The only vegetation that survives in an ice cap is small plants.
Polar ice caps are covered in permanent ice and snow, so vegetation is extremely limited. Only a few mosses, lichens, and algae can survive in these harsh conditions, typically found around the edges of the ice cap where some bare ground might be exposed.
The polar ice caps are surrounded by the polar tundra biome. This biome is characterized by cold temperatures, permafrost, and a short growing season with low-lying vegetation. Many arctic animals, such as polar bears and arctic foxes, are adapted to survive in this harsh environment.
Bacteria can survive at low temperatures, but they may become dormant and their growth may slow down significantly. Some bacteria can even thrive in cold environments. However, extremely low temperatures, like those found in freezers, can eventually kill most types of bacteria.
The main types of precipitation are rain, snow, sleet, and hail. Rain is liquid water droplets falling from clouds, snow is ice crystals falling from clouds, sleet is a mix of rain and snow or ice pellets, and hail is ice pellets formed in thunderstorm updrafts.
Some organisms might have survived the advance of glacial ice in North America by migrating to warmer regions or finding shelter in ice-free refugia, such as pockets of temperate climate or beneath the ice. Others may have adapted to the cold and harsh conditions by changing their behavior or physiology, allowing them to survive in the changing environment without necessarily undergoing significant evolutionary changes.
Countries in the Arctic and Antarctic regions, such as Greenland, Canada, Russia, Norway, and Antarctica, have ice caps as a vegetation zone due to the extreme cold temperatures and lack of soil for plants to grow. Vegetation in these areas is limited to mosses, lichens, and algae that can survive in such harsh conditions.
Polar ice caps are covered in permanent ice and snow, so vegetation is extremely limited. Only a few mosses, lichens, and algae can survive in these harsh conditions, typically found around the edges of the ice cap where some bare ground might be exposed.
well the answer is simple it is grass
none
Russia, China, India, and Kazakhstan have some land in an ice cap vegetation zone in monsoon Asia.
it is too cold for crops to grow
Nepal, China, India, & Bhutan
maybe Tokyo
hot and cold
tundra and ice
tundra and ice
tundra and ice