It can, but it depends which part of the Arctic. It is usually relatively warm in the Arctic, and this is a time when you get brief flower blooms on the tundra and lots of mosquitoes. Summer is very brief, but things really do come alive.
no, not in the summer
Snow shoe (Arctic) hares moult out their summer (agouti brown) coats for a coat of white for the winter.
Yes, they do so in the summer months.
During winter the Arctic Ocean is covered with ice and snow (which are water but not in liquid form).During the summer the amount of ice has diminished dramatically during the last decade (one of the primary indications of global warming).
Muskoxen change their diets from summer to winter. During the summer, muskoxen eat grasses, arctic willows, small woody plants, lichens, and mosses. In winter they eat arctic willows willows and dry grasses if they can reach them beneath the snow.
70
yes, only in north pole, south pole, sometimes Arctic.
Various bird species migrate to the Arctic each year to breed during the summer months. Some examples of migratory birds to the Arctic include snow geese, plovers, sandpipers, and terns. These birds travel long distances to take advantage of the abundant food resources available in the Arctic during the breeding season.
yes
The lowest level permanent snow reaches during the summer is called the snow line. In most cases, the snow line is about 12,000 feet in the Northern Hemisphere.
It does not snow in summer because it is too hot and it is too cold to rain in winter.
The answer is the Arctic fox. In summer, the Arctic fox's coat is brown or gray, but it turns white in winter to blend in with the snow for camouflage while hunting. This seasonal color change is known as "moulting."