novanet= lower canopy
For an area to be considered a rainforest, it must receive over 80 inches of rain.
The desert receives one 20th or less of the amount of water that a rainforest receives. This is because deserts get very little rain.
A forest can be called a rainforest when there is a minimum typical annual rainfall of 1750–2000 mm. This is 68-78 inches.
No, the rainforest receives much too much rain to be considered a desert.
it must recaives 80 inches of rain or more
A rainforest is not defined exclusively by the amount of rain it gets. There are other factors (average temperature, layers of overgrowth) that are characteristic of rainforests, either tropical or temperate. However, the general range for the classification is more than about 1750 to 2000 mm (68-78 inches) of annual rainfall.
no because there is not much rain to have a rain forest or trees to have a rain forest
The area in a rainshadow receives less rain than a similar area not in a rain shadow.
None. It is much too warm in a tropical rainforest to snow.
Wet seasons vary on each island. Some islands, such as St. Croix (US Virgin Islands) have a very arid area of the island and a rainforest that receives much more rain. Certain areas of each island may get much different rainfall.
tropical forest in an large area with high amount of rain
The rainforest has about 120 days of rain per year, with an average of 2013 mm falling per year.