habitat | AMNH https://www.amnh.org/explore/ology/ology-cards/146-habitat
Animals and plants are usually adapted to survive best in particular environments, known as their habitats.
habitats: tropical rain forest, savanna, desert, tundra
Animals and plants are usually adapted to survive best in particular environments, known as their habitats.
habitats: tropical rain forest, savanna, desert, tundra
Animals and plants are usually adapted to survive best in particular environments, known as their habitats.
habitats: tropical rain forest, savanna, desert, tundra
Ever wonder how scientists can look at a bunch of bones and draw what a dinosaur looked like? Learn their five-step trick. Then, bring a Stegosaurus skeleton to life.
A tundra? A swamp?
Ross MacPhee has always loved dirt. It means the opportunity to find lost things–from bones and teeth to pirate treasures. They’re clues to the history of our planet.
40,000 years Research Locations: Antarctica, Siberian tundra
As the climate warms, the Arctic greens—and vice versa.
by pushing northward, while the low-to-the-ground tundra
Find out about the cultural significance of reindeer for the Sámi people, who have been nomadic reindeer herders for centuries.
Blair’s great-great-grandfather, travel across the tundra
Antarctica is like no other place on Earth. The continent is covered almost entirely by a thick ice sheet. Yet there is very little precipitation.
species include penguins, seals, seabirds, and hardy tundra-like
Find out how six species of mammals survive in their habitats. And bring them to life in this coloring book!
every habitat on the continent, from the treeless tundra
Antarctica is like no other place on Earth. The continent is covered almost entirely by a thick ice sheet. Yet there is very little precipitation.
species include penguins, seals, seabirds, and hardy tundra-like
Some frogs live high on mountain slopes or in the frigid North. Some species practice controlled freezing: they produce excess sugars or starches to prevent damage to sensitive tissues while the re…
North American wood frog ranges well into the Alaskan tundra