Camp
Internet's Global Gardening Studies are open to all Camp Expedition
Teams. RAIN's Youth Technology Corps members are Expedition Team Leaders
for Communities taking part.
Did you know that the Arctic Tundra is the world's youngest
biome? It was formed 10,000 years ago. Located at latitudes 55ƒ to 70ƒ
North, the tundra is a vast and treeless land which covers about 20%
of the Earth's surface. It is usually very cold, and the land is pretty
stark. Almost all tundras are located in the Northern Hemisphere. Small
tundra-like areas do exist in Antarctica
in the Southern Hemisphere, but because it is much colder than the Arctic,
the ground is always covered with snow and ice. Conditions are not right
for a true tundra to form. Average annual temperatures are -70ƒF (-56ƒC).
Tundra comes from the Finnish word "tunturia", which means a barren
land. The ground is permanently frozen 10 inches to 3 feet (25 to 100
cm) down so that trees can't grow there. The bare and sometimes rocky
ground can only support low growing plants like mosses, heaths, and
lichen. In the winter it is cold and dark and in the summer, when the
snow and the top layer of permafrost melt, it is very soggy and the
tundra is covered with marshes, lakes, bogs and streams that attract
many migrating birds and insects. The main seasons are winter and summer.
Spring and fall are only short periods between winter and summer. The
tundra is the world's coldest and driest biomes. The average annual
temperature is -18ƒ F (-28ƒ C). Nights can last for weeks when the sun
barely rises during some months in the winter, and the temperature can
drop to -94ƒ F (-70ƒ C). During the summer the sun shines almost 24
hours a day, which is why the Arctic is also called the Land of the
Midnight Sun. Summer are usually warm. Temperatures can get up to 54ƒ
F (12ƒ C), but it can get as cold as 37ƒ F (3ƒ C). Average summer temperatures
range from 37ƒ to 60ƒF (3ƒ to 16ƒC). The Arctic tundra is also a windy
place and winds can blow between 30 to 60 miles (48 to 97 kilometers)
per hour. Of the North American, Scandinavian and Russian tundras, the
Scandinavian tundra is the warmest, with winter temperatures averaging
18ƒF (-8ƒC) The tundra is basically like a desert when it comes to precipitation.
Only about 6 - 10 inches of precipitation (mostly snow) fall each year.
Below the soil is the tundra's permafrost, a permanently frozen layer
of earth. During the short summers the top layer of soil may thaw just
long enough to let plants grow and reproduce. Since it can't sink into
the ground, water from melting permafrost and snow forms lakes and marshes
each summer. There is barely any vegetation in the tundra, only about
1,700 different species, which isn't very much. These are mostly shrubs,
sedges, mosses, lichens and grasses. There are about 400 varieties of
flowers. The growing season is only about 50 to 60 days long. There
are no trees, except for some birches in the lower latitudes. The ground
is always frozen beneath the top layer of soil, so trees can't send
their roots down. Willows do grow on some parts of the tundra but only
as low carpets about 3 inches (8 cm) high. Most plants grow in a dense
mat of roots which has developed over thousands of years. The soil is
very low in nutrients and minerals, except where animal droppings fertilize
the soil. Surprisingly there are animals in the tundra. Although there
isn't a lot of biodiversity, there are a lot of each species. There
are huge herds of caribou in North America (known as reindeer in Eurasia)
which feed on lichens and plants. There are also smaller herds of musk-oxen.
Wolves, wolverines, arctic foxes, and polar bears are the predators
of the tundra. Smaller mammals are snowshoe rabbits and lemmings. There
aren't many different species of insects in the tundra, but black flies,
deer flies, mosquitoes and "no-see-ums" (tiny biting midges) can make
the tundra a miserable place to be in the summer. Mosquitoes can keep
themselves from freezing by replacing the water in their bodies with
a chemical called glycerol. It works like an antifreeze and allows them
to survive under the snow during the winter. The marshy tundra is a
great place for migratory birds like the harlequin duck, sandpipers
and plovers. The tundra is one of Earth's three major carbon dioxide
sinks. A carbon dioxide sink is a biomass which takes in more carbon
dioxide than it releases. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas that contributes
to global warming. During the short summer tundra's plants take in carbon
dioxide, sunlight and water in the process of photosynthesis. Plants
normally give off carbon dioxide after they die and decompose. But because
of the short, cool summer and freezing winter temperatures, plants can't
decompose. Remains of plants thousands of years old have been found
in the tundra permafrost. In this way the tundra traps the carbon dioxide
and removes it from the atmosphere. Today global warming is melting
the permafrost of the tundra and every year several feet of tundra are
lost. As the tundra melts, the plant mass decomposes and returns carbon
dioxide to the atmosphere. The tundra is a very fragile environment.
The extremely cold temperatures makes it a difficult environment to
survive in during the winter, and plants and animals have a hard time
coping with any extra stresses and disturbances. More people moving
to the tundra to work in the mines and oil rigs have created towns and
more roads. Some animal's movements to traditional feeding and denning
grounds have been disrupted by these obstacles. When they try to pass
through a town they are often scared away or shot. With their feeding
patterns disrupted, many polar bears have starved. The Alaskan oil pipeline
was built across a caribou migration route. In some places the pipeline
has been raised above the ground so the caribou can pass under it. Pesticides
have been used to control the hordes of insects. Thousands of migrating
birds come to the tundra because of the abundant insects. Through the
food chain the pesticides reach many of the animals that live on the
tundra. Pollution from mining and drilling for oil has polluted the
air, lakes and rivers. The land around some nickel mines in Russia has
become so polluted that the plants in the surrounding area have died.
Footprints and tire tracks can be visible for many years after they
were made. When the sun hits the ruts it causes the permafrost to melt.
This causes erosion and the ruts get bigger, and eventually the ruts
turn into gullies. Tracks made during WW II have grown so large that
some of them are now lakes. The tundra is not a cold and useless wasteland.
It is a very fragile environment and the plants and animals that have
made their home on the tundra biome have made some incredible adaptations
to the long, cold winters and the short but abundant summers. They live
on a precarious edge and the smallest stresses can bring about their
destruction.