No, the tundra is cool (sometimes cold) and the air humidity is high and the soils are moist during the short growth period. Even though it gets little precipitation the evaporation rate is low unlike a desert.
A tundra is extremely cold, whilst a desert is extremely hot and dry.
The wet season in the tundra typically occurs during the summer months when temperatures are milder and precipitation increases. The dry season in the tundra is usually during the winter months when temperatures drop significantly, leading to frozen conditions and reduced precipitation.
No, a tundra is not hot and dry. Tundras are cold and have very low temperatures, with brief summers and long winters. They have a short growing season with low precipitation, resulting in a cold and harsh environment.
yes
They find plants that are suitable to eat in the hot dry summer. If not they simply search for another area for well cared for plants.
The summer temperature of a tundra climate typically ranges from 3°C to 12°C (37°F to 54°F). Summer in the tundra region is short but can experience periods of continuous daylight, known as the "midnight sun," due to its high latitude location.
Dry, hot and humid.
dry
It is very hot & dry in the summer and is cold and snowing in the winter.
Cold and snowy in the winter, hot and dry in the summer.
Hot aand dry except in summer it is rainy and stormy then.
A hot wind is called the loo. It is a hot and dry summer afternoon wind and is strongest in the months of May and June.