Temperatures usually range between -40°C (-40 °F) and 18°C (64°F).
This biome sees 150 to 250 millimeters (6 to 10 inches) of rain per yea
Vegetation
Almost no trees due to short growing season and permafrost; lichens, mosses, grasses, sedges, shrubs
The tundra is the coldest of the biomes. It also receives low amounts of precipitation, making the tundra similar to a desert. Tundra is found in the regions just below the ice caps of the Arctic, extending across North America, to Europe, and Siberia in Asia. Much of Alaska and about half of Canada are in the tundra biome. Tundra is also found at the tops of very high mountains elsewhere in the world. Temperatures are frequently extremely cold, but can get warm in the summers.
Tundra winters are long, dark, and cold, with mean temperatures below 0°C for six to 10 months of the year. The temperatures are so cold that there is a layer of permanently frozen ground below the surface, called permafrost. This permafrost is a defining characteristic of the tundra biome. In the tundra summers, the top layer of soil thaws only a few inches down, providing a growing surface for the roots of vegetation.
Precipitation in the tundra totals 150 to 250 mm a year, including melted snow. That's less than most of the world's greatest deserts! Still, the tundra is usually a wet place because the low temperatures cause evaporation of water to be slow. Much of the arctic has rain and fog in the summers, and water gathers in bogs and ponds.
Vegetation in the tundra has adapted to the cold and the short growing season. Mosses, sedges, and lichens are common, while few trees grow in the tundra. The trees that do manage to grow stay close to the ground so they are insulated by snow during the cold winters.
The soil in the Tundra has a unique soil structure, we think of it as permafrost. Permafrost is a layer of soil that stays frozen all year round. Even during the summer, the lower layers of soil will remain frozen and biologically inactive, but the upper layers will thaw out. The permafrost in the Tundra forms a barrier keeping reptiles and amphibians from burrowing down into its soil. Permafrost is said to be one of the main reasons why trees don't grow in the Tundra. The frequent freeze-thaw cycles associated with permafrost soils lead to soil-forming processes ‘frost churning’. Frost churning mixes the soil profile and results in irregular or broken soil horizons with organic material going in through existing horizons, and silt-enriched layers. Most of the soils in the tundra were formed with mixed rock fragments and sediments left behind by the glaciers when they receded. Sometimes, wind-blown loess also accumulated over the top of the rocks and other sediments. Organic matter (and bogs) can also be a parent material to these soils. Due to it being Permafrost soil it leaves only a thin surface layer of thawed soil in summer for plant roots to grow in. Tundra soil is also scarce in many of the nutrients that plants need to grow.
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