No. Alberta generally has a dry, continental (quite cold in winter and quite warm in summer) climate. The only places in Alberta cold enough to have a tundra climate are high elevations in mountains, above the line where trees can't grow. The rest of Alberta (essentially all of it) is nowhere near a tundra climate; the summers are too warm.
In Montreal, Canada the climate is a transitional climate. Montreal will experience a wide variety of temperatures through out the year.
This type of climate region is called a tundra climate.
Tundras are near in Russia, so Russians live in a tundra climate.
tropical and tundra
a tundra climate
Acrtic tundra
yes, near North Canada might not exactly be in the tundra climate but it will be very similar.
Tundra climate is typically colder than subarctic climate. Tundra regions have consistently low temperatures and a shorter growing season due to their high latitude and elevation, while subarctic regions are slightly warmer because they have more seasonal temperature fluctuations.
its is called a tundra just because it comes from the latin root tundramine that means climate that affects climate itslef
siberia's climate is a tundra
Tundra doesn't "stay" anywhere. It's a climate, not an animal.
COLD