It affects it by minerals falling from the rain making the forest tropical. Thus if this rain was to fall say somewhere in the world over the years it will slowly become a rainforest
because of the high level of rainfall in that particular area
wet ones
A tropical dry forest is similar to a tropical rain forest. the main differences are that it has a lot less rainfall and that they are dispersed more thuroughly throught the tropical regions. So it is basically a dry, tropical rain forest.
The four different forest biomes are tropical rainforest (hot and wet), temperate deciduous forest (moderate temperature and rainfall), boreal forest (cold and moderate rainfall), and tropical dry forest (hot with seasonal rainfall). Each biome has specific characteristics based on these factors.
The two types of tropical forests are tropical rainforests and tropical dry forests. Tropical rainforests are characterized by high rainfall and year-round warm temperatures, while tropical dry forests experience a pronounced dry season with less rainfall than rainforests.
Tropical rainforests typically have the highest annual average precipitation of any biome, receiving between 60-160 inches of rain per year. This constant rainfall fosters lush vegetation and high biodiversity in these regions.
The differentiate between tropical evergreen and tropical monsoon forest is that it have less rainfall but tropical monsoon forest have more rainfall than the tropical evergreen forest.
80 inches of rain or more
Yes.
A tropical rainforest
No, a tropical rainforest is a specific type of tropical forest characterized by high levels of rainfall and biodiversity. Tropical forests, on the other hand, encompass a broader category that includes tropical rainforests as well as other forest types found in tropical regions.
A tropical rainforest has a typical rainfall of 250 cm per year.