No. Humans, Homo sapiens, live in many biomes, though they most likely originated in rain forests.
We are all apes and we are closely related to the other apes.
The Chimpanzee (and indeed all the great apes including man) are or were indigenous to only one continent, Africa.
yes they are but not in all rainforests
The term 'Great Apes' encompasses all species of ape. Gorillas, chimpanzees, orangutans, and bonobos live in Africa and parts of Indonesia.
all of the cacao trees live in a rainforests
Yes and No, There are two types of Apes, Great Apes and Lesser Apes. Chimpanzees, Gorillas, Orangutans, and Bonobos are all Great Apes. Gibbons and Siamangs are Lesser Apes.
There is no specific genus that refers to all apes. Apes belong to Superfamily Hominoidea. Within Hominoidea, there are eight extant genera, four of which belong to Lesser Apes, four to Great Apes.
there all mammals
Tigers typically live in tropical rainforests in Southeast Asia, such as the rainforests in countries like India, Indonesia, and Malaysia. These rainforests provide tigers with the dense vegetation and abundant prey that they need to thrive.
The are 6 kinds of great apes in the world today. The Gibbons, Gorillas, Orangutans, Chimpanzees, Bonobos, and humans are all members of the great ape family.
all different types
Chimps live in the central African rainforests.