Snow, lots of plants that are native to cold weather
Yes. The tundra does get sunlight. Nothing could grow there otherwise.
no
Yes, there may be hills in tundra regions. For a photograph, see the related link. Linkhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tundra
you can see an evergreen forest in a tundra
no they do not they problay do but is might be frozen
Sorry, Japan is too far south to contain any tundra. -See the related links below for more information (to compare the maps)
The arctic tundra, alpine tundra, and antarctic tundra.
The arctic tundra, alpine tundra, and antarctic tundra.
Tundra is a cold, treeless region with a short growing season and a layer of permafrost, or permanently frozen subsoil. Arctic tundra occurs in the Arctic region; alpine tundra is found in high mountains scattered all over the world. The temperatures are generally a little higher and the growing season longer in alpine than arctic tundra, and there are some different species of plants and animals. However, both types of tundra still have a layer of permafrost. See Tundra by Peter Moore (Chelsea House, 2006).
The tundra is a biome that does not historically see much change. As humans encroach, they may over hunt local populations, destroy habitat by living on the tundra itself, and set up oil drilling that destroys the environment. The tundra is also being influenced by global warming as glaciers and permafrost melt.
There are 3 types of tundras, the antarctic tundra, the arctic tundra, and the alpine tundra.
Brisbane's location is more towards the tropics. It will not become a tundra biome any time soon. Go to an Australian map and see where Brisbane is and you will understand why.