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Wrangel Island Arctic desert

Wrangel Island Arctic desert

Wrangel Island Arctic desert
The Wrangel Island Arctic Desert is a Palearctic tundra ecoregion covering Russia's Wrangel Island, a remote, mountainous island in the Arctic Ocean between the Chukchi and East Siberian Seas, roughly 140 km off the Chukotka coast. Its vegetation is a mosaic of polar desert with hard-packed, gravelly soils and Arctic tundra, treeless and dominated by low-growing plants such as dwarf willows (Salix), sedges (Carex), and mountain-avens. The climate is severe and dry, with prolonged frosty winters, strong northerly winds, and very low annual precipitation. Because the island escaped glaciation during the last ice age, it shelters an exceptionally rich flora of 417 vascular plant species and subspecies, double that of any comparable Arctic territory, including endemic plants and numerous relict species of ancient Beringia. The island is protected as the Natural System of Wrangel Island Reserve, a strict nature reserve inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Among its hardy natives are alpine and rock-garden genera familiar to cold-climate gardeners, including Saxifraga, Primula, Potentilla, and Draba.
RESOLVE 783
Palearctic
2,912 sq mi
Tundra
Landscape type
Tundra
Plant region
Palearctic
Region footprint
2,912 sq mi
Habitat pressure
Half Protected (Dinerstein NNH 1)
Use this as the broad planting pattern for the region: Treeless polar and high-mountain landscapes of low shrubs, sedges, mosses, and lichens, where cold and a short growing season cap plant height. Soils are frequently frozen as permafrost, and these systems recover only slowly from disturbance. For garden decisions, pair that context with the plant list below, then narrow by your site's light, water, soil, and mature-size constraints.

Range & origins

Wrangel Island Arctic desert location on world map
Marker placed inside the RESOLVE 2017 polygon at 71.3°N, 178.9°W. This ecoregion crosses the antimeridian.
Region through time
Modern footprint
RESOLVE 2017 maps 2,912 sq mi
This boundary is a modern ecological footprint for Wrangel Island Arctic desert, not a permanent line on the planet. It is useful for today's plant and wildlife context because it follows recurring vegetation, climate, landform, and disturbance patterns.
Why here
tundra conditions
The region sits in the Palearctic realm and is classed as tundra. Elevation, moisture, fire, soils, coasts, and human land use can all make the real landscape more varied than a single map color suggests.
Change pressure
Half Protected
Plotwright shows this as the current RESOLVE footprint. Over decades to centuries, warming, disturbance, invasive species, land use, and restoration can move the living edge of a region even when the reference map stays fixed.

Planting collections

Finished planting recipes where every member can handle this region's climate range. The fit badge uses the collection's most sensitive plant, so a resilient collection is a safer starting point than any single standout.
Climate-resilient · 2 plantes
Bright shade foundation
A part-shade planting with shrub structure and low foliage contrast.
Annabelle hydrangea
Coral bells
+4
Climate-resilient · 8 plantes
Climate-resilient natives for warming zones (eastern NA)
A pollinator-supporting palette of eastern North American natives with broad hardiness ranges and wide native distributions. Built for gardeners who want a planting that can handle warming zones without giving up wildlife value.
Switchgrass
Little bluestem
Common milkweed
Black-eyed Susan
Wild bergamot
Sweet Joe-Pye weed
Cutleaf coneflower
New England aster
Climate-resilient · 3 plantes
Kitchen patio planters
A compact edible collection for containers, patios, and near-door harvesting.
Genovese basil
Lacinato kale
Coral bells
+2
Climate-resilient · 6 plantes
Mediterranean drought-tolerant edible
A low-water edible palette of culinary herbs + a hardy grape for hot dry sunny sites. Mediterranean-origin plants thrive on neglect; their primary failure mode is overwatering, not underwatering.
English lavender
Rosemary
Garden sage
Oregano
Common thyme
Fox grape
+5
Climate-resilient · 9 plantes
Native pollinator border (eastern US)
A continuous-bloom native pollinator strip for eastern North America. Covers spring through frost with host + nectar plants spanning monarchs, native bees, hummingbirds, and specialist Lepidoptera. Little bluestem provides the matrix grass + Hesperiidae host.
Butterfly weed
Common milkweed
Purple coneflower
Wild bergamot
Scarlet bee balm
Little bluestem
Sweet Joe-Pye weed
Swamp sunflower
Smooth blue aster
Climate-resilient · 4 plantes
Sunny pollinator border
A durable sunny border with summer bloom, seedheads, and upright winter texture.
English lavender
Purple coneflower
Black-eyed Susan
Switchgrass

