Glade (geography)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A glade is an open area within a woodland.
Glades are a lot like prairies, but Glades offer little or no soil for trees or plants to grow on. They only allow room for cedar trees or small shrub-like plants and moss, for example the slow growing reindeer lichen.
Conditions in glades are predominantly desert-like because the ground is not protected from the sun by trees or other large plants, causing the temperature in a glade to be as much as 20 degrees higher than regular forest temperature.
Sometimes the word is used in a looser sense, as in the treeless wetlands of the Everglades.