the typhoons change the environment by destroying or eliminating it and
The destruction of the natural environment, particularly through deforestation and climate change, can contribute to the intensity and frequency of typhoons. Deforestation reduces the land's ability to absorb moisture, leading to altered weather patterns. Additionally, climate change raises ocean temperatures, which can intensify tropical storms and typhoons. While human activities don't directly cause typhoons, they can exacerbate conditions that lead to more severe storms.
They rip up trees and other vegetation. They cause flooding which damages crops and livestock. u retard
Typhoons cannot be prevented.
No, typhoons are a southeast Asia phenomena.
Vegetation helps absorb water's kinetic energy and some of the water itself. So floods will not carry the same force, and storm surges from typhoons will not travel as far inland.
Typhoons do hit land.
Yes typhoons travel
Hurricanes and typhoons are weather. Climate is a longer term look at how weather averages out over the years. So one severe tornado is not evidence of climate change and global warming. But if the numbers and the severity of weather events change over time, then that may be a part of climate change caused by global warming.
Typhoons can deliver much needed rain to a region.
No. Typhoons are tropical storms. Antarctica is a polar desert.
meteorologists name typhoons in alphabetical order
6 typhoons hit Guam: pongsona, paka, karen, cha'tan, pamela, and omar.