Rainforests
are very dense, warm, wet forests. They are havens for millions of plants and
animals. Rainforests are extremely important in the ecology of the Earth. The
plants of the rainforest generate much of the Earth's oxygen. These plants are
also very important to people in other ways; many are used in new drugs that
fight disease and illness.
Where are Rainforests? Tropical rainforests are located in a band around the
equator, mostly in the area between the Tropic of Cancer (23.5° N latitude) and
the Tropic of Capricorn (23.5° S latitude). This 3,000 mile (4800 km) wide band
is called the "tropics." Tropical rainforests are found in South America, West
Africa, Australia,
southern India,
and Southeast Asia
Strata of the Rainforest
Different animals and plants live in different parts of the rainforest.
Scientists divide the rainforest into strata (zones) based on the living
environment. Starting at the top, the
strata are:
- EMERGENTS: Giant trees
that are much higher than the average canopy height. It houses many birds and insects.
- CANOPY: The upper
parts of the trees. This leafy environment is full of life in a tropical
rainforest and includes: insects, birds, reptiles, mammals, and more.
- UNDERSTORY: A dark, cool
environment under the leaves but over the ground.
- FOREST FLOOR: Teeming with
animal life, especially insects. The largest animals in the rainforest
generally live here.
Animals that Live in Rainforests: Ridiculously huge
numbers of animals live in rainforests, including microscopic animals,
invertebrates (like insects and worms), fish, reptiles, amphibians, birds, and
mammals. The different rainforests of the world support different populations
of animals. A few animals from each
rainforest are listed below:
- South America -
- insects (morpho
butterfly, Julia butterfly, Monarch butterfly, and millions of other
insects)
- mammals (jaguar, ocelot,
didelphid opossums, sloth, howler monkey, spider monkey, capybara, many
bats, marmosets, procyonids, peccaries)
- birds (quetzal, macaw,
tinamous, curassows, hoatzins, hummingbirds, eagles, ovenbirds, antbirds,
flycatchers, puffbirds, toucans, jacamars, tanagers, tapirs, troupials,
honeycreepers, cardinal grosbeaks, xenops)
- reptiles (anaconda,
caiman, iguanas, lizards, microteiid lizards, boas, and coral snakes),
amphibians (poison arrow frog, etc.)
- fish (electric eel, piranha),
and millions of other animals.
- Australia -
- mammals (tree kangaroo,
rat kangaroo, yellow-footed Antechinus, Giant White-tailed Uromys,
opossums, bandicoot, echidna, duck-billed platypus, sugar glider, red
legged pademelon)
- birds (cassowary,
brolga, emerald dove, orange-footed scrubfowl, Australian brush-turkey,
sarus crane, gray goshawk, wompoo fruit dove, topknot pigeon, Australian
king parrot, laughing kookaburra, lesser sooty owl, fernwren, barred
cuckoo-shrike, golden whistler, etc.)
- reptiles (frilled
lizard, carpet python, Green Tree Snake, Spotted Tree Monitor, Eastern
Water Dragon, Boyd's Forest Dragon, Northern Leaf Tailed Gecko)
- insects (Ulysses
butterfly, Zodiac Moth, Union Jack butterfly, Regent skipper, Birdwing
Butterfly)
- amphibians (Giant Tree
frog, Striped marsh frog, Northern Barred frog, Dainty Green Tree frog),
and millions of other animals.
- Southeast Asia -
- mammals (tarsiers, orangutans,
Siamangs, gibbons, colobine monkeys, tigers, tree shrews, binturong,
moonrats, most flying foxes, colugos, bamboo rats, Oriental dormice)
- birds (tree swifts,
leafbirds, fairy bluebirds, fantails, whistlers, flowerpeckers, wood
swallows)
- insects (Queen
Alexandra's Birdwing butterfly, Goliath Birdwing butterfly, Saturn
Butterfly), and millions of other animals.
- West Africa -
- mammals (antelopes, bonobo,
chimpanzee, gorilla, Mandrill, scaly-tailed squirrels, otter shrews,
duikers, okapi, hippopotamus, Cercopithecus monkeys, bushbabies, pygmy
hippo, duiker)
- birds (Congo
peafowl, African Gray Parrot) and millions of other animals
EnchantedLearning.com
Biomes - Habitats