Climate pattern
Climate pattern notes are being added.
Foxe Uplands is a region of hilly uplands and lowlands, largely composed of Canadian Shield rocks, with short cool summers, long cold winters, and discontinuous vegetation.
Zone
Arctic
Common Name
Foxe Uplands
CEC Level III Code
2.1.5
CEC Level II Code
2.1 Northern Arctic
Overview
Region facts
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Aliases | Foxe Uplands |
| Geographic Range | The Foxe Uplands region covers areas surrounding the Foxe Basin water body, including eastern Baffin Island and the Melville Peninsula in Nunavut. |
| Climate Snapshot | The Foxe Uplands region experiences short cool summers (mean 0.5°C to 4.5°C) and long cold winters (mean -25°C to -26.5°C), with mean annual precipitation ranging from 100 mm to 300 mm. |
| Terrain Profile | The terrain consists of hilly uplands and lowlands composed of Canadian Shield rocks, rising to about 400-600 masl, with common bedrock outcroppings and thin soils, and is underlain by continuous permafrost. |
| Vegetation Cover | Vegetation is discontinuous and dominated by species like purple saxifrage, Dryas spp., and arctic willow on Baffin Island, while areas closer to Melville Peninsula feature dwarf birch and willow. |
| Wildlife Habitat | Characteristic wildlife in the Foxe Uplands includes caribou, muskox, arctic hare, arctic fox, snowy owl, polar bear, seal, and seabirds, inhabiting areas of low to medium productivity. |
Eco snapshot
Climate pattern notes are being added.
Vegetation is discontinuous and dominated by species like purple saxifrage, Dryas spp., and arctic willow on Baffin Island, while areas closer to Melville Peninsula feature dwarf birch and willow.
Characteristic wildlife in the Foxe Uplands includes caribou, muskox, arctic hare, arctic fox, snowy owl, polar bear, seal, and seabirds, inhabiting areas of low to medium productivity.
Pollinator impact notes are being added.
Seasonal timing
Seasonal timing notes are being added.
Seasonal checklist notes are being added.
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 | Early food sources and safe shelter | Plan a pesticide-free patch in your home region; choose native plants with early bloom; leave some yard “messy” until it warms up |
| Spring | A ramp-up of nectar/pollen and nesting sites | Plant or pot up native flowers where you live; add bare soil and small cavities; avoid “weed-and-feed” products |
| Summer | Continuous bloom and water access | Keep flowers blooming in your home region (containers count); provide a shallow water source; avoid spraying for insects |
| Late summer/fall | Late-season nectar/pollen; places to overwinter | Add late-blooming natives where you live; leave stems/leaves for shelter; avoid fall pesticide applications |
| Winter or Dry Season | Undisturbed shelter | Don’t over-tidy; keep leaf litter or plant stems; plan next season’s bloom sequence |
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.