Well Alladins magic carpet should only carry 1 person and a monkey but it can hold 2 people and a monkey as well
No, because the tundra is a biome where no trees grow. Evergreens grow in the Boreal/Coniferous Forest.
Alpine tundra occurs on high mountains, where it is too cold for trees to grow but still warm enough for some forms of life to survive. Most alpine plants are perennial and evergreen. They include saxifrages, cranberries, heathers, and dwarf willows. Being evergreen helps these plants survive, because they are already have leaves when the short summer growing season starts. There are also a few types of deciduous plants (which shed their leaves in winter), including willows and birches. See Peter D. Moore, Tundra (Chelsea House, 2006).
The alpine tundra is in the mountains on the eastern hemisphere. It is usually cold, snowy, and windy there. The alpine tundra lies at the altitude of 10,000 feet right below the snow line of the mountains. To get to the biome you would have to hike through the forest biome, grassland biome, steppe biome, and the taiga biome. Summer usually lasts from June to September at about 10 to 15 degrees Celsius. In the winter it goes from October to May in below freezing temperatures. Since the alpine tundra is so high the oxygen is very little so the tree population is very small. In the arctic tundra the soil is hard and unusable but in the alpine tundra the soil is softer. The result of this is that there are more plants. Most of the plants there are perennials witch means they grow back every year. The most popular animals to be sited in the alpine tundra are mountain goats, chinchillas, woodland caribou, and pica.
Tundra means an area where plants can't grow. Considereing there would be no plants in tundra, animals wouldn't react to them.
High altitude vegetation is typically called "alpine", from the plants that grow high up in the Alps mountain range.
alpine flowers
Very warm clothing made of animal hidesIn physical geography, tundra is an area where the tree growth is hindered by low temperatures and short growing seasons. The term "tundra" comes from Kildin Sami tūndâr "uplands, tundra, treeless mountain tract". There are two types of tundra: Arctic tundra (which also occurs in Antarctica), and alpine tundra[1]. In tundra, the vegetation is composed of dwarf shrubs, sedges and grasses, mosses, and lichens. Scattered trees grow in some tundra.
Small, strong plants such as lichens and mosses can grow there.
Vertical climate on a mountain affects vegetation by creating different temperature and precipitation patterns at varying elevations. This leads to a wide range of microclimates that can support diverse plant species adapted to specific conditions. As elevation increases, temperatures tend to decrease and precipitation levels may vary, resulting in different vegetation zones such as forests, alpine meadows, and tundra.
during summer and spring
The cold area where only small plants grow is called the Tundra region. Tundra vegetation is characterized by small plants that grow close together and close to the ground. These plants are only a cm tall.
The cold area where only small plants grow is called the Tundra region. Tundra vegetation is characterized by small plants that grow close together and close to the ground. These plants are only a cm tall.