Similar planting regions

Browse other regions with a similar hot, dry-summer rhythm. Their plant lists can suggest species and combinations worth comparing.
RESOLVE 771 - Palearctic
Cherskii-Kolyma mountain tundra
The Cherskii-Kolyma mountain tundra is a Palearctic tundra ecoregion occupying the higher elevations of the Chersky Range and the Kolyma Mountains in northeastern Russia, a mosaic of montane terrain that also takes in the Verkhoyansk, Ulakhan-Chistay, and Moma ranges and stretches roughly 2,000 km from the Lena River eastward and 1,000 km from the Sea of Okhotsk to the Arctic coast. Vegetation is arranged by elevation: scattered Dahurian larch reaches up to about 1,000 meters, giving way to a belt of dwarf Siberian pine along with Siberian alder, Rhododendron aureum, and shrub birch, and then to lichen-rich alpine tundra with heather and mountain-avens above the treeline. The climate is severe subarctic and entirely underlain by permafrost, with winter temperatures among the coldest on Earth, brief cool summers, and low annual precipitation. The endangered great knot serves as the ecoregion's flagship species, and the rugged terrain shelters reindeer, snow sheep, brown bears, wolverines, and Arctic foxes. Protection is uneven and concentrated in the west, leaving southern and eastern areas exposed to mining and infrastructure pressure, with the Magadan Nature Reserve guarding the southern edge along the Sea of Okhotsk.
Tundra
Zones 3a-7a
+10.1°F by 2070
215,166 sq mi
NNH tier 2
RESOLVE 772 - Palearctic
Chukchi Peninsula tundra
The Chukchi Peninsula tundra spans the northern coast of far northeastern Russia, reaching to Cape Dezhnev, the easternmost point of mainland Asia, and is broken by ranges such as the Chukotka and Anyuskiy mountains. Lying north of the treeline, it is dominated by lichen- and moss-rich tundra rather than trees, with low mountain communities of pincushion plant, alpine azalea, alpine cranberry, eight-petal mountain-avens, and netleaf willow, while coastal zones support dwarf birch and sedges. The climate is harsh and permafrost-bound, with sharp, shifting cold winds, very low annual precipitation, and only brief summers when sea influence nudges daytime temperatures just above freezing. Despite these conditions the region holds remarkable diversity, including hundreds of recorded lichen and moss species, Beringian endemic plants, and fauna such as Siberian bighorn sheep, polar bears, and breeding migratory geese and ducks. Notably, relict species like redcurrant and common oak fern persist near hot springs, a reminder of how sheltered microclimates can host plants well outside their expected range.
Tundra
Zones 3b-10b
+8.7°F by 2070
115,217 sq mi
NNH tier 2
RESOLVE 773 - Palearctic
Kamchatka tundra
The Kamchatka Tundra ecoregion blankets the higher elevations of Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula in the Far East, draped across the central Sredinny Range and the eastern Vostochniy range, a volcanic land studded with more than twenty active volcanoes. Erman's birch (Betula ermanii) forms a zonal forest belt on the mountain flanks, giving way upslope to dwarf Siberian pine thickets, dwarf alder and willow tundra, and dwarf-shrub communities of bog bilberry, dwarf birch, and crowberry mixed with mat-forming lichens. The climate is subarctic and snow-laden, with North Pacific cyclones delivering heavy precipitation spread through the year and snowdrifts that can pile remarkably deep. This is recognized as the southernmost large expanse of Arctic tundra floral community in the world, and parts of it are safeguarded within the Kronotsky Nature Reserve and the Volcanoes of Kamchatka World Heritage Site. For cold-climate gardeners, the region's native flora includes ornamental cushion plants such as blue and Aleutian mountain heath and wedgeleaf primrose that flush briefly into bloom as the deep snow patches melt.
Tundra
Zones 4a-10a
+7.0°F by 2070
46,098 sq mi
NNH tier 2
RESOLVE 774 - Palearctic
Kola Peninsula tundra
