What animals and plants are typical for North America?
North America is located in all but the equatorial climatic zones. This explains the diversity of flora and fauna, which changes depending on climatic conditions. We will move from north to south of the mainland.
Animal world.
Polar bears, reindeer are representatives of the tundra.
Mink, marten, weasel, brown and black bears, muskrat, beaver, lynx, wolverine are the inhabitants of the taiga zone.
The forest zones are inhabited by foxes, wolves, grizzly bears; in the forest-steppes, you can find a bison, antelope, coyotes, and steppe sheep.
In the zone of deserts and semi-deserts, a variety of snake species, humid tropics are represented by alligators, turtles.
Vegetable world.
The very north of the mainland is covered with glaciers and has no vegetation. Mosses, lichens, dwarf trees grow in the tundra. Fir, Canadian, tsuga, and sequoia pine grow in the taiga. In the zone of deciduous forests: ash, birch, oak, maple. The forest-steppe is a plane tree, chestnut, walnut, feather grass, bison grass. Further south, cacti, yuccas, and agaves grow.
In the south you can find palms, cypresses, ferns.