No they can't.
tundra
The tundra is characterized by having permafrost - the ground is frozen a few inches below the soil surface. Tree roots cannot penetrate this, and so they cannot grow there.
A vegetation region is the major types of plants that grow in that climate and area. So rainforests, grasslands, deserts, tundra, taiga have specific vegetation that grow in that region.
forest grow , higher up are meadows with small trees and shrubs, and above the timberline, where it is too cold for trees to grow, are only scatterd tundra plants.
Trees do not grow in the tundra climate due to several harsh environmental conditions. The short growing season limits the time available for tree growth, while the bitterly cold winters and permafrost prevent roots from establishing. Additionally, the thin, nutrient-poor soil in tundra regions further inhibits tree growth, making it difficult for them to thrive in such an extreme climate. Instead, the tundra is characterized by low-lying vegetation like mosses, lichens, and small shrubs.
The treeless plains of Alaska are called tundra. The harsh climate and short growing season make it difficult for trees to grow in this region. Instead, the landscape is dominated by low-lying plants, grasses, mosses, and lichens.
green
No. Alberta generally has a dry, continental (quite cold in winter and quite warm in summer) climate. The only places in Alberta cold enough to have a tundra climate are high elevations in mountains, above the line where trees can't grow. The rest of Alberta (essentially all of it) is nowhere near a tundra climate; the summers are too warm.
a cold dry region where trees can not grow
No, because the tundra is a biome where no trees grow. Evergreens grow in the Boreal/Coniferous Forest.
its is called a tundra just because it comes from the latin root tundramine that means climate that affects climate itslef
the reason tree's can not grow in the tundra biome is because it's to cold for most living things like plant... I object,,,, trees DO SO grow in the tundra,