Yeah
no
yes, it does
Rain forests recycle nutrients.(apex)
How much rain forest does a rain forest get each year... Well, I would say that a rain forest can't really get any rain forests in a year, but Tropical rain forests get about 200-600 cm of rain each year, and Temperate Rain forests get 200-400 cm of rain each year.
In the forests of the Amazon, or any other tropical rain-forest like climate (Such as Hawaii, Jamaica, some parts of the US and Cuba, etc.) Probably the place that there is the most moisture is the Amazon Rainforest.
Yes it does in fact the biome is a tropical rain forest and even more of a deciduous forest.
No, a tropical forest is a broad type of forest found in tropical regions, while a rainforest is a specific type of tropical forest characterized by high levels of rainfall and biodiversity. All rainforests are tropical forests, but not all tropical forests are considered rainforests.
Why would rain forests have any other different type of rain than any other place on the world? Rain forests have normal rain from normal clouds.
Wisconsin doesn't have any rain forests because it is not in the tropics. Wisconsin would have to be located near Florida in order to have a tropical climate.
Tropical Rain forests are located between the tropics (20 degrees above or below the Equator), but temperate rain forests exist well outside that line, like the pacific northwest in America or on the Japanese mainland of Honshu.
There is one more that has as much and that is the temperate rain forests. If you look carefully at their names, you will see something in common to both. Rain. This the main reason that both have the most diversity than any other place on Earth. Rain and warmish temperatures drive the diversity.
It is France (French Guiana), Suriname, and Guyana.