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The Montvale Free Public Library The Rainforest |
What is a Rainforest?
Rainforests
are very dense, warm, wet forests. They are
havens for millions of plants and animals.
Different
animals and plants live in different parts of the
rainforest. Scientists divide the rainforest into strata (zones) based
on the
living environment. Starting at the top, the strata are:
• EMERGENTS:
Giant trees that are much higher than the average canopy height. It
houses many
birds and insects.
• CANOPY: The
upper parts of the trees. This leafy environment is full of life in a
tropical
rainforest and includes: insects, birds, reptiles, mammals, and more.
•
UNDERSTORY:
A dark, cool environment under the leaves but over the ground.
•
FOREST
FLOOR: Teeming with animal life, especially insects. The largest
animals in the
rainforest generally live here.
Animals of the Rainforests
An incredible
number of animals live in rainforests.
Millions of insects, reptiles, amphibians, birds, and mammals call them
home.
Insects are the most numerous animals in rainforests. Tropical
rainforests have
a greater diversity of plants and animals than temperate rainforests or
any
other biome.
Tropical
rainforests are found in a belt around the equator
of the Earth. There are tropical rainforests across South America,
Central
America, Africa, Southeast Asia and
It
is almost always
raining in a rainforest. Rainforests get over 80
inches (2 m) of rain each year. This is
about 1 1/2 inches (3.8 cm) of rain each
week.
The
temperature in a rainforest never freezes and never gets
very hot. The range of temperature in a tropical rainforest is usually
between
75° F and 80° F (24-27° C). Temperate rainforests rarely freeze or get
over 80°
F (27° C).
The soil of a
tropical rainforest is only about 3-4 inches
(7.8-10 cm) thick and is ancient. Thick clay lies underneath the soil.
Once
damaged, the soil of a tropical rainforest takes many years to recover.
Some of the
foods that were originally from rainforests
around the world include cashew nuts, Brazil nuts, Macadamia nuts,
bananas,
plantains, pineapple, cucumber, cocoa (chocolate), coffee, tea,
avocados,
papaya, guava, mango, cassava (a starchy root), tapioca, yams, sweet
potato,
okra, cinnamon, vanilla, nutmeg, mace, ginger, cayenne pepper, cloves,
oranges,
grapefruit, lemons, limes, passion fruit, peanuts, rice, sugar cane,
and
coconuts (mostly from coastal areas).
There are many
indigenous groups of people who have live in
the tropical rainforests. Many of these groups, like the Yanomamo tribe
of the
Amazon rainforests of
Most
indigenous populations are declining. There are many
reasons for this. Their primary problems are disease (like smallpox and
measles, which were inadvertently introduced by Europeans) and
governmental
land seizure.
Information
provided by
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/rainforests/