
Russian steppe in spring
In physical
geography, a 'steppe' ( - , - , - ), pronounced in English as , is a
plain without
trees (apart from those near rivers and lakes); it is similar to a
prairie, although a prairie is generally considered as being dominated by tall grasses, while short grasses are said to be normal in the steppe. It may be semi-
desert, or covered with
grass or
shrubs or both, depending on the
season and
latitude. The term is also used to denote the
climate encountered in regions too dry to support a
forest, but not dry enough to be a desert.
The climate of mid-latitude steppes can be summarized by hot summers and cold winters, averaging 250-500 mm (10-20 inches) of rain or equivalent in snowfall per year. In tropical locations, necessary rainfall to separate steppes from true deserts may be half as much again due to greater evapotranspiration.
Locations

Southern Siberian steppe: windbreaker trees in the wintertime.
The world's largest zone of all steppes, often referred to as "the
Great Steppe", is found in central
Russia and neighbouring countries in
Central Asia, stretching from
Ukraine in the west to the
Ural Mountains and the
Caspian Sea. To the east of the Caspian Sea, the steppes extend through
Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan and
Kazakhstan to the
Altai,
Koppet Dag and
Tian Shan ranges. The vast
Eurasian Steppe, as it is called, incorporates all of these steppes. The area is bordered in the north, on the eastern side of the
Urals, by the forested
West Siberian Plain taiga, extending nearly as far as the
Arctic Ocean.
Other regions of steppes include transition zones between savanna and severe desert such as the
Sahel that fringes the true
Sahara or similar semi-arid lands that fringe the
Thar desert of the Indian subcontinent or the more severe deserts of Australia.
Another large steppe area is located in the central
United States and western
Canada. The
High Plains steppe is the westernmost part of the
Great Plains region. A significant steppe, noteworthy for not grading into desert, is the
Sertão of northeastern Brazil.
Some steppes are to be found in transition zones between zones of
Mediterranean climate and desert, such as
Tijuana, Baja California, and in places cut off from adequate moisture due to rain shadow effects such as
Zaragoza, Spain.
External links
★
The Steppes
See also
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Shrub-steppe
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Tundra-steppe
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Alpine steppe
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Coastal plain
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Coastal prairie
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Field (agriculture)
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Flooded grasslands and savannas
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Flood-meadow
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Grassland
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Meadow
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Pasture
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Plain
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Prairie
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Rangeland
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Savanna
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Tundra
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Water-meadow
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Wet meadow
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Veld
References
''Ecology and conservation of Steppe-Land birds'' by Gerard Bota et al. International Symposium on Ecology and Conservation of Steppe-land Birds. Lynx Edicions 2005. 343 pages. ISBN 84-87334-99-7