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Palaearctic > Flooded Grasslands and Savannas >
Amur meadow steppe (PA0901)
Delineation Only

 

Amur meadow steppe
Amur River, northeast of Khabarovsk, Khabarovskiy Kray, Russia
Photograph by Steve Nelson & Zovtaigi


 

Where
Eastern Asia: Southeastern Russia and northeastern China
Biome
Flooded Grasslands and Savannas

  Size
47,600 square miles (123,200 square kilometers) -- about the size of New York
Vulnerable
 
 

· Location and General Description
· Biodiversity Features
· Current Status
· Threats
· Ecoregion Justification
· References
More Photos

The extensive meadows in the middle sections of the Amur are the result of long-term river fluctuations on the extensive alluvial deposits in the Amur valley. Flooding and a high water table appear to inhibit forest development. Remaining ice free during the Pleistocene, flora and fauna of the Amur meadow steppe strongly influenced post-glaciation development of flora and fauna of eastern Russia. The relatively flat land and fertile soil of the river floodplains often creates conflicts between agricultural and conservation needs.

Location and General Description

Biodiversity Features

Current Status

Types and Severity of Threats

Justification of Ecoregion Delineation

In Russia, the mapped ecoregion boundaries correspond to the forest steppe in the Amur-Manchurian vegetation province in Kurnaev’s (1990) forest map of the USSR. In addition, the ecoregion includes Isachenko’s (1988) subtaiga deciduous forest and floodplain along the Amur River. It does not, however, include Lake Khanka and environs, as the lake attracts its own unique assemblage of avian species. Within China, the boundaries correspond to swamp woodlands and grasslands in the Heilongjiang Province (classes 69 and 70) of the CVMCC Vegetation Map of China (1979).

References

Kurnaev, S. 1990. Forest regionalization of the USSR (1:16,000,000) Moscow: Dept. of Geodesy and Cartography

Prepared by: Pavel Krestov
Reviewed by: In process

For more general information on this ecoregion, go to the WildWorld version of this description.

All text by World Wildlife Fund © 2001