Search  
GNWT Environment and Natural Resources
Home  Our Environment - Cordillera
       Login 
Learn More About... 

Click here to learn more about Our Environment


Click here to learn more about Our Forest


Click here for information on Our Wildlife

Cordillera


The mountains of the Northwest Territories (NWT) are collectively called the Cordillera. This area forms a semi-circle of high plateaus, jagged peaks and river valleys along the western NWT border and extends east of the Mackenzie River to include the Franklin Mountains. The Cordillera influences the climate and drainages of the Taiga Plains to the east. The region displays an exceptional assemblage of boreal and subarctic mountain landscapes and ecosystem diversity.

Under the new ecosystem classification the NWT Cordillera is unique in that it contains portions of three level I ecoregions:  Tundra, Taiga and Northwest Forested Mountains., Nested respectively within each of these level I ecoregions is the Tundra Cordillera, Taiga Cordillera and Boreal Cordillera level II ecoregions.  Five Level III ecoregions are nested within the Level II ecoregions of the Cordillera:  the Tundra Cordillera High Subarctic (HS), the Taiga Cordillera High Subarctic (HS), the Taiga Cordillera Low Subarctic (LS), the Boreal Cordillera (HB), and the Boreal Cordillera Mid-Boreal (MB).  Level III ecoregions are identified primarily by regional climate differences reflected in the soils and vegetation characteristic of each ecoregion.  The Level III ecoregions of the Cordillera are further divided into 36 Level IV ecoregions that are defined by a characteristic pattern of terrain and vegetation.

Click here for the full report of the document Ecological Regions of the Northwest Territories, Cordillera (2010). For a specific level III ecoregion within the Cordillera, please click on one of the individual sections below.


 

1. The Tundra Cordillera High Subarctic (HS) Ecoregion includes the low mountains, plateaus and plains between the western Mackenzie Delta and the Yukon - Northwest Territories border. It contains two level IV ecoregions.


   2. The Taiga Cordillera High Subarctic (HS) Ecoregion occupies the northern third of the Level II Taiga Cordillera Ecoregion. It includes three Level IV Ecoregions.

  3. The Taiga Cordillera Low Subarctic (LS) Ecoregion is the largest level III ecoregion in the Cordillera, and includes 75 percent of the Level II Taiga Cordillera Ecoregion. It includes twelve level IV ecoregions.

  4. The Boreal Cordillera High Boreal (HB) Ecoregion occupies the southeastern quadrant of the main Cordillera massif and includes ten level IV ecoregions.

  5. The Boreal Cordillera Mid-Boreal (MB) Ecoregion paralleles the Yukon-Northwest Territories border in a belt about 350 km long by 70 km wide south of latitude 63º30' north; the Liard and Kotaneelee Ranges west of the Liard River are an eastern outlier. It includes nine level IV ecoregions.

 
Ecosystem Classification Documents 
             GNWT Home Webmaster Copyright Disclaimer Privacy