Yes, various species of spiders live in the Amazon rainforest - tarantulas being just one species.
Brazilian wandering spider, Tarantulas, jumping spiders,
spiders and stuff
Yes, spiders do live in the rainforest. Rainforests are diverse environments that provide a variety of habitats for different species of spiders to thrive. Spiders play an important role in the ecosystem by controlling insect populations.
tropical rainforest
Spiders can be found living in various layers of the rainforest, depending on their species and habitat preferences. Some live in the forest floor, others in the understory, while some can be found in the canopy.
spiders, ants, worms and many more. birds eat the worms. you would find spiders crawling around every where!
monkeys, snakes, frogs, beetles, spiders, ants, parrots, gorillas
The rainforest is neither vertebrate or invertebrate. The rainforest is a biome, and biomes cannot be classed as vertebrates or invertebrates. Only individual organisms that are members of the Kingdom Animalia can be classified in this way.
The daddy long leg spider? they're commonly known as house spiders. I don't know if they live in a specific rainforest.
monkeys, snakes, spiders, beetles, frogs, ants, parrots, gorillas
Rainforest animals live in countries near the equator. There are many animals that only live in the rainforest, including the decoy building spiders, piranhas, Kinkajou, poison dart frogs, and candiru fish.