Probably not. Without rain, the trees in the forests won't grow and will eventually die. And without trees, a forest won't exist. Trees minimize the carbon dioxide around us. So without them, the rate of global warming will increase.
Forests are the source of oxygen. Without oxygen there would be no ozone.
Life without forests is not possible. This is because these trees keep oxygen circulating in the air for animals to breathe.
People are constantly cutting down forests and rainforest's. Eventually they will just disappear. Trees and plants provide oxygen for us. without it we would die! So if Forests or rain forests disappear then we will too!
As we all know that forests are necessary for the earth. Forests and plants give us oxygen to breathe. Without them we would die. That's why people are working so hard to stop/slow down Global Warming. The world is a cycle and without trees and forests, the ecosystem will no longer be a cycle and many things will no longer exist.
It would affect the deciduous forests because as the natural disaster comes the forest would get destroyed and there would be no habitat for the animals.
It returns atmospheric water back to the ground. Without precipitation there would be no water cycle, all the water would run down the rivers and into the seas then the rivers would dry up with no fresh water from precipitation.
We can protect them by not harming them & not by cutting forests.
It would still be Alaska
it would be precipitation. (as the gas then rises it starts precipitation)
Yes, precipitation is an abiotic factor.
This is because as you will know forests contain many trees of which posses leaves that will photosynthesize to produce oxygen an element that is essential for the process of respiration to occur (without oxygen there would be no life).
The inhabitants of those tropical rain forests would be without homes. The loss of homes would contribute to the death of said inhabitants. This would include animals and humans indigenous to the land.