Answer:
A. Tundra
Explanation:
The less heat and less precipitation a biome receives, the less biodiversity it will have.
Stability is the ability of an ecosystem/biome to withstand sudden changes like natural disasters or diseases. Biodiversity (the number of different species) equals stability. This is because the more species an ecosystem/biome has, the better it will be able to recover from the loss of a species/population (because there will be other species to cover that species' role).
Now, looking at the answer choices, I think almost everyone knows that <u>the rainforest is one of the most diverse biomes</u>, so we can immediately eliminate it. (It checks off good temperatures and lots of rain!)
You might not know, but <u>the ocean biome is also incredibly diverse</u>. (Just think of all of those still undiscovered deep-sea creatures added to all the types of animals and plants you can think of in the ocean). The rainforest and ocean biome actually compete for the highest species richness.
Once we've gotten rid of C. and D., we're left with tundra and grassland. This is where you can go back and remember that higher temperatures and higher precipitation = diversity/stability.
Since the tundra biome is <u>colder</u> than the grassland biome, we can cross out B. too!
Apologies, this explanation turned out quite long. I hope it helps you understand the question better though!