If a forest fire occurs, it can significantly disrupt the food web by destroying habitats and killing organisms at various trophic levels. Primary producers, such as plants, may be severely damaged or wiped out, leading to a decrease in food availability for herbivores. This, in turn, affects carnivores that rely on those herbivores for food. However, over time, the ecosystem can recover, with new growth and species adaptations reshaping the food web.
In the forest
ummm....in a forest.
in the forest
Most the time it is either because humans think it would be cool to burn down the forest, but it really isn't most the animals will die only some can run from it. The other way a forest fire can happen is when there is lightning and it hits the forest the forest catches on fire.....
When a fire is out of control in a forest.
Organisms in the forest could die, escape, or be displaced by a fire. Those that can't flee quickly may be injured or killed, but some species have adapted to fire and can benefit from it by regenerating their habitat. The overall impact depends on the intensity, size, and frequency of the fire.
amazon
it might burn the forest
Get current fire information on www.nifc.gov
Possibly a forest fire. That would leave the forest as a meadow or prairie, to start all over again.
even though its called a tropical RAIN forest it still can get on fire
If a forest fire ain't putted out then it would get big and burn them trees n grasses and such.