The answer is a taiga; that is the only thing that I can think of that matches the description.
The subarctic zone
We are. Many Canadians live in a subarctic climate.
The subarctic is a place/environment, places/environments are things not animals and therefore they do not eat.
antarctic to 60 degrees north
Neither, Subarctic.
taiga
tiga
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Trees found in subarctic forests are typically small coniferous and a few broadleaf deciduous types.
Taiga
The answer is a taiga; that is the only thing that I can think of that matches the description.
Russia has the same climate as Canada. They both are located in the arctic and subarctic latitudes. They also both have vast areas of taiga, which is subarctic coniferous forest.
TaigaThe swampy coniferous forest of high northern latitudes, esp. that between the tundra and steppes of Siberia and North America.
The swampy coniferous forest of high northern latitudes, esp. that between the tundra and steppes of Siberia and North America.
These terms apply to trees, not to small plants. The Venus fly trap is a perennial which lives in warm, swampy places.
No, moose do not live in the tropics at all. Most moose live in subarctic regions. They live in coniferous forests called taiga.
Moose live primarily in the taiga. The taiga consists of subarctic coniferous forests. The taiga exists in Canada as well as throughout Siberia, and moose live in both places.