Table Of Continents
Page 4: The Arctic Fox
Page 5: Opening Intro
Page 6: Icy Waters
Page 7: Arctic Animal Food Chain
Page 8: Arctic Fox in it´s habitat
Page 9: A Little Amount of Plants
Page 10: Arctic bear Berries
Page 11: Cold and Windy Climate
Page 12: Snow Drifts
Page 13: Closing Conclution
Page 14: Polar bear
Page 15: Sources
Opening Intro
Cold? Icy? Explorers don’t care. The cold snowy Arctic Tundra has drastic and cold temperatures. Many animals and plants that live there have to adapt to their cold and windy home. With limited food they have to eat what they find, and they are not picky! There is no way this place is a good V.K. spot, but a great place to explore and let off some heat. (If you can survive)
The Arctic Animal Food Chain
Animals in the Arctic Tundra all depend on each other. This is called a food chain. Bigger animals depend on a smaller animals for food. For example, seals eat fish and fish eat shrimp. Without shrimp the fish would starve and die, leaving seals food less, hungry, and doomed! We need to remember to preserve animals, so food chains do not die out.
The Little Amount of Plants
Not many plants live in the Arctic Tundra due to permafrost, but plants that do must have short roots, and must survive the cold drastic temperatures. There also isn’t very fertile soil for plants to grow. Bearberries can grow on dry land with hard and frozen soil. It can also survive drastic temperatures. The bearberry also is very plentiful, and useful if you need to survive the cold climate.
Cold and windy Climate
Cold and icy winds blow in the Arctic. Snow covers most of the cold land. With very cold temperatures animals must have shelter and food to survive. It is no beach! Much of the upper layer of permafrost (a frozen layer of soil that keeps plant’s roots from growing long) has melted from Global Warming.
Closing Conclusion
No doubt this place is cold, But the animals and plants that live there are amazing. This is no place to relax, but a cool place to explore. With a variety of animals to see and a colorful bouquet of plants this place really makes a great sight to see for explorers and an amazing place that catches the eye.
“Tundra.” Funk & Wagnalls New World Encyclopedia (2015): 1p. 1. Funk & Wagnalls New World Encyclopedia. Web. 4
MARTINEZ-BAKKER, MICAELA E. “Arctic Tundra, Low.” Biomes (2013): 293. Science Reference Center. Web. 4 Feb. 2016
MARTINEZ-BAKKER, MICAELA E. “Arctic Tundra, High.” Biomes (2013): 292. Science Reference Center. Web. 4 Feb. 2016.
“Tundra.” Britannica School. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., 2016. Web. 5 Feb. 2016.
Sturm, Matthew. “Arctic Plants Feel The Heat.” Scientific American 302.5 (2010): 66-73. Health
Source – Consumer Edition. Web. 11 Feb. 2016.
“Tundra Plants.” Tundra Plants. N.p., n.d. Web. 29 Mar. 2016.
“Arctic regions.” Britannica School. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., 2016. Web. 4 Mar. 2016.
Published: Apr 7, 2016
Latest Revision: Apr 10, 2016
Ourboox Unique Identifier: OB-125200
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