Forests – Natural Vegetation of India
Table of Contents
- 1Forests – Natural Vegetation of India
- 2Classification of Natural Vegetation of India
- 3Moist Tropical Forests
- 4Dry Tropical Forests
- 5Montane Sub-Tropical Forests
- 6Montane Temperate Forests
- 7Alpine Forests
Forests – Natural Vegetation of India:Types and distribution
types
- Climate, soil and topographyare the major factors that influence Natural Vegetation of a place.
- The main climatic factors arerainfall and temperature. The amount of annual rainfall has a great bearing on the type of vegetation.
Annual Rainfall | Type of Vegetation |
200 cm or more | Evergreen Rain Forests |
100 to 200 cm | Monsoon Deciduous Forests |
50 to 100 cm | Drier Deciduous or Tropical Savanna |
25 to 50 cm | Dry Thorny Scrub (Semi-arid) |
Below 25 cm | Desert (Arid) |
- Temperature is the major factor in Himalayas and other hilly regions with an elevation of more than 900 metres.
- As the temperature falls with altitude in the Himalayan region the vegetal cover changes with altitude fromtropical to sub-tropical, temperate and finally alpine.
- Soil is an equally determining factor in few regions.Mangrove forests, swamp forests are some of the examples where soil is the major factor.
- Topography is responsible for certain minor types e.g.alpine flora, tidal forests, etc..
Classification of Natural Vegetation of India
- Classification of Natural Vegetation of India is primarily based on spatial and annual variations in rainfall. Temperature, soil and topography are also considered.
- India’s vegetation can be divided into 5 main types and 16 sub-types as given below.
A. Moist Tropical Forests
- Tropical Wet Evergreen
- Tropical Semi-Evergreen
- Tropical Moist Deciduous
- Littoral and Swamp
B. Dry Tropical Forests
- Tropical Dry Evergreen
- Tropical Dry Deciduous
- Tropical Thorn
C. Montane Sub-tropical Forests
- Sub-tropical broad leaved hill
- Sub-tropical moist hill (pine)
- Sub-tropical dry evergreen
D. Montane Temperate Forests
- Montane Wet Temperate
- Himalayan Moist Temperate
- Himalayan Dry Temperate
E. Alpine Forests
- Sub-Alpine
- Moist Alpine scrub
- Dry Alpine scrub
Forest Type in India | % of Total Area |
Tropical Moist Deciduous | 37 |
Tropical Dry Deciduous | 28 |
Tropical Wet Evergreen | 8 |
Sub-Tropical Moist Hill | 6 |
Tropical Semi-Evergreen | 4 |
Rest below 4 % |
Moist Tropical Forests
Tropical Wet Evergreen Forests or Rain Forests
Climatic Conditions
- Annual rainfall exceeds 250 cm
- The annual temperature is about 25°-27°C
- The average annual humidity exceeds 77 per cent and
- The dry season is distinctly short.
Characteristics
- Evergreen: Due to high heat and high humidity, the trees of these forests do not shed their leaves together.
- Mesosphytic:Plants adopted to neither too dry nor too wet type climate.
What are mesophytes?· Unlike hydrophytic plants, such as water lily or pondweed, that grow in saturated soil or water, or xerophytic plants, such as cactus, that grow in extremely dry soil, mesophytes are ordinary plants that exist between the two extremes. · Mesophytic environments are marked by average to hot temperatures and soil that is neither too dry nor too wet. |
- Lofty: The trees often reach 45 – 60 metres in height.
- Thick Canopy: From the air, the tropical rain forest appears like a thick canopy of foliage, broken only where it is crossed by large rivers or cleared for cultivation.
- All plants struggle upwards (mostephiphytes) for sunlight resulting in a peculiar layer arrangement. The entire morphology looks like a green carpet when viewed from above.
- Less undergrowth: The sun light cannot reach the ground due to thick canopy. The undergrowth is formed mainly of bamboos, ferns, climbers, orchids, etc.
Distribution
- Western side of the Western Ghats (500 to 1370 metres above sea level).
- Some regions in the Purvanchal hills.
- In the Andaman and Nicobar Islands.
Timber
- Hardwood: The timber of these forests is fine-grained, hard and durable.
- It has high commercial value but it is highly challenging to exploit dueto dense undergrowth, absence of pure stands and lack of transport facilities [Read previous posts on Climatic regions to understand how lumbering industry works in Equatorial Rainforests (hardwood) and Taiga Climatic (softwood) conditions].
- The important species of these forests aremahogany, mesua, white cedar, jamun, canes, bamboo
Tropical Semi-Evergreen Forests
- They are transitional forests between tropical wet evergreen forests and tropical deciduous forests.
- They are comparatively drier areas compared to tropical wet evergreen forests.
Climatic Conditions
- Annual rainfall is 200-250 cm
- Mean annual temperature varies from 24°C to 27°C
- The relative humidity is about 75 per cent
- The dry season is not short like in tropical evergreen forests.
Distribution
- Western coast
- Assam
- Lower slopes of the Eastern Himalayas
- Odisha and
Characteristics
- The semi-evergreen forests are less dense.
- They are moregregarious [living in flocks or colonies – more pure stands] than the wet evergreen forests.
- These forests are characterized by many species.
- Trees usually havebuttressed trunks with abundant epiphytes.
Buttressed Trunks
- The important species are laurel, rosewood, mesua, thorny bamboo – Western Ghats, white cedar, Indian chestnut, champa, mango, etc. – Himalayan region.
Timber
- Hardwood: Similar to that in tropical evergreen forests except that these forests are less dense withmore pure stands (timber industry here is better than in evergreen forests).
Tropical Moist Deciduous Forests
Climatic Conditions
- Annual rainfall 100 to 200 cm.
- Mean annual temperature of about 27°C
- The average annual relative humidity of 60 to 75 per cent.
- Spring (between winter and summer) and summer are dry.
Characteristics
- The trees drop their leaves during the 288 448 288 448s170.8 0 213.4-11.5c23.5-6.3 42-24.2 48.3-47.8 11.4-42.9 11.4-132.3 11.4-132.3s0-89.4-11.4-132.3zm-317.5 213.5V175.2l142.7 81.2-142.7 81.2z"/> Subscribe on YouTube
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