Well, depending on what type of cave we are talking about here (Underwater caves, Underground caves, Mountain range caves, Man-made caves) you can likely derive your own conclusion with some simple research.
Caves, in general, do not really belong to any specific Biome. All biomes have some kind of cave somewhere on earth.
There are caves on every corner of the earth so the answer to your question is that there are caves in every Biome.
The most common types of cave are limestone caves.
There is a desert biome in central Australia.
a biome
Northern Alaska has the biome of Tundra and Arizona biome consist of mostly deserts. the only similarities would be that trees can barely survive, and are both cold at night.
I would assume that Canada is mostly covered in evergreens, so the biome would be taiga. Also, in the more northerly latitudes one would expect the biome to be tundra.
the biome is the effort of the biome such as lakes and ponds and caves
Usually caves or to be more specific terrestrial biomes.
Their biomes are living in caves, hollow trees, and live in other places where the sun never shines.
The Ajanta Caves contain 29 caves in total.
There are 12 Buddhist (caves 1-12), 17 Hindu (caves 13-29) and 5 Jain (caves 30-34) caves. Total 34 caves.
caves caves caves caves why do u want to know?
granite caves sea caves sandstone caves . stay in school
forest biome and a mountain biome
The main types of caves are solution caves, lava caves, sea caves, glacier caves, and talus caves. Solution caves form from the dissolution of soluble rocks like limestone; lava caves are created by flowing lava; sea caves are carved by the action of waves on coastal cliffs; glacier caves form within glaciers due to melting and refreezing processes; and talus caves are formed by fallen rocks creating cave-like structures.
The most common types of cave are limestone caves.
There is a desert biome in central Australia.
The garden biome, the hedgerow biome and the woodland biome are 3 (there may be more).