In biome 2 the temperature pattern is quite unique when held alongside the biomes of Earth. The average annual temperature sits around 3 degrees Celsius which when compared to biomes present on Earth is somewhat close in nature to temperate deciduous forests (average annual temperature usually around 7.6 degrees Celsius), yet this biome is still on average colder. The overall pattern while it does follow that of the other temperate biomes (forest and grassland) in directionationality and cold winters, it does not reach the same heights. Precipitation follows a consistent pattern similar to the deciduous forest, however the levels of precipitation are on par with that of a rainforest, having almost double the amount of total annual precipitation when compared to a deciduous forest. These two factors of precipitation and temperature would most likely lend themselves to a highly unique environment that would have seasonal changes and at points freezing temperatures with massive amounts of moisture.
This biome would most likely be similar in nature to deciduous forest with hits of rainforest characteristics, precipitation wise. Winters would be cold and wet while summers would be average temperature wise but even more intense precipitation wise. Large trees life would likely be supported due to the very consistent temperature and massive amounts of precipitation, precipitation by itself would lend itself to a large amount of biodiversity with regulated temperatures mitigating this as a factor slightly. The latitudinal region would be difficult to ascertain based on the strange characteristics of the environment but most likely it would be found at 30 degrees to 50 degrees.
Comments
Unnecessary words
Phrases like "quite unique when held alongside..." can be shortened to convey a clearer message by saying instead "Biome 2 is different than the rest of the biomes of Earth".
I believe you write out small
I believe you write out small numbers like 2. You write "two" out but also just write "2." I would pick one or the other.