The Arctic climate is too cold to support reptiles !
There is but 1 snake, the most widely-spread snake in the world, the garter snake. They have been known to survive around the Arctic Circle, they are also the only snake to be found in Alaska.
Minke Whales don't live in the Arctic (near North Pole), they more go towards the Antarctic (near South Pole).
Arctic foxes live for 3 or 4 years in the wild and up to 14 years in captivity.
no
earth and water combined makes up the planet we live on and both are snakes. who cares?
An arctic hare lives in the Taiga Biome. This biome is the hemisphere from Alaska to Japan. The taiga is a coniferous forest. The taiga is the largest biome, but also the coldest. It is cold for almost the whole year, but in its warmest months the arctic hare has good vegetation. The arctic hare is a herbivore, which means it eats plants. But in the long, cold months it sometimes must eat meat. The arctic hare must be smart, because the taiga is a tough place to live.. with it's winter temperatures as low as -90 degrees Fahrenheit!
zero, penguins and polar bears live at opposite end of the earth.
The Year of the Horse follows the Year of the Snake.
If you catch a wild snake chances are it has went into shock and has to get use to its new surroundings. I had a snake one time that didn't eat for a whole year, if it gets hungry enough it will eat.
No, for two reasons: # A bee can only fly from the hive if the air temperature is higher than about 15oC. Arctic temperatures would seriously inhibit foraging. # The bee does not hibernate, and must collect enought nectar when flowers are available to feed the whole colony for the whole year. This would not be possible in the very short arctic summer.
A Narwhale lives year-round in the Arctic waters around Greenland, Canada, and Russia.
Polar bears are from the Arctic and most penguins live in the Antarctic.