I believe you mean ''temperate''... ? A temperate rain forest is a rain forest in a cooler climate compared to a rainforest in the tropics (near the equator). I believe the only temperate rain forest (or only rain forest for that matter) is the Hoh Rain Forest in Washington, USA. hope that helps
No, there are no tropical rain forests in Washington State. There are, however, temperate rain forests on the Olympic Peninsula. These rain forests are cooler in temperature than the tropical forests and house different species.
Definitely not tropical. Feels pretty close to the subantarctic. Generally defined as temperate. Australia uses a different definition of 'temperate rainforest' from other countries, but that's mostly about what is rainforest rather than what is temperate. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temperate_rainforest#Definition
not all the time there may be trees bigger than the canopy like in Australia is a tropical rainforest but whit only the canopy
Anything bigger than it
the tropical rain forest
Indonesia is made up of more than 13000 islands and has the second largest area of tropical rainforest.
no because the types of soils it contains. If you look up for EX: Tropical Rainforest in the Google search bar then there is only going to be tropical rainforest in certain areas same for the Rainforest.
A climate characterized by a very small temperature range and more than 250 cm of rainfall per year is likely a tropical rainforest climate. These regions typically have high temperatures year-round and experience heavy rainfall throughout the year, leading to lush vegetation and high biodiversity.
A soil profile in a tropical rainforest tends to be thick with distinct layers due to high rainfall and rapid decomposition of organic matter. In contrast, desert soil profiles are typically shallow with little organic matter, as the low rainfall and high temperature limit plant growth and organic input, resulting in less developed soil horizons.
more than you can begin to comprehend
A tropical rainforest gets much more precipitation than a desert gets, so, the tropical rain forest's soil is even more moister than dessert soil, the dessert soil is exceedingly dry.
There is more than one tropical rainforest, but all together, they cover about 12% of the planet.