The Kola Peninsula tundra is a Palearctic tundra ecoregion spanning the northern and northeastern Kola Peninsula of northwestern Russia and reaching into the northeasternmost tip of Norway, where coastal lowlands meet the Barents Sea to the north and the White Sea along the eastern and southeastern edge. The only trees are sparse woodlands of low, crooked birch, including dwarf birch, while the open ground is carpeted with lichens, mosses, and dwarf shrubs such as mountain crowberry, bilberry, cowberry (lingonberry), alpine bearberry, alpine azalea, and Swedish dwarf cornel, alongside cloudberry. The climate is humid continental of the cool-summer subtype, with long, cold winters and short, cool summers. The ecoregion's flagship species is the Steller's eider, and its sheer coastal cliffs host vast nesting colonies of seabirds including black-legged kittiwakes and murres; protected areas include the Kandalaksha Nature Reserve in Russia and Varangerhalvoya National Park in Norway. For cold-climate gardeners, several hardy native groundcovers grow here, among them lingonberry, bilberry, bearberry, and cloudberry.
Tundra
Zones 7b-10a
+9.6°F by 2070
22,687 sq mi
NNH tier 2
RESOLVE 775 - Palearctic
Northeast Siberian coastal tundra
The Northeast Siberian coastal tundra stretches across the Arctic coastal plain of northeastern Sakha (Yakutia) in Russia, running roughly from the Lena River delta eastward to the Kolyma delta and bordering the Laptev and East Siberian Seas. It is a low-growing tundra of dwarf shrubs, grasses, sedges, and mosses, with polar and gray willow thickets, dwarf birch, and isolated stands of Dahurian larch reaching in from the south. The entire region sits on continuous permafrost, where only a shallow surface layer thaws each summer, producing thermokarst lakes, hummocks, polygonal ridges, and bogs under a cold subarctic-to-tundra climate. Its large river deltas are vital breeding grounds for migratory birds, including the critically endangered Siberian crane, and it holds the largest wild population of tundra reindeer. For gardeners, several cold-hardy genera native here are familiar in northern and rock gardens, among them mountain avens (Dryas), willows (Salix), and Vaccinium.
Tundra
Zones 3a-5b
+12.4°F by 2070
85,938 sq mi
NNH tier 2
RESOLVE 776 - Palearctic
Northwest Russian-Novaya Zemlya tundra
The Northwest Russian-Novaya Zemlya tundra stretches roughly 1,000 km along the north coast of European Russia, from the White Sea-bound Kanin Peninsula eastward toward the Yugorsky and Yamal peninsulas, and takes in Barents Sea islands including Kolguyev and the southern half of the Novaya Zemlya archipelago. This is mostly lowland tundra of extensive marshes, lakes, and coastal meadows, dominated by characteristic shrub, moss, and lichen communities, with small stands of Siberian spruce, willow, and dwarf birch in floodplain areas and on the islands. The climate is humid continental with long, cold winters and short, cool summers, averaging about -20 C in January and roughly 13 C in July. The region is a major nesting ground for migratory geese, swans, and ducks; its flagship is the Bewick's swan, and the vulnerable lesser white-fronted goose occurs on the Kanin Peninsula, with the Nenets Nature Reserve protecting the Pechora River delta. For gardeners, the dwarf birch and willows native here are among the hardy woody plants suited to cold, boggy northern ground.
Tundra
Zones 6a-9b
+11.7°F by 2070
109,787 sq mi
NNH tier 2

Sources & citations

Cite this page
For lesson plans, articles, or regional planting notes that use this Plotwright page. To cite the underlying ecoregion framework or a specific editorial profile, use the source cards below.
Plotwright. (n.d.). Wrangel Island Arctic desert (Wrangel Island Arctic desert). Retrieved 2026, June 14, from https://plotwright.garden/regions/resolve-783
Sources for this region
This page cites Plotwright first for the compiled view, then lists the upstream framework, climate, and editorial source pages so readers can cite the original material directly.
RESOLVE 2017 Terrestrial Ecoregions (Dinerstein et al.)
Primary ecoregion framework
Backs 4 fields
RESOLVE id
Biome + realm
Area
NNH tier
Canada Plant Hardiness
Published hardiness-zone authority
Backs 1 field
NRCan zone range
One Earth
One Earth
Backs 1 field
Editorial summary
Wikipedia
Wikimedia Foundation
Backs 1 field
Summary cross-check