Biomes, Habitats, and the Geography of Life
Biomes, habitats, and the geography of life examine how climate, water, seasonality, soils, disturbance, evolutionary history, and dispersal shape the uneven distribution of living systems across Earth. Life is not spread across the planet in a uniform or accidental way. It is organized into broad ecological formations, regional biotas, local habitats, and fine-grained environmental mosaics that reflect both present-day conditions and deep historical processes. This article explores biomes as large-scale ecological formations, habitats and microhabitats, terrestrial and aquatic realms, mountains and islands, endemism and biogeographic regions, human-driven remapping of ecological space, and the growing role of quantitative biogeography, environmental data, R, and Python in understanding the spatial structure of life.









