Want this question answered?
Yes! The Arctic Wolf, sub-species to the Gray Wolf, is sometimes called the Tundra Wolf.
No, it is not an invasive species. It is a native to all areas where it lives and has been for tens of thousands of years.
There are only 48 LAND animal species in the arctic tundra
polar bears, snowy owls, arctic wolfs
No, they live primarily in the arctic tundra and eat rodents.
Tundra. The arctic tundra in the summer and then they migrate to the Boreal Forest in the winter.
Approximately 1,700 species of plants live on the Arctic tundra, including flowering plants, dwarf shrubs, herbs, grasses, mosses, and lichens. The tundra is characterized by permafrost, a layer of soil and partially decomposed organic matter, that is frozen year-round.
Yes. 4 species of earthworms from the Family Lumbricidae were found in Alpine Tundra in the Urals (Russia). Enchytracids have a tendency to be found in Arctic Tundra.
Carnivores in the Arctic tundra can eat all sorts of prey including caribou, deer, foxes, and any other mammal species that can survive there.
There are a couple small populations of Arctic foxes in northern Europe that are endangered but overall the species is not endangered and classified as a species "of least concern."
If you mean Arctic tundra then yes.
the polar bear is one. the arctic seal is another arctic fox snowy owl caribou