The Tropical rain forest gets about 50 to 260 inches of precipitation yearly
It is 'precipitation'.
there is usually 2 inches a year just in precipitation in a swampland area. to my calculations there are many different swamps around the world. mostly they have that amount of precipitation.
The amount of sunlight that can be found in a freshwater biome varies. Some of these biomes receive more sunlight than others.
Fresh water is produced due to the sun. Evaporated water from the sea collects in the atmosphere as clouds, condenses an falls as precipitation. The salt is left behind because salt is soluble, and evaporates at a different temperature than water.
The major categories of freshwater ecosystems are rivers and streams, lakes and ponds, and freshwater wetalnds Hope this helps
There is no way to determine the dominant animals in freshwater biomes. This is because freshwater can be found in a variety of different habitats.
5 cm per month
Deserts are defined as regions that receive less than 10 inches (250 mm) of precipitation per year on average. Some deserts receive virtually no precipitation, however.
not a lot. its all snow :D
maybe about 40 inches per year
It receives 37.1 inches per year.
it can not be deturemand there is no way to measure it
A desert is defined as a region that receives less than 10 inches (250 mm) of rain on average per year. Some deserts receive virtually no precipitation.
Average humidity on Antarctica is about five percent. Annual precipitation is minimal -- single digit inches -- and most precipitation evaporates or freezes before hitting the ground.
Rainforests can receive both high temperatures and high precipitation.
Both receive less than 10 inches (250 mm) of annual precipitation on average. The cold desert may receive much of its annual precipitation in the form of snowfall.
Moist warm air comes out of the maritime islands and collides with the colder are on the continent. When the air masses meet, precipitation follows.
Given that a coral reef is already underwater, it doesn't really matter. And the precipitation doesn't reach the reef anyway.