Mat is AWESOME N~
wet, swampy, subtropical rainforest, and tropical wetlands
Before humans existed, the Sahara used to be a tropical rainforest. As human evolved, trees in Sahara were deforested, therefore it turned into a desert.
it is humid and has a savana ecosystem. Humid subtropical. Wet. Alot of rainfall it is humid and has a savana ecosystem. Humid subtropical. Wet. Alot of rainfall it is humid and has a savana ecosystem. Humid subtropical. Wet. Alot of rainfall it is humid and has a savana ecosystem. Humid subtropical. Wet. Alot of rainfall
1. Stretching from Newcastle in NSW to Brisbane, the Gondwana Rainforest includes large areas of warm temperate rainforest, Antarctic Beech cool temperate rainforest and the largest areas of subtropical rainforest in the world. 2. Frasier Island in Queensland has a sand rainforest, which is quite different from a rainforest based in dirt. 3. Much of the west coast Tasmania is rainforest.
Tropical and Sub-tropical Savanna but you will also Tropical Rainforest along the west coast, and Alpine in the Himalayans. India also has the Subtropical dry forest biome (or the tropical and subtropical deciduous forest biome) and some Temperate Broadleaf forests.
Stingrays are common in coastal tropical and subtropical marine waters throughout the world; I don't believe they live in rainforests.
Due to the climate, they are in a tropical environment. There can also be rainforest in subtropical environments, but you don't hear people saying "Sub-Tropical Rainforest"
Mostly Alabama can have a rainforest because of its humid subtropical climate and its abundant rainfall. You won't find any tropical rainforests there because it's not hot enough but it is moist enough to support humid pine/cypress rainforests
No. Blue-winged kookaburras live in a variety of habitats, but not rainforest. They live in tropical and subtropical open woodlands, paperbark swamps, and in native trees along watercourses, in open clearings, canefields and farmland.
Listing from the most common to least common: Desert Savanna Steppe Tropical Rainforest Highland Mediterranean Marine Humid Subtropical
Florida is a very interesting state because it has A LOT of different biomes... A very unique type of 'biome' (found in the Everglades) is called a Tropical Hammock. Tropical Hammocks are like miniature Tropical Rainforests that are scattered all around Southern Florida (again, mainly in the Everglades). It has been said that Key Lignumvitae has a little Tropical Rainforest on it. So, to answer your question yes, there is Tropical Rainforest in Florida. Another interesting note, is that Florida actually has Subtropical Rainforest as well! Look up Ocala National Forest and you'll see how cool that is. You always hear people talking about Tropical Rainforest, but not Subtropical. It's pretty interesting!
No, Venus flytraps do not live in the Amazon. The carnivorous plants in question (Dionaea muscipula) instead have as their native distributional range subtropical wetlands in the more northerly southeastern United States of America.