In the polar climate.
Ice Cap, Subarctic, Tundra, and Humid Continental
ice cap
they are in the high latitude
TUNDRA
Sub-polar.
tundra: grasslands ice cap: coldest climate Non-permanent ice: freeze-thaw cycles highlands: ice closer to the equator
tundra: grasslands ice cap: coldest climate Non-permanent ice: freeze-thaw cycles highlands: ice closer to the equator
Ice Cap, Subarctic, Tundra, and Humid Continental
Well you have the Arctic and Temperate zones. The Temperate zone includes: Mediterranean, Grassland Savannah, Desert, Mountainous, Sub-Tropical, Chaparral, and Pacific climates. The Arctic zone includes: Taiga, Tundra, Mountainous, and Polar Ice-Cap climates.
ice cap
Ice cap is made of ice. Tundra is actually soil land that's just covered in snow and ice for most of the year. During the short summer months the snow kinda melts exposing grass.
they are in the high latitude
TUNDRA
Sub-polar.
Wheat is a plant that can grow in almost any climate with a decently warm summer, the only climates it cant grow in are tundra and ice cap. Depending on the farming conditions, it can even grow in the subarctic.
ice cap ..... Antarticia Greenland and Alaska are just some ex.
a tundra is a treeless are between the ice-cap and the tree line of artic regions,tundra comes to life went he frozen soil generates to its powerful resource of life then transformes to a tundra