Basically, yes. They both support similar plant and animal species.
Both are large rolling areas of grasses.
Yes
it need 4 side
In North America - the prairies In South America - the Pampas In Asia - the Steppes In Africa - the Savannah
Grasslands are not exclusively called prairies in the US. The term "prairie" is commonly used in North America, specifically the central part of the continent. In other countries, grasslands may have different names, such as savannah in Africa, pampas in South America, or steppe in Eurasia.
Yes, pampas foxes are omnivores
i think that it is pampas but i could be completely wrong so please do not copy this answer pampas llano
( . Y . )
PAMPAS
they are all grasslands!!
it need 4 side
With a generally temperate climate, the Pampas house grassy prairies and grass steppes. The climate, being mild, and the evenly dispersed rainfall of the area allow agriculture to flourish.
grassland North America Europe Asia
Prairies and plains are both flat and there is not really a difference.
no
In North America - the prairies In South America - the Pampas In Asia - the Steppes In Africa - the Savannah
The answer is in the name. Short grass prairies and tall grass prairies are different because short grass prairies have short grass, and tall grass prairies have tall grass. Also, tall grass prairies get up to 40 inches of rain, and short grass prairies get only 15inches of rain a year.
An exsensive plain, esp. one without trees.
Grasslands are not exclusively called prairies in the US. The term "prairie" is commonly used in North America, specifically the central part of the continent. In other countries, grasslands may have different names, such as savannah in Africa, pampas in South America, or steppe in Eurasia.