The Tropical Climate
The tropical rain forest is a forest of tall trees in a
region of year-round warmth. An average of 50 to 260
inches (125 to 660 cm.) of rain falls yearly.
Rain forests belong to the tropical wet climate group.
The temperature in a rain forest rarely gets higher than
93 °F (34 °C) or drops below 68 °F (20 °C); average
humidity is between 77 and 88%; rainfall is often more
than 100 inches a year. There is usually a brief season
of less rain. In monsoonal areas, there is a real dry
season. Almost all rain forests lie near the equator.
Rainforests now cover less than 6% of Earth's land
surface. Scientists estimate that more than half of all
the world's plant and animal species live in tropical
rain forests. Tropical rainforests produce 40% of
Earth's oxygen.
A tropical rain forest has more kinds of trees than any
other area in the world. Scientists have counted about
100 to 300 species in one 2 1/2-acre (1-hectare) area in
South America. Seventy percent of the plants in the
rainforest are trees.
About 1/4 of all the medicines we use come from
rainforest plants. Curare comes from a tropical vine,
and is used as an anesthetic and to relax muscles during
surgery. Quinine, from the cinchona tree, is used to
treat malaria. A person with lymphocytic leukemia has a
99% chance that the disease will go into remission
because of the rosy periwinkle. More than 1,400
varieties of tropical plants are thought to be potential
cures for cancer.
All tropical rain forests resemble one another in some
ways. Many of the trees have straight trunks that don't
branch out for 100 feet or more. There is no sense in
growing branches below the canopy where there is little
light. The majority of the trees have smooth, thin bark
because there is no need to protect the them from water
loss and freezing temperatures. It also makes it
difficult for epiphytes and plant parasites to get a
hold on the trunks. The bark of different species is so
similar that it is difficult to identify a tree by its
bark. Many trees can only be identified by their
flowers.
Despite these differences, each of the three largest
rainforests--the American, the African, and the
Asian--has a different group of animal and plant
species. Each rain forest has many species of monkeys,
all of which differ from the species of the other two
rain forests. In addition, different areas of the same
rain forest may have different species. Many kinds of
trees that grow in the mountains of the Amazon rain
forest do not grow in the lowlands of that same forest.

Köppen
Classification & Biomes
| Cold
Climate |
Dry Climate
|
Temperate Climate |
Tropical Climate
|