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NO Actually they do grow in frost-free zones of the US or they can be grown in pots that spend summers outside and winters in sunny windows.
Cities at the same latitude may still have different elevations, and may be near or far from large bodies of water. Both of those characteristics have huge influence on the climate of the place.
Parts of the West Coast of the US. It's cool, but temperate in the North and like the Mediterranean climate along the much of the Californian coast. The east coast of the US from North Carolina to Maryland is also quite temperate, with spring and fall absolutely gorgeous, winters are cold, but bearable, and cold snaps are usually brief. Summers are warm, and extreme heat waves usually last only a few days.
Places with moderate precipitation, and a range of temperatures.
Its normally hot and the local foods they have are cheaper because they grow locally of course, (eg: tomatoes-sauces, olives-oliveoil, sunflowers-sunfloweroil, etc...)
The colorful butterfly that spends summers in the Unite States and winters in Mexico is the Monarch butterfly. They are the ones who are easily recognized by their black and orange coloring.
Washington, Oregon, northern and central California
In the US I would say the Central United States. The summers are hot and the winters are very cold.
The Monarch Butterfly is known to migrate in cold weather. They will spend their summers all around the United States, and migrate to Mexico and Southern California in the winter.
The answer depends on which desert. If it is a hot, subtropical desert, the summers are hot and the winters are mild., If it is a cold winter desert, the summers are hot and the winters can be bitterly cold.
Possibly a Monarch!
the Monarch butterfly
Possibly a Monarch!
The Monarch butterfly (Danaus Plexippus) does.
Most U.S. states have cold winters.
I believe it is one in America
Houston