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Ecology of California - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (407 words) |
 | California's high mountains block most moisture from reaching the eastern parts of the state, which are home to California's desert and xeric shrub ecoregions. |
 | California's Central Valley was once a large temperate grassland, the California Central Valley grasslands ecoregion, which was formerly home to great herds of grazing pronghorn and Wapiti; some writers have referred to it as "America's Serengeti". |
 | The mountains of northern California have a cooler and wetter climate, and are home to temperate coniferous forests, including the Sierra Nevada forests, Northern California coastal forests, Klamath-Siskiyou forests, and Central and Southern Cascades forests. |
| Temperate grasslands, savannas, and shrublands - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (262 words) |
 | Temperate grasslands, savannas, and shrublands is a group of biomes in which the climate is temperate to semi-arid. |
 | Grasslands are characterized by grasses and other erect herbs, usually without trees or shrubs. |
 | Temperate grasslands occur in the dry temperate interiors of continents. |