
The Koppen climate classification system categorizes climate zones throughout the world based on local vegetation. Wladimir Koppen, a German botanist and climatologist, first developed this system at the end of the 19th century, basing it on the earlier biome research conducted by scientists. These scientists learned that vegetation and climate are intricately linked. The vegetation that grows in a region is dependent on the temperature and precipitation there, which are two key factors of climate. Areas with more rainfall and higher temperatures contain more forests while regions with less rainfall tend to be deserts. The Koppen climate classification system has been enhanced and modified several times since it was first published.
The system divides the world into five climate zones based on criteria, usually temperature, which allows for different vegetation growth. Koppen’s map used different colors and shades to represent the different climate zones of the world. While most of the zones are organized based on the temperature of a region, Zone B focuses on the aridity of a region. The zones are as follows:
Zone A: tropical or equatorial zone (represented by blue colors
on most maps)
Zone B: arid or dry zone (represented by red, pink,
and orange colors on most maps)
Zone C: warm/mild temperate zone (represented by green colors on
most maps)
Zone D: continental zone (represented by purple,
violet, and light blue colors on most maps)
Zone E: polar zone (represented by gray colors on
most maps)
Each zone is further subdivided based
on temperature or dryness. For example, Zone A has three
subdivisions: Zone Af has no dry season, Zone Am has a short dry season, and
Zone Aw has a winter dry season. Zone B is divided into categories related to
regions such as hot, arid deserts (Zone BWh);
cold, arid deserts (Zone BWk); hot, arid steppes (Zone
BSh); and cold, arid steppes (Zone BSk). Climate zones
C and D are broken into categories based on when the dry seasons occur in the
zones, as well as the coldness of the summer or the warmth of the winter. Zone
E climates are separated into tundra regions (Zone ET) or
snow and ice regions (Zone EF). Additionally, some modern revisions to the
system include a sixth region, known as Zone H. This represents a
highland climate located at mountainous elevations.
Koppen’s classification maps are still used by scientists and
climatologists to this day. Although he published his first map in the early
1900s, Koppen continued to update it until his death in 1940. Subsequent
climatologists, including Rudolf Geiger, updated versions of this map, which
often include Geiger’s name as well. At the time of writing, a recent revision
to this map was published in 2018.