Some say the destruction of the world's forests because of the need for land and food is inevitable, but others say it is not. If the world uses the land and farming techniques (biointensive planting for one) that are already available, the world's forests would not have to be destroyed. If they continue on the course they are on, then yes, the forests would be destroyed.
YҽŚ I agree
trees
It was proven that natural diversity grows with temperature.
in large forests by streams, rivers, lakes, or ponds
Venus fly trap
Chinar
Malthus's theory of population argued that population grows at a geometric rate while food output grows at an arithmetic rate and that food scarcity was, therefore, inevitable.
drhwtwywywg
Broadleaf Evergreen Forest
Where the wild fern grows =] i hope that answers your question.
They live among the Bamboo forests of the mountains of China.
Native to North America. It grows in the forests and woodlands of the eastern United States and Canada.
Rain forests come in two varieties. There are tropical rain forests which are warm, and boreal rain forests which are cold in the winter (but still warm in the summer). Forests, by definition, have lots of trees, and consequently, not that much grass - the trees block out too much sunlight for optimal grass growth. Grass grows better on plains, in meadows, etc., not in forests.