They affect the environment in many different ways they destroy trees, buildings, and very many different things that humans rely on to live.
Tornadoes can destroy trees, which make oxygen.
tornadoes affect the environment mostly because they can pull trees out of the ground, and they can destroy anything in their path.
Tornadoes are a part of nature. The damage they cause to plants and animals is insignificant (unless that was my favorite shade tree that got knocked over last night!) If you look at the size of the earth, tornadoes are tiny, don't travel very far, and don't last very long. Most tornadoes are the weakest type (F0) and very few are the stronger and larger types. Thunderstorms (with wind, rain, hail, lightning, and flooding) have a great deal more influence (good and bad) on plants and animals.
Because they tear down trees,kill animals and totally destroy houses!
They also killl people.
tornadoes can possibly contribute to global warming.
plus they destroy houses, trees (rip them out of their roots) and kill people.
A tornado can damage or destroy trees and other plants, destroy habitats, and kill or injure animals.
Tornadoes primarily damage the natural environment by destroying vegetation.
Firewhirls, as they are more properly called, can affect the environment by spreading fire beyond the boundaries of the fire from which they formed.
Tornadoes don't really affect aquifers at all. Aquifers are far enough underground to be beyond the influence of tornadoes.
No
Tornadoes do not affect climate change. They may be affected by climate change, but how is yet to be determined.
They don't really. Tornadoes can cause some soil erosion, but this affect is not very significant except in rare cases of extremely violent tornadoes.
Firewhirls, as they are more properly called, can affect the environment by spreading fire beyond the boundaries of the fire from which they formed.
Exactly! The tornadoes destroy stuff, including trees, houses, and much more. For that reason, it effects our everyday life
Tornadoes can affect a small portion of the natural environment, such as by clearing an area of trees, but overall they have little effect because they are so localized.
Tornadoes don't really affect aquifers at all. Aquifers are far enough underground to be beyond the influence of tornadoes.
No
Tornadoes do not affect climate. Climate is the long term trend in weather patterns while a tornado is a short lived effect. Temperature inside a tornado is lower than it is in the surrounding environment. However, you would only experience this while inside the tornado itself.
The powerful winds of tornadoes can destroy trees and other vegetation.
Tornadoes do not affect climate change. They may be affected by climate change, but how is yet to be determined.
They don't really. Tornadoes can cause some soil erosion, but this affect is not very significant except in rare cases of extremely violent tornadoes.
No.
Tornadoes are part of our environment but they also destroy our environment like houses, roads, and forests!Tornadoes have very destructive effects on the environment because they spread pollution from people's houses and debris flies everywhere. If people weren't around tornadoes might not have such bad effects. Tornadoes would kill trees and plants and animals but all those decompose. It would give a chance for new plants and animals to populate an area everytime a tornado hit the area.
Tornadoes can destroy trees and animal habitats when they hit them.