28°N | 4400 | 14400 | |
| Hawaii, USA | 20°N | 2800 | 9000 | precipitation low above the trade winds |
| Costa Rica | 9.5°N | 3400 | 11200 | |
| Mount Kilimanjaro, Tanzania | 3°S | 3000 | 9800 | |
| New Guinea | 6°S | 3900 | 12800 | |
| Andes, Peru | 11°S | 3900 | 12800 | East side; on west side tree growth is restricted by dryness |
| Sierra de Córdoba, Argentina | 31°S | 2000 | 6560 | Precipitation low above trade winds, also high exposure |
| Australian Alps, Australia | 36°S | 2000 | 6560 | West side of Australian Alps |
| Australian Alps, Australia | 36°S | 1700 | 5580 | East side of Australian Alps |
| South Island, New Zealand | 43°S | 1200 | 3940 | strong maritime influence serves to cool summer and restrict tree growth |
| Location | Approx. longitude | Approx. latitude of tree-line | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Norway | 24°E | 71°N | The North Atlantic current makes arctic climates in this region warmer than other coastal locations at comparable latitude. |
| West Siberian Plain | 75°E | 66°N | |
| Central Siberian Plateau | 102°E | 72°N | Extreme continental climate means the summer is warm enough to allow tree growth at higher latitudes, extending to 72°30'N at Ary-Mas (102° 27' E) in the Novaya River valley, a tributary of the Khatanga River. |
| Russian Far East (Kamchatka and Chukotka) | 160°E | 60°N | The Oyashio Current and strong winds affect summer temperatures to prevent tree growth. The Aleutian Islands are almost completely treeless. |
| Alaska | 152°W | 68°N | |
| Northwest Territories, Canada | 132°W | 69°N | Reaches north of the Arctic Citcle due to the continental nature of the climate and warmer summer temperatures. |
| Nunavut | 95°W | 61°N | Influence of the very cold Hudson Bay moves treeline southwards. |
| Québec | 72°W | 56°N | Very strong influence of the Labrador Current on summer temperatures. In parts of Labrador, the treeline can be as far south as 53°N. |
| Greenland | 50°W | 64°N | Determined by experimental tree planting in the absence of native trees due to isolation from natural seed sources; a very few trees are surviving, but growing slowly, at Søndre Strømfjord, 67°N. |
| Tierra del Fuego, Chile | 69°W | 55°S | Tree growth reaches very close to the southernmost point of South America, with the limit related to extreme exposure rather than climate. |
Trees | Conifers | Forestry | Climate
Trægrænse | Waldgrenze | Arbarolimo | Boomgrens | Linha das árvores | Puuraja
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Tree-line".
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