) Subarctic temperatures are above for at least one and at most three months of the year. Precipitation tends to be low due to the low moisture content of the cold air but isn't to the point to
semiarid regions. Precipitation is typically greater in warmer months, with a summer maximum ranging from moderate in
North America to extreme in the
Russian Far East. Except in the wettest areas glaciers are not large because of the lack of winter precipitation; in the wettest areas, however, glaciers tend to be very abundant and
Pleistocene glaciation covered even the lowest elevations.
Soils of the subarctic are in which leaching of nutrients takes place even in the most heavily glaciated regions. The dominant soil orders are
podsols and, further north,
gelisols. Subarctic regions are often characterized by
taiga forest vegetation as
deciduous trees can't withstand the long winters, though where winters are relatively mild, as in
northern Norway,
broadleaf forest may occur—though in some cases soils remain too saturated almost throughout the year to sustain
any tree growth and the dominant vegetation is a peaty herbland dominated by
grasses and
sedges. Typically, there are only a few species of large terrestrial
mammals in the subarctic regions, the most important being elk,
moose (
Alces alces),
bears,
reindeer (
Rangifer tarandus), and
wolves (
Canis lupus).
Agriculture is mainly limited to
animal husbandry as many crops can't be grown here, though in some areas
barley can be grown.
Canada and
Siberia are very rich in minerals, notably
nickel,
molybdenum,
cobalt,
lead,
zinc and
uranium, whilst the
Grand Banks and
Sea of Okhotsk are two of the richest
fisheries in the world and provide support for many small towns. Except for those areas that are well-drained or adjacent to warm
ocean currents, there is almost always continuous
permafrost due to the very cold winters and short summers. This means that building in most subarctic regions is very difficult and expensive: cities are very few (
Murmansk being the largest) and generally small, whilst
roads are also few. Subarctic rail transport only exists in
Europe (lines to
Narvik and Murmansk) and the
Norilsk–
Dudinka line in northern
Siberia, as well as the
Alaska Railroad in Alaska and short sections of rail lines in Canada reaching northward into the lower subarctic. An important consequence is that transportation usually tends to be restricted to
"bush" planes,
helicopters and, in summer,
riverboats. In areas that receive lower rainfall they tend to be covered by
grasslands. ==Economy==