I think it's Taiga.
Allways cold but it gets a little bit warmer in summer than it does winter
when snow covers the tundra , caribou often change their grazing behaviour and move to warmer areas for food
Remember that where it's tundra now was quite a bit warmer during most of dinosaur times. At some points there may have been no tundra at all.
A hawk of the North, the Rough-legged Hawk breeds in Arctic tundra and taiga regions around the northern hemisphere. Both dark and light forms are common, with many birds intermediate between the extremes.
1.It's warmer in the taiga. 2.There's more food there than the tundra.
The total precipitation in the tundra varies depending on the region, but it generally ranges from 6 to 10 inches per year. The precipitation in the tundra is primarily in the form of snow, with some rainfall during the warmer months.
No, they tend to hibernate until the warmer spring weather.
No, the tundra is not a plain. The tundra is a cold and treeless biome characterized by low temperatures, permafrost, and a short growing season. Plains, on the other hand, are flat expanses of land with fertile soil and are generally warmer than tundra regions.
Because it is slightly warmer, and it has more plant life (such as evergreens, spruce, fur, and a variety of trees) for animals to rely on in the wild.
No, tundra is typically found in regions closer to the poles, particularly in the Arctic Circle and the Antarctic Circle. The Tropic of Capricorn is located around 23.5 degrees south of the equator, where the climate is typically warmer and drier compared to tundra regions.
Animals move to other places or they will not survive. Or the population might grow.
Tundra climate is typically colder than subarctic climate. Tundra regions have consistently low temperatures and a shorter growing season due to their high latitude and elevation, while subarctic regions are slightly warmer because they have more seasonal temperature fluctuations.