hilly in some parts and a little flat in other parts
peacocks and deer and little crake and snowy owls and woodpecker ducks gooses swan popqupines
There is a bit of "transition" between areas of permafrost and the coniferous forests, but yes, a few trees will grow over permafrost. These trees will grow if there is sufficient "relief" in the form of seasonal thawing. That thawing allows soil of sufficient depth to unfreeze and support a larger plant like a tree. Trees would need a little longer period of thawing and enough of the soil to thaw so they can survive than, say, bushes, shrubs or flowering plants like those of the tundra.
The five major biomes are tundra, taiga, temperate deciduous forest, grasslands, and tropical rainforest. Each biome has distinct climate, fauna, and flora characteristics that differentiate it from the others.
Tropical Grassland
A forest that receives relatively little rainfall and has acidic soil would be located near the Arctic Circle. It is one of the five major circles of latitude that marks the maps of the Earth.
This answer does NOT sound like it is from a reliable source. From almost the exact website there was incredibly different answers. According to multiple different resources (Holdridge life zones system of bioclimatic classification ) Portland Oregon is temperate moist forest biome. That may be wrong, but from the what I have gathered, this is the most common answer from reliable Sources. Thank you!!😊 Hopefully that helps a little bit more. Have a great day
Rain forest life! Vanilla plants, howler monkeys, slugs, and hundreds of unknown species. Could you be a little more specific?
because we all polluted the forest.
AnswerSeattle, Washington has one rain forest in it so it can be considered a temperate rain forest biome. If one were to look on a map of biomes you could also consider it part of the alpine biome. I agree with the temperate rain forest, though I would not call it alpine.
Little John
Taiga