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The Circle of Life The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem - 2010 TV was released on: USA: 10 November 2010
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The park is located mainly in northwestern Wyoming but small sections of the park lie in Montana and Idaho. The park is located in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, the headwaters of the Yellowstone River, and Yellowstone Caldera.
Yellowstone National Park, established by the U.S. Congress and signed into law by President Ulysses S. Grant on March 1, 1872. The name actually derives from the Yellowstone River which flows some 670 miles from the heart of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem in Wyoming to the Montana/North Dakota border.
Over 1700 species of native plants and more than 170 invasive species inhabit Yellowstone. They include deciduous trees, wildflowers (including 12 species of orchids), conifers, brush, and grasses.
Yellowstone National Park comprises 2,219,823 acres (3,472 square miles), an area larger than the states of Rhode Island and Delaware combined. Yellowstone Park is a part of the 18-million acre Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, the largest in-tact temperate ecosystem in the world.
Yellowstone National Park is America's first and most famous Wildlife Sanctuary, originally referred to as 'Colter's Hell'. The park itself is the centerpiece of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, which is the largest (nearly intact) ecosystem in the Earth's northern temperate zone. The park is also home to the largest megafauna location in the Continental United States. Please see the related link listed below for more detailed information:
The address of the Greater Yellowstone Region Geotourism Ctr Inc is: Po Box 250, Driggs, ID 83422-0250
A natural ecosystem would have greater biodiversity than a human-made ecosystem. This is because in a human made ecosystem, everything is controlled and monitored, such as on a farm or in a garden. In a natural ecosystem, the plants, animals, and insects are allowed to flourish as they will, leaving greater room for naturally occurring diversity.
The producers in an ecosystem such as duckweed cattails have the greater total amount of energy. This is because they produce their own energy.
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It expresses biomass at different trophic levels in an ecosystem.