Rainforest.
Most plants and animals live in areas with very specific climate conditions, such as temperature and rainfall patterns, that enable them to thrive.
Temperatures and rainfall help determine which animals, plants, and insects you will find in a tropical rain forest. Each species uses the environmental conditions to its benefit.
The tropical rain forest is known for the exotic plants, the many trees, the amazing animals, the high rainfall, the constant temperature, how hot it is (an average of 25 degrees Celsius, how humid it is, the darkness, damp, populated, green, vegetated, and amazing!
Plants and animals.If there weren't any plants and animals in a biome the ecosystem wouldn't be able to stay in balance.If the ecosystem isn't in balance, then all of the plants and animals would die off.
Rainfall is very important in determination climate of a place .If there is no rainfall plants will not grow moderate temperature 25 to 35 C there is no rainfall become barren turn into a desert
little rainfall
In the dry season, there is a likely chance that there will be little to no rainfall. Therefore, without water animals and plants start to die.
the factors are- humidity rainfall soil temperature
The temperature of air affect the plants and animals in a quadrat in a variety of ways from the food that the animals will have to eat to the land and place the animal plays a role on mother nature .
Both plants and animals identify climate zones and shifts in these zones. As an example plants are adapted to grow best in certain conditions (rainfall, temperature, hours of daylight, frost free days, etc.). These conditions define the ecology that is established as specific animal species live with and on these plants using them as shelter or food sources. Other animals usee these first animals as food sources.
No. No living things live on it. Plants, animals, rivers and lakes and ponds and oceans, rainfall, or ecosystem
1/4 of it is absorbed into the ground. The rest of the rainfall sustains the plants and animals living in the forest, and eventually evaporates back into the atmosphere.