SAVANNAS - translation to arabic
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SAVANNAS - translation to arabic

MIXED WOODLAND-GRASSLAND ECOSYSTEM
Savannahs; Savannas; Savanah; Savannah; Tree savanna; Savanna climate; Woodland savannah; Woodland savanna; Effects of climate change on savannas; Effects of global warming on savannas
  • A ''savanna woodland'' in [[Northern Australia]] demonstrating the regular tree spacing characteristic of some savannas.
  • [[Bushfire]] in [[Kakadu National Park]], Australia
  • holm oak]]
  • [[Grevy's zebra]]s grazing
  • A ''grass savannah'' in [[South Africa]] ([[Kruger National Park]])
  • Acacia savanna, [[Taita Hills Wildlife Sanctuary]], [[Kenya]].
  • A ''tree savanna'' in [[Tanzania]], East Africa ([[Tarangire National Park]])
  • Savanna in eastern South Africa
  • Savanna in [[Western Sydney]]

SAVANNAS         

ألاسم

سَافَانَا

savanna         
‎ السَّفانَة:مَرْجٌ في المناطق المدارية‎
SAVANNA         

ألاسم

سَافَانَا

Definition

savannah
(also savanna)
¦ noun a grassy plain in tropical and subtropical regions, with few trees.
Origin
C16: from Sp. sabana, from Taino zavana.

Wikipedia

Savanna

A savanna or savannah is a mixed woodland-grassland (i.e. grassy woodland) ecosystem characterised by the trees being sufficiently widely spaced so that the canopy does not close. The open canopy allows sufficient light to reach the ground to support an unbroken herbaceous layer consisting primarily of grasses. According to Britannica, there exists four savanna forms; savanna woodland where trees and shrubs form a light canopy, tree savanna with scattered trees and shrubs, shrub savanna with distributed shrubs, and grass savanna where trees and shrubs are mostly nonexistent.

Savannas maintain an open canopy despite a high tree density. It is often believed that savannas feature widely spaced, scattered trees. However, in many savannas, tree densities are higher and trees are more regularly spaced than in forests. The South American savanna types cerrado sensu stricto and cerrado dense typically have densities of trees similar to or higher than that found in South American tropical forests, with savanna ranging from 800 to 3300 trees per hectare (trees/ha) and adjacent forests with 800–2000 trees/ha. Similarly Guinean savanna has 129 trees/ha, compared to 103 for riparian forest, while Eastern Australian sclerophyll forests have average tree densities of approximately 100 per hectare, comparable to savannas in the same region.

Savannas are also characterised by seasonal water availability, with the majority of rainfall confined to one season; they are associated with several types of biomes, and are frequently in a transitional zone between forest and desert or grassland, though they're mostly a transition between desert to forest. Savanna covers approximately 20% of the Earth's land area. Unlike the prairies in North America and steppes in Eurasia, which would feature cold winters, savannahs are mostly located in areas having warm to hot climates, such as those in Africa, Australia, Thailand, South America and India.

Examples of use of SAVANNAS
1. Giant anteaters lives in grassland savannas, swamps, forests and wetlands throughout much of Latin America, from Belize to northern Argentina.
2. Flytraps also are being wiped out by logging and efforts to suppress wildfires in their slim stretches between dry Carolina savannas and mucky pocosins, a type of wetland.
3. A million tourists a year spend more than $580 million to see and photograph lions, elephants, gazelle and other wildlife on this East African country‘s savannas.
4. A01 OCULOKORI, Uganda –– He had escaped alone, running for his life through swamps and grassy savannas, leaving behind seven years of captivity in one of Africa‘s most sadistic rebel groups, the Lord‘s Resistance Army.
5. By Monte ReelWashington Post Foreign ServiceMonday, September 5, 2005; A25 LA GLORIA, Colombia –– Each weekend, Luis Soriano and two heavily burdened donkeys traverse the hills and savannas of northern Colombia, where villages like El Dificil and El Tormento were aptly named for their rutted, tortuous approaches.