Because the tundra is a very cold place so it doesnt have much sunlight so trees dont grow there !!!!!!!!!!!
it is too cold for most living things [including plants] to survive, therefore, usually only evergreen trees [e.g. pine trees], where snow slides off and does not collect on leaves, can plants survive. the soil may in rare cases be frozen over, therefore, making survival even harder.And there is a frozen layer underneath the soil called permafrost which the roots of the trees cannot grow through therefore there cannot be any trees
There are no trees because the tundra is too windy it would knock the trees over and in some places it is too cold and the tundra has a thing called permafrost which is a frozen layer underneath the the soil that prevents the trees to grow there because of their roots.
the tundra is treeless because it is very very cold and the soil is very hard thats why the tundra is really treeless
true
The tundra is a bleak and treeless place. It is cold through all months of the year.
Because the wind is too strong it would tip the trees over and in someplaces it's too cold...
Because of permafrost. The ground is to cold for large vegetation to grow.
Because of the land and climate
No they can't.
No, because the tundra is a biome where no trees grow. Evergreens grow in the Boreal/Coniferous Forest.
tundra
Coniferous trees usually grow in the taiga, but the dwarf widow can grow in the tundra.
They dont grow in the tundra because the tundra is to hot and there is not enough water for them to grow...thats grass land because the tundra is too windy it would knock the trees over and in somplaces it is too cold
Tundra is land where it is too cold for trees to grow. It is found usually in the far north of the planet's surface.
Yes, Dwarf trees do live in the Tundra. Dwarf trees are the tallest plant in the Tundra growing up to 5 cm tall. Tiny! The harsh winds and freezing weather conditions make it impossible for anything taller to grow.
You call these areas tundra.
Tundra is defined as a treeless ecosystem because of its low temperature, but dwarf shrubs and trees do grow in tundra climates. Other types of vegetation include: grass, moss, and lichens.
forest grow , higher up are meadows with small trees and shrubs, and above the timberline, where it is too cold for trees to grow, are only scatterd tundra plants.
Arctic Tundra.. A tundra is means ""treeless""since it is so cold.. and very rare plants grow on the landd :] <33 xSlEEPiNq_bEAUTYx
The tundra has permafrost because the soil in the tundra is very poor. This is why there are not many trees or plants that grow very tall in the tundra. Permafrost is the top layer of soil that is frozen. Obviously there's permafrost because in the tundra it is very cold and the soil is not very rich.