Special issue «Environment change on the Mongolian plateau: atmosphere, forests, soils and water»

The Mongolian Plateau forms a part of the Central Asian Plateau and covers an area of approximately 3,200,000 square kilometers in Mongolia and adjacent areas in China and Southern Siberia. It contains one of the world’s largest grassland areas, with the Gobi desert in the south and a transition via...

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Main Authors: Daniel Karthe, Sergey Chalov, Alexander Gradel, Antonín Kusbach
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lomonosov Moscow State University 2019-10-01
Series:Geography, Environment, Sustainability
Online Access:https://ges.rgo.ru/jour/article/view/829
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spelling doaj-74263b4559f540a9a8335af76f9fe44f2021-07-28T21:10:08ZengLomonosov Moscow State UniversityGeography, Environment, Sustainability2071-93882542-15652019-10-01123606510.24057/2071-9388-2019-1411407Special issue «Environment change on the Mongolian plateau: atmosphere, forests, soils and water»Daniel Karthe0Sergey Chalov1Alexander Gradel2Antonín Kusbach3German-Mongolian Institute for Resources and Technology (GMIT)Moscow State UniversityInternational Forestry Consultancy GradelMendel University in Brno (MENDELU)The Mongolian Plateau forms a part of the Central Asian Plateau and covers an area of approximately 3,200,000 square kilometers in Mongolia and adjacent areas in China and Southern Siberia. It contains one of the world’s largest grassland areas, with the Gobi desert in the south and a transition via steppe and forest steppe to the taiga and mountain tundra in the North (Dulamsuren et al. 2005; Miao et al. 2015). Due to its location, the Plateau's climate is continental and semi-arid to arid, characterized by low precipitation (about 250 mm on average), high potential evapotranspiration (almost 1000 mm on average), large temperature amplitudes, long and harsh winters and recurrent droughts (Dorjgotov 2009; Liu et al. 2019). The Mongolian Plateau mostly drains into the Arctic Ocean basin, including the system of the Selenga River and Lake Baikal, which is not only the world's largest freshwater lake but also a natural heritage of global importance (Kasimov et al. 2017). Hydrologically, parts of the plateau also belong to the Pacific Ocean and Central Asian internal drainage basins.https://ges.rgo.ru/jour/article/view/829
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel Karthe
Sergey Chalov
Alexander Gradel
Antonín Kusbach
spellingShingle Daniel Karthe
Sergey Chalov
Alexander Gradel
Antonín Kusbach
Special issue «Environment change on the Mongolian plateau: atmosphere, forests, soils and water»
Geography, Environment, Sustainability
author_facet Daniel Karthe
Sergey Chalov
Alexander Gradel
Antonín Kusbach
author_sort Daniel Karthe
title Special issue «Environment change on the Mongolian plateau: atmosphere, forests, soils and water»
title_short Special issue «Environment change on the Mongolian plateau: atmosphere, forests, soils and water»
title_full Special issue «Environment change on the Mongolian plateau: atmosphere, forests, soils and water»
title_fullStr Special issue «Environment change on the Mongolian plateau: atmosphere, forests, soils and water»
title_full_unstemmed Special issue «Environment change on the Mongolian plateau: atmosphere, forests, soils and water»
title_sort special issue «environment change on the mongolian plateau: atmosphere, forests, soils and water»
publisher Lomonosov Moscow State University
series Geography, Environment, Sustainability
issn 2071-9388
2542-1565
publishDate 2019-10-01
description The Mongolian Plateau forms a part of the Central Asian Plateau and covers an area of approximately 3,200,000 square kilometers in Mongolia and adjacent areas in China and Southern Siberia. It contains one of the world’s largest grassland areas, with the Gobi desert in the south and a transition via steppe and forest steppe to the taiga and mountain tundra in the North (Dulamsuren et al. 2005; Miao et al. 2015). Due to its location, the Plateau's climate is continental and semi-arid to arid, characterized by low precipitation (about 250 mm on average), high potential evapotranspiration (almost 1000 mm on average), large temperature amplitudes, long and harsh winters and recurrent droughts (Dorjgotov 2009; Liu et al. 2019). The Mongolian Plateau mostly drains into the Arctic Ocean basin, including the system of the Selenga River and Lake Baikal, which is not only the world's largest freshwater lake but also a natural heritage of global importance (Kasimov et al. 2017). Hydrologically, parts of the plateau also belong to the Pacific Ocean and Central Asian internal drainage basins.
url https://ges.rgo.ru/jour/article/view/829
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