I mean, aren’t most planets monobiomic that we know what biome they have?
Nope. Look at our own gas giants or Venus. The gas layers create various different environmental conditions. One theory is we could have floating cities on Venus that exist right in the human habitable zones where you could live “normally”, while the other layers are incredibly toxic.
But that’s like, depending on depth or something, right? Not the coordinates around the sphere? I guess I was mostly talking about planets with a solid surface but Venus is one such planet. Does it have different biomes depending on where you would land as well?
Ice caps I concede, but I don’t consider mountains and valleys to be different biomes if they consist of the exact same soil type and fauna (none). I don’t know what’s the case on Mars, I’m just saying. That’d be like saying the Moon has different biomes as well. But maybe it does, by some definition.
It’s an interesting topic. 😄 Need a geologist or something to chime in here.
If you applied an atmosphere to mountains and valleys you would see a lot more difference. The thinner air on top the high mountains will cause them to be colder which affects other local weather including rain and snow formation that will erode them at different rates than flat ground and cause erosion products to accumulate in the valleys. The varying temperatures and weather conditions would then cause different flora and fauna to appear in the different zones and given a billion years you would end up with biomes not too dissimilar to the ones on earth
I mean, aren’t most planets monobiomic that we know what biome they have?
Although to be fair, 100% of the known planets which have intelligent and evolved life do have diverse biomes…
Nope. Look at our own gas giants or Venus. The gas layers create various different environmental conditions. One theory is we could have floating cities on Venus that exist right in the human habitable zones where you could live “normally”, while the other layers are incredibly toxic.
But that’s like, depending on depth or something, right? Not the coordinates around the sphere? I guess I was mostly talking about planets with a solid surface but Venus is one such planet. Does it have different biomes depending on where you would land as well?
I’m not sure about Venus, but Mars has different temperature ranges on different latitudes and even different seasons due to axial tilt.
Mars has polar ice caps, mountains, valleys, etc if you’re looking for coordinates on the spehere.
Ice caps I concede, but I don’t consider mountains and valleys to be different biomes if they consist of the exact same soil type and fauna (none). I don’t know what’s the case on Mars, I’m just saying. That’d be like saying the Moon has different biomes as well. But maybe it does, by some definition.
It’s an interesting topic. 😄 Need a geologist or something to chime in here.
If you applied an atmosphere to mountains and valleys you would see a lot more difference. The thinner air on top the high mountains will cause them to be colder which affects other local weather including rain and snow formation that will erode them at different rates than flat ground and cause erosion products to accumulate in the valleys. The varying temperatures and weather conditions would then cause different flora and fauna to appear in the different zones and given a billion years you would end up with biomes not too dissimilar to the ones on earth