taiga - a cool forest biome of conifers in the upper Northern Hemisphere, long, cold winters and small amounts of precipitation, northern coniferous forest composed of pine, fir, hemlock, and spruce tree, soil is acidic and mineral-poor
temperate deciduous forest - the biome in southeastern Canada, and eastern United States, warmer temperatures lots of precipitation, huge forests
tropical rainforest - biome near the equator, most diverse and hottest terrestrial biome, warm climate wet weather, high plant growth
shrubland - biome around California coast and the Mediterranean Sea, hot summers and mild, rainy winters, contains fire-tolerant shrubs
temperate grassland - biome found in North America, Eurasia, South America and Africa, nutrient-rich soil, cold winters and rainfall, grasses and few trees
savanna - a grassland biome with scattered individual trees, large herbivores, three distinct seasons, occasional fires and drought
desert - a biome characterized by low moisture levels and infrequent and unpredictable precipitation, little rainfall supports only sparse or no vegetation at all
tundra - biome in the Arctic and Antarctica, coldest of all the biomes, lots of lichens, mosses, sedges, and dwarfed shrubs, cold climate, permafrost, low biotic diversity
Aquatic Biomes
Freshwater Biomes - streams, rivers, ponds, and lakes
streams/rivers - A freshwater ecosystem in which the water flows in a current
ponds/lakes - A body of fresh water that is surrounded by land and that does not flow
Marine Biomes - oceans, coral reefs, marshland, and estuaries
oceans - deep ocean water located away from the shoreline
coral reefs - most diverse marine biome, warm, shallow waters beyond shoreline
marshland - found along the coast in temperate climates, contains non-woody mergingvegetation
estuaries - a coastal body of water, partly surrounded by land, with access to the open ocean and a large supply of fresh water from a river