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Home › Science › Botany › Trees Native to Canada › Forest Regions

Forest Regions

Boreal Forest
It is the largest region, extending from Newfoundland and Labrador to the Rocky Mountains and Alaska.

Coast Forest
It runs along the British Columbia Coast.

Subalpine Forest
It is located on the mountains of Alberta and British Columbia, extending across interior British Columbia to the Pacific Coast inlets.

Montane Forest
It covers much of the interior uplands of British Columbia and areas in the Kootenay Valley and on the east side of the Rocky Mountains.





Columbia Forest
It includes much of the Kootenay Valley, the upper valleys of the Thompson and Fraser Rivers and the Quesnel Lake area.

Grasslands
This covers the prairies of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta.

Deciduous Forest
It covers southwestern Ontario between Lakes Huron, Erie, and Ontario.

Great Lakes – St. Lawrence Forest
It extends from near the Great Lakes and along the St. Lawrence River.

Acadian Forest
It is located in the Maritime Provinces, but not in Newfoundland and Labrador.




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