no. tundra is a tree less region. the plants are shrubs grasses, etc.
no
They would be temperate.
temperate zones
There is maximum diversity at equator and minimum at poles , areas also change with change of latitudes .
low
Both! All lines of latitude between the equator and the tropic of cancer are high latitudes, and lines of latitude between the equator and the tropic of capricorn are considered low latitudes. ***THIS DOES NOT INCLUDE THE TROPICAL LATITUDES*** <- those I can't name
no :) the northern..... well im pretty sure it is northern
Savanna areas occupy mostly southern hemisphere Tropical latitudes, but can exist in northern hemisphere.
In humid areas historically covered by hardwood forest in the latitudes previously glaciated. Areas like the Alleghany Plateau and Southern New England.
High latitudes
Yes there are lakes present in tundra areas.
high latitudes
high latitudes
Tundras and Ice SheetsArctic and alpine tundras are areas where trees grow sparsely due to a short growing season, low precipitation, strong winds, and in the case of alpine tundras, high altitude. Tundras are often found near permanent ice sheets where, during summer, the ice and snow recede to expose the ground and allow vegetation to grow.
cool high latitude areas are called
Polar Easterlies
temperate zones
They would be temperate.