Conditions. Low temperature and high biting winds.
The tree line is the elevation at which trees stop growing due to harsh conditions like cold temperatures, high winds, and lack of nutrients. This line varies depending on the location, with trees unable to grow beyond a certain point in cold, mountainous regions or at high latitudes.
play COD and grow a pair
The Trees They Grow So High - album - was created in 1988.
No, coniferous trees do not grow on Mount Kilimanjaro due to its location near the equator and its elevation, which is too high for them to thrive. Instead, the mountain is home to unique flora and vegetation adapted to its diverse climate zones, ranging from lush rainforest to alpine desert.
No, coconuts do not grow underground. They grow on palm trees, high up off the ground.
grow dwarf trees
It is because of the different temperate zones. As you go further up in elevation there is less atmosphere and so it will be colder. All mountains have this effect in some degrees. Mt Evans for example in June will have snow at the top and trees do not grow that high. At the base more flowers and trees and plants grow.
Well Iceland does have trees. How ever trees do not grow in lava fields due to lack of earth. Trees do not grow well in the highlands and similar places, mostly because of high winds.
A timberline is the point on a mountain above which trees do not grow due to harsh conditions such as cold temperatures and high winds. The elevation at which the timberline occurs varies depending on factors like latitude, climate, and local topography.
* swamp * marshland
All mountains have trees, but only for so high. There is the treeline which, on a mountain, is the altitude line above which no trees will grow. Some species of trees (conifers, for example) may grow higher than broadleaf trees that thrive best lower down in the valleys.
Trees do not grow above the tree line primarily due to harsh environmental conditions, including low temperatures, high winds, and short growing seasons. The tree line typically marks the elevation where these factors limit tree growth, leading to the dominance of alpine vegetation instead. In these high-altitude areas, conditions are more suitable for shrubs, grasses, and other hardy plants that can withstand extreme climates.