some abiotic factors of the arctic are permafrost, strong winds, poor soil, long winters and short summers.
Abiotic factors in tundra areas include ice, water, and temperatures. Other factors are altitude, the amount of rain and snow, and rocks.
cold temperatures, rivers, percipitation, sunlight, and rocks
The Arctic consists mostly of sea ice or open sea. The remaining land area is tundra, a distinct biome from a desert. Antarctica, however, is a true polar desert,
Yes there are many bacteria in the arctic
wildlife, plants, microbes
grasses,wind, light ,and temperature
Some abiotic factors in the tundra are dirt, water, sun, air, snow, precipitation.
some abiotic factors of the arctic are permafrost, strong winds, poor soil, long winters and short summers.
Defentally not me! haha u wasted your time with this question!
Wind, cold, weather, soil, floodplains
Foxes.
An abiotic factor is a non biological component of a biome. For tundra, the lower annual temperature average is one such factor. Additionally, because of the latitude, the wide range of sunlight that the tundra receives is another.
Some biotic factors include:Animals that live there (polar bears, penguins, fish, etc. depending on location)MicrobesPlants (not many, but there are a few in the warmer areas)Fungi (see plants)I'm sure I missed a few, and may not have been specific enough for you. I suggest googling it using my categories.-AS
The soil is an example... there is also temperature especcially with global warming. All together, it could be of the tundra that is there or the slimple climate that can be abiotic factors. That answer you must look for.
Tundra is abiotic because it cannot breathe oxygen.
Moss, lichens, mushrooms, and grass.
The Tundra is a geographical region and does not adapt.