Yes!
Yes, the amount of rain in an area determines the types of organisms that can live there. Organisms have adapted to the specific amount of rainfall in an area, with some species requiring more water while others can thrive in dry conditions. Rainfall affects the availability of water, which is essential for the survival of plants and animals in an ecosystem.
Yes, the amount of rain in an area can greatly influence the types of organisms that can thrive there. Organisms have adapted to specific precipitation levels, so more rain can support more diverse species while less rain may limit the types of organisms able to survive.
Acid rain can lower the pH of the water in aquatic biomes, making it more acidic. This can harm aquatic organisms such as fish, amphibians, and invertebrates by disrupting their physiological functions, damaging their gills, and affecting their reproductive success. It can also degrade habitats and reduce biodiversity in these ecosystems.
non living How can rain just be non living i mean doesnt rain respond to the environment when lets say black clouds form in the sky from a forest fire enough of it will trigger a rain ,, it will begin to rain to release all that gas and smoke build up it wil clean the air. so maybe its non living but cant it be living due to responding to the environment
A vivovore is an organism that feeds on living animals or organisms. It obtains its nutrition by consuming other living organisms rather than consuming dead or decaying matter.
no
Yes, rain can contain acid due to pollutants in the atmosphere mixing with water vapor to form acidic rain.
Yes. Tropical rain forests have the greatest variety of biological organisms, both plant and animal, on the surface of the earth.
Rain doesn't "contain" any colours. Rain is water falling from the clouds while colous are represented by different frequencies of light.
Some of the water in rain was probably in sweat at some point, but sweat itself is not a component of rain.
Rain water is usually fairly clean, but it can contain pollutants from the air.
No, it is not true; rain water contain all the impurities washed from the atmosphere.
No. Salt is too heavy to evaporate. Even though some rain water is evaporated from the ocean it does not contain salt. No. When the water evaporates, it leaves the salt behind.
Rain does not naturally contain calcium. It is formed from water vapor in the atmosphere, which does not typically have calcium in high concentrations. Calcium can be present in rain if it picks up minerals from the ground as it falls.
The warmer the air the more water it can contain in soluion therefore the heavier the rain when the air is cooled and the water comes out of solution.
If the rain water contain powdered materials the mixture is nonhomogeneous.
If there was no rain all the organisms die because they don't have rain to live