In the Arctic Tundra, there are ravens, snow buntings, trouts, flatfish, etc. and mammals such as polar bears, arctic foxes, lemmings, arctic hares, and arctic squirrels. As for the Alpine tundra, life consists of not only plants, but grouselike birds, mountain goats, elks, marmots, pikas. Sources also state other mammals in the tundra are harlequin ducks, snowy owls, caribou, and snow geese.
Caribou, Arctic Hares, Voles, Ptarmigan, Seals.
Lemmings, mice, pikas, Arctic hares, and Caribou.
polar bears and much more
A wolf and caribou
caribou, lemmings, and the arctic hare.
caribou, lemmings, and the arctic hare.
a wolf
The Tundra Wolf (Canis lupus albus) is a subspecies of the Grey Wolf.
Tundra wolf is one
Yes! The Arctic Wolf, sub-species to the Gray Wolf, is sometimes called the Tundra Wolf.
Both the red fox and the Arctic fox are found in the range of the Arctic wolf and may be occasionally be taken as prey by them.
The cast of Following the Tundra Wolf - 1974 includes: Robert Redford as Narrator
it only is if you are a Artic wolf.
yes.
In general terms a gray wolf is a predator, while the animal it is hunting is the prey. If someone or something were hunting the wolf, it would become prey. Example: The gray wolf is hunting a rabbit.--wolf predator, rabbit prey Example: The man is hunting a grey wolf.--man predator, wolf prey
meat?
snakes and alligators ?