It depends on the type of mountain
the mist on the top of the mountains suck into the mountains, the trees automatically grow! confusing isn't it?
Yes, mountains and trees are interconnected in the ecosystem. Trees help stabilize the soil on mountains, preventing erosion, while mountains provide a habitat for trees to grow. Trees also help regulate the climate by absorbing carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen, which benefits both the mountain ecosystem and the planet as a whole.
Yes they do and on ma balls
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 grow everywhere except for the oceanic and arctic regions. They sometimes will not live in deserts, depending on the desert climate.
The tropical coasts and the climate of Taiwan make it easy for palm trees to survive. Palm trees grow in mountains, resorts, beaches along with some other foreign plants.
Mountains are not trees. Mountains are large landforms that are created through geological processes such as tectonic plate movement and volcanic activity. Trees, on the other hand, are living organisms that grow from the ground and are made up of cells, tissues, and organs. The fundamental difference between mountains and trees lies in their composition and formation.
No, mountains are not giant trees in disguise. Mountains are formed through geological processes such as tectonic plate movements and volcanic activity, while trees grow through photosynthesis and biological processes.
Trees. Except peanuts, which are legumes; they grow underground.
Pine trees grow in all areas except Antarctica.
on hills or mountains trees grow on there side it is formed that way because of the wind
sometimes trees grow from other roots of trees