Tundra
The tundra is located at the top of the world, near the North Pole. This enormous biome, extremely uniform in appearance, covers a fifth of the earth's surface.
Climate can go as low as -50 °C during winters, though on an average, it stays somewhere between -25 °C to -30 °C. The highest recorded temperature during the fleeting summers have never gone beyond 15 °C and tend to hover between 3 °C and 13 °C on an average
the Arctic tundra is host to only about 48 species of land mammals and a few species of fish. The most significant animals found in this region include Tundra Wolf, Arctic Wolf, Caribou, Musk Oxen, Wolverine, Arctic Fox, Ermine, Arctic Hare, Lemmings, Arctic Ground Squirrels, Whales, Polar Bears, Ptarmigan, Snowy Owl, Ravens, Seals, Walruses, etc.
The typical tundra vegetation is composed of about 1700 species of botanical life forms. Some such tundra plant varieties include Arctic Willow, Arctic Poppy, Cottongrass, Cushion Plants, Orange Lichen, etc.