Want this question answered?
it forms over oceans with high latitudes
No. Hurricanes form over warm oceans in tropical areas when there is little to no wind shear. Strong wind shear will prevent a hurricane form organizing.
Tropical waters, while beautiful, have high light levels and are nutrient poor. The murkier temperate oceans are nutrient dense and have low light levels allowing for abundant plankton and algae formation.
A tropical forest in an area with high precipitation is known as a rainforest. A rainforest typically has an annual rainfall of between 98 and 177 inches.
because of the high level of rainfall in that particular area
tropical forest in an large area with high amount of rain
Because there is a lot of evaporation and lot a of precipitation
tropical rainforest , costal areas,and islands
The calm area of a tropical cyclone is the eye. The circular eye of the storm is surrounded by a high wall of thunderstorms where the most severe weather occurs.
It's an area in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans called the "Doldrums." It is a low pressure area along the equator caused when all the hot air along the equator rises very high and flows North or South. Eventually it comes back down in the horse latitudes, about 30 to 36 degrees North and South of the equator.Also, if you wanna know what is just the "area near the equator" alone, it is the tropical zone.
hurricane
Maritime tropical air masses are warm and humid, originating from tropical oceans. They bring muggy conditions, high temperatures, and the potential for thunderstorms due to their moisture content. These air masses often form along the Gulf of Mexico and move northward into the central United States during the summer months.