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SlideshowReport

Temperate forest geography and climate.

Description
Temperate forests, which may be either coniferous or deciduous, occur where temperatures are not extreme and where annual precipitation averages anywhere from about 650 mm to over 3,000 mm (fig. 2.17). These forests generally receive more winter precipitation than temperate grasslands. Deciduous trees usually dominate temperate forests, where the growing season is moist and at least four months long. In deciduous forests, winters last from three to four months. Though snowfall may be heavy, winters in deciduous forests are relatively mild. Where winters are more severe or the summers drier, conifers are more abundant than deciduous trees. The temperate coniferous forests of the Pacific Coast of North America receive most of their precipitation during fall, winter, and spring and are subject to summer drought.
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