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If humans don't stop clearing Tropical Rainforests they will eventually disappear for good. Scientists predict that in 40 years there will be no more Rainforests and the sloths and giant anteaters and many other animals will die with it.
Tropical Rainforests The Southeast Asian rainforests are the oldest, consistent rainforests on Earth, dating back to the Pleistocene Epoch 70 million years ago.
What biome
in the last hundred years humans have changed the rainforest by reduce of deforestation and we have people looking after the enviorment
There are no forests in Anarctica. There were tropical rainforests the 50 million years ago, but not any more.
People have lived in and around tropical rainforests for many thousands of years. The people there build houses. Houses are made out of forest materials, such as palm leaves, trees and clay. they moved their villages when they needed to find new food supplies or to find higher ground during floods.
Approximately 200 years ago, there were over 7 billion acres of tropical rainforest around the world, which covered about 12 percent of the planet's surface.
The are both in a tropical area, and they are both near the equator and there is probably more. They are rainforests. They were made a million years ago
The main difference between a temperate rainforest and tropical rainforest is location. Tropical rainforests ar located near the equator between the tropics of cancer and capricorn. Temperate rainforests ar located to the north of the Tropic of Cancer and to the south of the Tropic of Capricorn.
The annual precipitation for temperate rainforests is at least 200 cm (78.74 in) and can go up to 350 cm (137.79 in). Tropical rainforests receive from 60 to 160 inches of precipitation. They vary some during the months but over a years' time, the graph shows nearly a straight line.
Much of the animals on earth that there are now lived 300 years ago. The only difference was that the variety of animals, especially in countries like brasil and many rainforests, was greater back then. And of course, there were humans.
For thousands of years, The Yanomami tribe haved lived in the rainforests of South AmericaThe Yanomami people live in the tropical rainforests in northern Brazil and southern Venezuela in South America