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Pakistan
has some of the world’s highest cold areas and numerous
intermediate stages. Thus, within a relatively small area, it
has the equivalent of many of the world’s most important
climatic and vegetation zones or biomes.
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Section
3: Natural Regions
Pakistan
has great extremes of elevation, reaching the highest point at
the Himalayan peak of K2 (also known as Mount Godwin Austen) in
the north and the lowest point at the Arabian Sea coast in the
south. The Indus River flows the length of Pakistan from north
to south. The Indus and its tributaries form a wide river valley
with fertile plains in Punjab and Sind (Sindh) provinces.
Pakistan is mountainous in the north and west. Earthquakes are
frequent, and occasionally severe, in the northern and western
areas.
Much
of Pakistan is a dry, sun-scorched region. To the west of the
Indus are the rugged dry mountains of the Sulaiman Range, which
merge with the treeless Kirthar Range in the south. Farther west
are the arid regions of the Baluchistan Plateau and the Kharan
Basin. A series of mostly barren low mountains and hills
predominate in the western border areas. The Thar Desert
straddles the border with India in the southeast.
The
country also possesses a variety of wetlands, with the glacial
lakes of the Himalayas, the mudflats of the Indus Valley
plains, and the extensive coastal mangroves of the Indus River
delta. The wetland areas cover an estimated area of 7.8
million hectares (19.3 million acres).
Pakistan
has some of the world’s highest cold areas and numerous
intermediate stages. Thus, within a relatively small area, it
has the equivalent of many of the world’s most important
climatic and vegetation zones or biomes. Moving from permanent
snow and cold desert habitats, through alpine, mountain
temperate forests and tropical deciduous forests to the alpine
dry steppes, the arid subtropical/desert habitats, thorn forest,
the reverain plains of the Indus and its tributaries and finally
a rich mangrove and associated systems along the coast.
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Map
showing extremes of elevation |
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Map
Credit: WWF-Pakistan |
References
and Credits:
-
Pakistan,"
Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2004
http://encarta.msn.com © 1997-2004 Microsoft Corporation.
All Rights Reserved.
-
Biodiversity
Action Plan for Pakistan © 2000 by Government of Pakistan,
World Wide Fund for Nature, Pakistan and International Union
for Conservation of Nature and
Natural
Resources, Pakistan
First
National Report on the Implementation of the Convention on
Biological Diversity, LEAD Pakistan, Ministry of Environment
and Local Government Pakistan and UNEP
COUNTRY
REPORT BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION IN PAKISTAN, Ejaz Ahmad
Conservation Director, World Wide Fund For Nature - Pakistan
BIODIVERSTIY
CONSERVATION IN PAKISTAN : AN OVERVIEW, Muhammad Ajmal
Director (Industries & Ozone) Ministry of Environment,
Urban Affairs, Forestry and Wildlife C/O Pakistan National,
Commission for UNESCO
Pakistan
at a Glance, The World Resource Institute
©1997-2004
Wildlife of Pakistan-All Rights Reserved.
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