ECosystem and Biomes in Pakistan
ECosystem and Biomes in Pakistan
ECosystem and Biomes in Pakistan
Pakistan is a land of high mountains, fertile river valleys, and inhospitable deserts.
Situated in South Asia, Pakistan’s ecoregions are home to a wide range of flora and
fauna.
The Indus Valley ecoregion is the only one that lies entirely in Pakistan while the
rest are shared with its neighbors such as India and Nepal.
Major Ecosystems in Pakistan
Distribution
The Himalayan subtropical pine forests ecoregion in Pakistan is classified under the Tropical and Subtropical
Coniferous Forests Biome. This ecoregion stretches for about 3,000 km across the Himalayas through
Pakistan, India, Nepal, and Bhutan.
Flora and Fauna
The dominant pine species is the chir, pine ( Pinux roxburghii). The trees in this
ecoregion are widely spaced, and fire is a common occurrence in the forests. The
burnt slopes in the region are home to abundant grass species such and shrub
species including Rubus and Berberis.
Rainfall
The eastern part receives more rainfall from monsoon winds from the Bay of Bengal. Fauna
in the region do not exhibit a high level of endemism and includes 120 mammal species such
as the barking deer, goral, and yellow-throated marten. The ecoregion has been severely
degraded through agriculture and deforestation.
Serious threats to the subtropical pine forests :
Logging and cultivation in the Himalayan forests has push Rhinos, Tigers, Leopards and
many other animals to extinction. Large portion of the forests in the region are being cut
at the higher rate. Species of various plants and animals would soon disappear if proper
conservation steps are nor taken immediately. Than the agricultural plots around the
forests are serious threats to the various natural habitats of the animals.
Nearly two third of the ecoregion has been cleared or degraded, however, several large patches of
forests remain in the extreme western part of the ecoregion. The degraded forest needs to be
rehabilitated and remaining need to be protected to ensure the survival of remain sub-populations
of priority species such as Black Bear.
The ecoregion has been a hub of timber mafia, and further provides the fuelwood needs of the
communities.
Indus Valley Desert biome
DISTRIBUTION
Mostly located in ‘Sindh Sagar Doab’
Thal desert
Distribution
The Indus River-Delta-Arabian Sea mangroves ecoregion is
classified in the Mangrove Biome. This mangrove ecoregion
lies on the Arabian Sea coastline of the Sindh Province in
Pakistan.
To deal with the situation, WWF-Pakistan has initiated a project on the conservation of
mangroves at three sites — Sandspit in Karachi, and Sonmiani and Jiwani in Balochistan.
Thar Desert Ecosystem
Distribution
The desert is densely populated and overgrazing and the introduction of alien species
have been identified as some of the threats to the ecoregion.
The Nara Desert Wildlife National park and the Rann of Kutch Wildlife National park are
some of the conservation reserves in the region.
Threats
Global warming is increasing the incidence of drought,
which dries up water holes. Higher temperatures may
produce an increasing number of wildfires that alter
desert landscapes by eliminating slow-growing trees and
shrubs and replacing them with fast-growing grasses.
Irrigation used for agriculture may in the long term lead to salt
levels in the soil that become too high to support plants.
Grazing animals can destroy many desert plants and animals.
Potassium cyanide used in gold mining may poison wildlife.
This climate features mean temperatures in the coldest month between 0 °C (32 °F) (or −3 °C (27 °F)) and 18 °C (64 °F) and
mean temperatures in the warmest month 22 °C (72 °F) or higher. However, while some climatologists have opted to describe
this climate type as a "humid subtropical climate",
Rainfall often shows a summer peak, especially where monsoons are well developed, as in South Asia). Other areas have a more
uniform or varying rainfall cycles, but consistently lack any predictably dry summer months. Most summer rainfall occurs
during thunderstorms that build up due to the intense surface heating and strong subtropical sun angle.
In Pakistan, the twin cities of Islamabad and Rawalpindi, as well as the city of Swabi in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, feature this
weather pattern.
Pakistan lies in the temperate zone. The climate is
generally arid, characterized by hot summers and
cool or cold winters, and wide variations between
extremes of temperature at given locations. There
is little rainfall. These generalizations should not,
however, obscure the distinct differences existing
among particular locations. For example, the
coastal area along the Arabian Sea is usually
warm, whereas the frozen snow-covered ridges of
the Karakoram Range and of other mountains of
the far north are so cold year round that they are
only accessible by world-class climbers for a few
weeks in May and June of each year.