The average rainfall with the amazon basin is equal to 8.1mm per day. However for other tropical locations such and the congo, west indian islands or the asian tropics could be different. I would asume that as the ecosystems are fairly similar it would be fair to say that the rain fall in these locations would be about the same.
Palms+rain=tropics
Palms+rain=tropics
normally 100-250 days of rain per year
An impossibility - the equator is in the tropics and that region receives to much rain to have a desert.
Lots of rain thats for sure
Many deserts are in the regions just outside the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn where dry sinking air from the tropics suppresses the development of rain. Some are in the rain shadow of mountains that block the flow of humid air from the sea. See the image above.
no, all rain forests are found in the out skirts of Africa
The tropical rain belt in a band of rain that moves to the north in June and to the south in December, roughly following the sun's seasonal path. When the tropical rain belt in north of the equator, the northern tropics experience their rainy season and the southern tropics experiences their dry season. When the tropical rain belt is south of the equator, the southern tropics experience their rainy season and the northern tropics experience their dry season.
Tropical rain forests can be found on land in the tropics on either side of the equator.
Because they are located in an area of the Earth known as the "tropics", between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, and there is an abundace of rain.
Many deserts are in the regions just outside the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn where dry sinking air from the tropics suppresses the development of rain. Some are in the rain shadow of mountains that block the flow of humid air from the sea. See the image above.
Yes, most of the parts in Brazil is located in the tropics.