many animals that live in tropical rain forests will die off and that population will decrease.
any kind i think
Donno, I don't think it impacts tropical rainforests...
No, they don't live in China ,and i think Japan.They eat bamboo,and bamboo isn't in a tropical rainforest:).So m y answer is nooo :)!
Sloths are unique mammals highly adapted to life in the canopy.
I doubt this is the answer you're looking for as it's a little tautological, but between 23° 26′ 16″ N and 23° 26′ 16″ S. Outside of this band you'd by defintion I suspect be talking about temperate rainforests. Of course mother nature doesn't work so cleanly and around teh Tropics of Cancern and Capricorn you'd very fairly be able describe tropical and sub-tropical rainforests based other criteria. These guys think 10° N to 10° S is the band for tropical rainforests: http://www.rochedalss.eq.edu.au/rain2.htm
I think it is more capable at certain time of day
Answer 1:Think of the question a little more carefully, can they - not do they.Fiordland Penguins are eligible to live in rainforests but live on the south-west coast of new zealand.In other words - penguins CAN live in the rainforests but do not.(They probably would if they could get there.)Answer 2:Unlikely.Penguins require proximity to the ocean for their food. Rainforests - even cool, temperate rainforests which are the rainforests generally found in the same latitudes as some species of penguins - are nit found close enough to the ocean for penguins.
We would destroy are world and if we carry on with doing this we will destroy are world and are selves.
I think it is 458137376378347o
I don't think so
i think the four main rainforests are asias north America and south America and Australia
Two of the most known are the Amazon located in Peru the largest in the world and the Daintree as the oldest in Australia