No sugar came from ancient Persia and was exported around the world
Nah, no there are no rainforest's in germany. Sorry
Native Amazonians are believed to have inhabited the Amazon rainforest for thousands of years, with estimates suggesting their presence dates back at least 11,000 years. Archaeological evidence indicates that these indigenous peoples adapted to and shaped the rainforest environment long before European contact. Their cultures, languages, and practices have been deeply intertwined with the forest, making them an integral part of its history and ecology.
White sugar began being used in both North and South America in the 18th century. It was cultivated in these countries and was said to perpetuate the growth of slavery.
Sugar is made in many different countries, but mainly tropical regions, such as Hawaii, southern California, Latin America, and Indonesia. The number one sugar exporter is Brazil, followed by Thailand and Australia.
Yes, sugar can come from plants that grow in rainforest regions, primarily from sugarcane and sugar beet. Sugarcane is a tropical grass that thrives in humid, warm climates, often found in or near rainforests. While sugar production itself may not be directly linked to the rainforest ecosystem, the cultivation of sugarcane can impact rainforest environments through deforestation and land-use changes.
You can get sugar from the rain forest as there is sugar canes where sugar is grown.
African rainforest .
sugar cane, coco, fruits and herbs cinnamon
The sugar glider live in the canopy .
it does not come from the rainforest, it is natural and is produced in the body, and now days synthetically made
Some common foods coming from the Amazon Rainforest include: cocoa beans, bananas, manioc, rice, fish, soy, and corn, mango and sugar canes
the jacana lives in the rainforest or if you called it the canpoy which is like the rainforest.
Medicine, fruits, antibiotics, and/or sugar cane
neurofen
yes
The rainforest is one of the habitats in which sugar gliders live. They live in tree hollows in bushland and the rainforests of Australia. Climatic conditions preferred by sugar gliders include rainforests and bushland (both wet and dry sclerophyll forest). They can adapt to cool-temperate climates, such as that found in Tasmania, and warmer, humid climates of northern Australia, but they are healthiest in drier bushland rather than moist rainforest.