Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • Of or pertaining to biogeography or the geographical distribution of life.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adjective Of or pertaining to biogeography, the study of the geographical arrangement of plants and animals

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • adjective of or relating to or involved with biogeography

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

biogeography +‎ -ic

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Examples

  • The existence of plant and animal endemisms, particularly in biomes in the middle and high mountains were basic indicators for recognizing the singular nature of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta and establishing the status as of Biosphere Reserve in this biogeographic unit.

    Santa Marta páramo 2008

  • A one-stop source for biogeographic information collected from U.S. waters and oceanic regions is now available from the National Biological Information Infrastructure NBII Program.

    USGS — New One-Stop Source for Scientific Information about U.S. Oceans and Waters « ResourceShelf 2010

  • This latter plant with only a single species endemic to the páramo and another species in the high mountains of central Ecuador, represents a biogeographic curiosity.

    Santa Marta páramo 2008

  • I read, first "The aquatic sloth Thalassocnus (Mammalia, Xenarthra) from the Late Miocene of North-Central Chile: biogeographic and ecological implications," and then went back to the long-neglected Victorians and the Prehistoric: Tracks to a Lost World.

    Pictures That Move, and Pictures That Have Ceased Moving greygirlbeast 2008

  • Figure 2: The map of terrestrial ecoregions of the world recognizes 867 distinct units, roughly a four fold increase in biogeographic discrimination over that of the 193 units of Udvardy (1975).

    Ecoregions of the world (WWF) 2009

  • If the arctic host populations become fragmented due to the northward expansion of southern biogeographic elements, extinction of parasites in small host populations and/or cryptic speciation (isolation events seen in parasites, often only by using molecular methods, that are not evident in host populations) in refugia are likely to follow.

    Effects of changes in climate and UV radiation levels on structure of arctic ecosystems in the short and long term 2009

  • The WWF system subvides the terrestrial world into 14 biomes and eight biogeographic realms (Figure 1).

    Ecoregions of the world (WWF) 2009

  • The Altai is the major mountain range in Western Siberia biogeographic region and plays a central role in maintaining the hydrological regime of the Western Siberian Lowlands, by providing the source of the greatest rivers of Western Siberia - the Ob and the Irtysh

    Golden Mountains of Altai, Russian Federation 2009

  • They are classified with a system familiar to all biologists: biogeographic realms and biomes.

    Ecoregions of the world (WWF) 2009

  • Figure 1: The ecoregions are categorized within 14 biomes and eight biogeographic realms to facilitate representation analyses.

    Ecoregions of the world (WWF) 2009

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