There are no indigenous people in the polar regions, however the Inuit are one of the peoples who live in the Arctic region. Rainforests are populated by many tribes of indigenous people such as the Baka of Cameroon and Gabon. Some estimates put the number as high as 50,000,000 people living in the rainforests. Deserts are also populated. The Bedouin are one of the most famous groups of desert-dwellers.
Some examples of very different ecosystems include the Amazon Rainforest, which is a tropical rainforest with high biodiversity, the Sahara Desert, a hot and arid desert with minimal vegetation, and coral reefs, which are diverse marine ecosystems found in warm, shallow waters.
There isn't much precipitation (Rain, snow, hail, sleet) in the Polar Regions because the air is too cold to contain much water vapour. In some parts of the Polar Regions it is as dry as the desert because rain has not fallen for a matter of years.
Some dinosaurs that lived in rainforest environments include Microraptor, Sinosauropteryx, and Anchiornis. These dinosaurs were small to medium-sized and are known from fossil discoveries in regions that were believed to be lush and forested during the Mesozoic era.
While the Sahara desert is one of the hottest and driest places on Earth, there are some populations living in oasis towns and settlements scattered across the desert. These communities have adapted to the harsh desert environment through various means such as traditional knowledge of water conservation and agriculture.
Listing from the most common to least common: Desert Savanna Steppe Tropical Rainforest Highland Mediterranean Marine Humid Subtropical
There is actually only one true polar desert and that is the Antarctic Desert. The Arctic region consists primarily of sea ice and some tundra and is not considered to be a true desert.
The only true polar desert is Antarctica and, except for along some coastlines, it receives no rain and little snowfall. It is the driest desert on earth according to some.
Africa and South America have both deserts and rainforests. In Africa, the Sahara Desert is the largest desert, while the Congo rainforest is one of the largest rainforests. In South America, the Atacama Desert is known for being one of the driest deserts, and the Amazon Rainforest is the largest rainforest.
There is some disagreement on this. Some classify the Arctic as a desert but others do not since the vast majority of the Arctic is ice and not land. However, Antarctica is classified as a desert due to low humidity and low precipitation.
No. Quolls are not found in the desert. They require bushland, either wet sclerophyll or dry sclerophyll bushland, we some live in rainforest.
Some are: Ulura, Mount Everest, Northern Lights, Amazon Rainforest, Sahara Desert, Lunar Crater and Niagara falls.
Yes, people do live in the rainforest. Indigenous tribes have been living in the rainforest for centuries, relying on its resources for their survival. In modern times, there are also small communities and settlements scattered throughout some rainforest regions.
Some examples of biomes are: rainforest, tundra, forest, desert, freshwater, marine and grassland
Every continent has some type of desert. North America, South America, Europe, Asia, and Australia have hot dry deserts. Both polar continents have polar deserts.
Some examples of very different ecosystems include the Amazon Rainforest, which is a tropical rainforest with high biodiversity, the Sahara Desert, a hot and arid desert with minimal vegetation, and coral reefs, which are diverse marine ecosystems found in warm, shallow waters.
there are some who live in the desert, rainforest, normal forests, and even in homes.
A desert is an area with a small amount of precipitation (rainfall) per year. Since the polar regions are so cold they get next to no rainfall so are considered desert due to that fact.