Some natural disasters that ocur often in rainforests are droughts, floods, and mudslides.
The droughts are caused by the extreme temperatures in the dry season when the sun is directly posistioned upon the equator where many rainforests are.
The floods occur mainly in the wet season when the highest average annual rainfall tends to just seem to never end.
The mudslides are caused when the floods push down soil, shrubs and other ground sediments and plants and cause a moderate to large spill out of a part of the land.
Weather is very humid and hot. It rains every hour of the day. My suggestion is to bring a umbrella.
In a temperate forest, there are four definite seasons. In some biomes, like the tundra, it is usually cold, but not in the temperate forest. Spring time brings new life to the trees and plants, warm temperatures, and rain which helps everything grow. Summer is hot, and everything is green for all the trees now have leaves. Fall is cool. The trees are beginning to change colors such as red, yellow, and bright orange. Winter months are extremely cold. All the trees loose their leaves.
The average temperature for a year in the temperate forest is about 50 degrees F.
The forests usually gets about 30 to 60 inches of every year.
tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes, fires, land slides, basically everything you can think off.
Rainforests suffer the same sort of natural disasters as most other areas of the planet. They are subject to floods, drought, fire, mudslides, volcanic eruptions, and wind damage.
Yes. Because tropical rainforests are in the tropical climate zone, they can be subject to severe storms, complete with hailstorms, and cyclones.
tornadoes & hurricanes
Alout of rain and mega drouts
people cut dowm trees
lots of flooding from all the rainfall
Yes; floods can be quite common.
No, there hasn't been. I was wondering the same question and I looked it up on a weather website and nothing showed up.
because God
you`d be able to be a meteorologist
No. There is no record of a hurricane or tropical storm named Robin.
Most likely not. Andorra is a small landlocked country between Spain and France. Spain itself has only ever had one tropical depression.
The Dominican Republic is located in the Caribbean, and therefore, it is sometimes subjected to hurricanes. So yes, it has had severe weather.
While it is generally well protected it does receive severe winds and the effects of tropical cyclones.
Africa has a relatively mild climate most of the year and rarely, if ever, snows. It does tend to go from hot to cold during winter, however.
No, there hasn't been. I was wondering the same question and I looked it up on a weather website and nothing showed up.
It varies. There are vast deserts, and both arid and semi-arid lands; there are grasslands, and tropical rainforests; but there is also plenty of rich, fertile crop land which puts Australia in the enviable position of being able to be self-sufficient, if it ever needed to.
The slowest round of golf ever recorded is approximately 15 hours back in 2003 during a tournament on the European Tour. This prolonged round was due to severe weather conditions and the difficulty of the course.
In all likelihood, no. There have only ever been two day 2 high risk outlooks. Issuing a high risk outlook means that the SPC is predicting with a high degree of certainty that there will be a major severe weather outbreak. A day 3 outlook cannot be issued with such certainty.
no
There are many species of rat-kangaroo, but only one species is the smallest of the kangaroos.The smallest kangaroo is the musky rat-kangaroo, with an average length of 23 centimetres. The musky rat kangaroo lives in the dampest parts of the tropical rainforests in north Queensland.
Yes. There was a Tropical Storm Elaine in the Atlantic Ocean in September of 1974.
Psychiatry really helps people who suffer from severe emotional distress.
Sort of. There was a Severe Tropical Cyclone Gina in the South Pacific Ocean in 2003. It is really the same thing as a hurricane, but under a different name. Gina reached an intensity equivalent to a category 2 hurricane.