Full Zen
  Index >> About Us >> Add Url >> Privacy Policy >> Terms & Conditions >> Add Your Article
Search:   
Add Url
 
 

Recreation

 

Education & Learning

 

Family & Home

 

Business & Commerce

 

Healthcare & Treatment

 

Investment & Finance

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Society & Communities

 

Adventure & Sports

 

Online Shopping

 

Events & News

 

Art & Culture

 

Politics & Government

 

Jobs & Employment

 

Hotels & Travel

 

Eating & Drinking

 

Games & Play

 

Self Management

 

Estate & Realty

 

Health & Hygiene

 

Computers & Software

 

Teens & Kids

 

Technology & Science

 

Vehicles & Automotive

 

Index » Education & Learning » Environmental Education
 

Vegetation of the Sahara Desert

 
Author: Richard Monk
The Sahara Desert is often described as a bleak and barren plain. In truth, it is very beautiful and full of different Sahara Desert vegetation.

Vegetation of the Sahara Desert

Among desert areas throughout the Earth, there are two types. The cold type of desert, which is often found in Arctic regions, is an area that gets very little precipitation. The cold desert can be covered in snow, however, and the temperatures here are chilly and unsuitable for sustaining many life forms. The other type of desert is known as the hot desert, and this is what people usually think of when they picture a desert area. This type of desert is extremely warm and dry, with temperatures reaching unbearable levels, and little to no rain to sustain those who live here. The biggest of the hot deserts is the Sahara Desert, located in Africa. Although this desert is not the most hospitable place for organisms to take up residence, the Sahara Desert vegetation defies the odds and thrives here.

Many of the Sahara Desert species in existence today are different than those you would have found in the area during the end of the last ice age. At that time in history, melting ice sheets from the ice age as well as weather patterns which caused monsoon conditions in the region allowed much more vegetation to grow in the Sahara. In around the year 2500 BC, the monsoon conditions retreated to the south, allowing for the desertification of the Sahara region, which returned it to the dry state it was in before the last ice age.

There are still some areas of the Sahara Desert that can be considered lush and green. The Nile Valley, for example, is an area that is still quite full of foliage, trees and other growing things. This area is an exception, because of the way it is fed by the Nile River. Another area of the Sahara that has some vegetation to it is in the North, along the Mediterraneanhere, olive trees grow in abundance. The Saharan highlands are also home to species of trees, such as the doum palm, date palm and oleander; as well as herbs such as thyme.

The rest of the Sahara Desert is sparse and vegetation does not cover much of the area. Here, away from rivers and highlands, grasses and shrubs that have adapted to the high heat of the area manage to survive. Also, halphytes, which are saline-tolerant plants (those plants which can grow in areas of high salt content) grow in the saline depressions of the Sahara. For a desert area, the Sahara manages to have many different types of vegetation, all of which have had to adapt to the unique challenges of a dry desert climate.

Author Bio:

Richard Monk is with FactsMonk.com - a site with facts about everything.

You can search for this article using: environmental issues, environmental versus epigenetic theories, environmental remediation
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Learning Physics At The Grocery Store Check Out Counter
 
Online Degree Programs
 
The Physics of Fiction: A Review of "King of the Sun"
 
C.S. Lewis "The Silver Chair"
 
The Life of Joan Miro
 
On Dis-ease
 
Hurricane Book Marketing Group
 
Make Your Own Biodiesel Fuel
 
Computer Graphic Schools
 
10 Home Schooling Success Tips
 
 
 
Index >> Privacy Policy >> Terms & Conditions
Copyright © www.fullzen.com - All Rights Reserved Worldwide.