1,ooo (ml)
Each year, approximately 50% of the rain that falls in rainforests is evaporated back into the atmosphere, contributing significantly to the region's humidity and overall climate. For rivers and lakes, evaporation rates can vary widely based on factors like temperature, surface area, and local climate conditions, but it can be estimated that a substantial volume of water is lost to evaporation annually. Overall, these processes play a crucial role in the hydrological cycle, influencing weather patterns and ecosystems.
This depends on many factors.
This depends on many factors.
Because the process of evaporation leaves behind salt and rain is an result of evaporation
Evaporation
There is so much rain in the rain forests, because they are located near the equator. This makes their temperature high enough that it results in maximum evaporation of water, causing heavy rainfall to occur.
The evaporation rate of a desert is much greater than the precipitation rate.
It is the same everyday. Sea and rain is constant. Transposition, condensation evaporation etc.
one million
evaporation
How much rain forest does a rain forest get each year... Well, I would say that a rain forest can't really get any rain forests in a year, but Tropical rain forests get about 200-600 cm of rain each year, and Temperate Rain forests get 200-400 cm of rain each year.
evaporation and rain