Climate pattern
- Short summers and long winters are typical.
- Weather can shift quickly, especially in mountain terrain.
- Microclimates (small local weather differences) can be created by slope direction, wind exposure, and nearby water.
Alaska Range is a south central Alaska ecoregion marked by high and steep mountains with ice fields and glaciers, a subarctic continental climate, and vegetation ranging from barren areas and dwarf scrub communities to sparse forests of white and black spruce in low-elevation drainages.
Zone
Interior
Common Name
Alaska Range
CEC Level III Code
6.1.2
CEC Level II Code
6.1 Boreal Cordillera
Overview
Region facts
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Aliases | Alaska Range, CEC 6.1.2 |
| Geographic Range | The Alaska Range ecoregion spans a wide area of south central Alaska. |
| Climate Snapshot | The Alaska Range has a subarctic continental climate with cool summers, cold winters, a mean annual temperature ranging from approximately -6°C to 1°C, and widely varying precipitation from about 350 mm in lowlands to over 3,000 mm on high peaks. |
| Terrain Profile | The Alaska Range features high and steep mountains, rocky slopes, ice fields, and glaciers, with elevations ranging from sea level up to over 6,100 masl, and is characterized by a complex mix of deformed metamorphic rocks, granitic batholiths, and large, active volcanoes. |
| Vegetation Cover | The Alaska Range features areas barren of vegetation, dwarf scrub communities at higher elevations, shrub communities of willow, birch, and alder on lower slopes, and rare forests of white and black spruce in low-elevation drainages. |
| Wildlife Habitat | The Alaska Range wildlife includes large mammals such as brown bear, gray wolves, wolverines, caribou, and moose, along with Dall sheep and pikas on middle and upper slopes, and salmon running in the streams. |
Eco snapshot
The Alaska Range features areas barren of vegetation, dwarf scrub communities at higher elevations, shrub communities of willow, birch, and alder on lower slopes, and rare forests of white and black spruce in low-elevation drainages.
The Alaska Range wildlife includes large mammals such as brown bear, gray wolves, wolverines, caribou, and moose, along with Dall sheep and pikas on middle and upper slopes, and salmon running in the streams.
Seasonal timing
Yearly needs
What pollinators need throughout the year, and what to do about it.
| Season | What pollinators need most | What you can do |
|---|---|---|
| Late winter / early spring | Safe shelter as temperatures fluctuate; early food when available | Avoid “spring clean-up” that removes stems/leaves too early; plan your plant list and site |
| Spring | Early blooms; sunny, wind-sheltered foraging spots | Plant or protect early-blooming natives; create windbreaks with rocks/logs or fencing where appropriate |
| Summer | Steady nectar/pollen; water; nesting materials | Keep a continuous bloom sequence; provide shallow water; leave some bare, well-drained soil patches |
| Late summer / fall | Late blooms; places to overwinter | Add late-blooming natives; stop deadheading some plants; leave stems standing |
| Winter | Undisturbed shelter | Leave leaf litter and stems; avoid disturbing likely nesting areas until conditions truly warm |
Seed mix concept
Spring starter: early-blooming, cold-tough flowers for the first active days.
Summer bridge: reliable mid-season bloomers that carry the peak foraging period.
Fall finisher: late-blooming plants that help pollinators fuel up before winter.
What You Can Do
Turn this knowledge into action. Whether you plant a single pot or a whole garden, you are building a vital bridge for local biodiversity.
Join the movement to restore our shared habitats.