About the Area
This
Global ecoregion is made up of 2 terrestrial ecoregions:
Muskwa-Slave Lake forests; and
Northern Cordillera forests.
The
Muskwa-Slave Lake forests are named after the large Slave Lake in the south central Northwest Territories. Encompassing a series of plains and mountains, including portions of the Mackenzie River plain and Caribou mountains, the Muskwa-Slave lake boreal forests experience cool summers and very cold winters characterized by low precipitation. The resulting habitats, which are forests dominated by spruce and fir trees, support one of North America's most diverse and intact large mammal systems.
The
northern Cordillera forests extend across northern British Columbia, southern Yukon Territory, and cover a minute area in the Northwest Territories. It represents a combination of alpine, subalpine and boreal mid-Cordilleran habitats across much of northern British Columbia and southeastern Yukon.