首页
登录
职称英语
Rainforests Tropical rainforests are
Rainforests Tropical rainforests are
游客
2024-06-08
23
管理
问题
Rainforests
Tropical rainforests are the most diverse ecosystem (生态系统) on Earth, and also the oldest. Today, tropical rainforests cover only 6 percent of the Earth’s ground surface, but they are home to over half of the planet’s plant and animal species.
What Is a Rainforest?
Generally speaking, a rainforest is an environment that receives high rainfall and is dominated by tall tress. A wide range of ecosystems fall into this category, of course. But most of the time when people talk about rainforests, they mean the tropical rainforests located neat the equator.
These forests raceive between 160 and 400 inches of rain per year. The total annual rainfall is spread pretty evenly throughout the year, and the temperature rarely dips below 60 degrees Fahrenheit.
This steady climate is due to the position of rainforests on the golbe. Because of the orientation of the Earth’s axis, the Northern and Southern hemispheres each spend part of the year tilted away from the sun. Since rainforests are at the middle of the globe, located near the equator, they are not especially affected by this change. They receive nearly the same amount of sunlight, and therefore heat, all year. Consequently, the weather in these regions remains fairly constant.
The consistently wet, warm weather and ample sunlight give plant life everything it needs to thrive. Trees have the resources to grow to tremendous heights, and they live for hundreds, even thousands, of years. These giants, which reach 60 to 150 It in the air, form the basic structure of the rainforest. Their top branches spread wide in order to capture maximum sunlight. This creates a thick canopy (树冠) level at the top of the forest, with thinner greenery levels underneath. Some large trees grow so tall that they even tower over the canopy layer.
As you go lower, down into the rainforest, you find less and less greenery. The forest floor is made up of moss, fungi, and decaying plant matter that has fallen from the upper layers. The reason for this decrease in greenery is very simple: The overabundance of plandts gathering sunlight at the top of the forest blocks most sunlight from reaching the bottom of the forest, making it difficult for robust plants to thrive.
The Forest for the Trees
The ample sunlight and extremely wet climate of many tropical areas encourage the growth of towering trees with wide canopies. This thick top layer of the rainforest dictates the lives of all other plants in the forest. New tree seedlings rarely survive to make in to the top unless some older trees die, creating a "hole" in the canopy. When this happens, all of the seedlings on the ground level compete intensely to reach the sunlight.
Many plant species reach the top of the forest by climbing the tall trees. It is much easier to ascend this way, because the plant does’s have to form its own supporting structure.
Some plant species, called epiphytes, grow directly on the surface of the giant tress. These plants, which include a variety of orchids and ferns, make up much of the understory, the layer of the rainforest right below the canopy. Epiphytes are close, enough to the top to receive adequate light, and the runoff from the canopy layer provides all the water and nutrients (养分) they need, which is important since they don’t have access to the nutrients in the ground.
tranglers and Buttresses
Same epiphytes eventually develop into stranglers. They grow long, thick roots that extend down the tree trunk into the ground. As they continue to grow, the roots form a sort of web structure all around the tree. At the same time, the strangler plant’s branches extend upward, spreading out into the canopy. Eventually, the strangler may block so much light from above, and absorb such a high percentage of nutrients from the ground below, that the host tree dies.
Competition over nutrients is almost as intense as competition for light. The excessive rainfall rapidly dissolves nutrients in the soil, making it relatively infertile except at the top layers. For this resson, rainforest tree roots grow outward to cover a wider area, rather than downward to lower levels. This makes rainforest tree roots grow outward to cover a wider area, rather than downward to lower levels. This makes rainforest trees somewhat unstable, since they don’t have very strong anchors in the ground. Some trees compensate for this by growing natural buttresses. These buttresses arc basically tree trunks that extend out from the side of the tree and down to the ground, giving the tree additional support.
Rainforest trees are dependent on bacteria that are continually producing nutrients in the ground. Rainforest bacteria and trees have a very close, symbiotic (共生的) relationship. The trees provide the bacteria with food, in the form of fallen leaves and other material, and the bacteria break this material down into the nutrients that the trees need to survive.
One of the most remarkable things about rainforest plant life is its diversity. The temperate rainforests of the Pacific Northwest are mainly composed of a dozen or so tree species. A tropical rainforest, on the other hand, might have 300 distinct tree species.
All Creatures, Great and Small
Rainforests are home to the majority of animal species in the world. And a great number of species who now live in other environments, including humans, originally inhabited the rainforests. Researchers estimate that in a large rainforest area, there may be more than 10 million different animal species.
Most of these species have adapted for life in the upper levels of the rainforest, where food is most plentiful. Insects, which can easily clomb or fly from tree to tree, make up the largest group (ants are the most abundant animal in the rainforest). Insect species have a highly symbiotic relationship with the plant lifte in a rainforest. The insects move from plant to plant, enjoying the wealth of food provided there. As they travel, the insects may pick up the plants’ seeds, dropping them some distance away. This helps to disperse the population of the plant species over a larger area.
The numerous birds of the rainforest also play a major part in seed dispersal. When they eat fruit from a plant, the seeds pass through their digestive system. By the time excrete (排泄) the seeds, the birds may have flown many miles away from the fruit-bearing tree.
There are also a large number of reptiles and manmals in the rainforest. Since the weather is so hot and humid during the day, most rainforest manmals are active only at night, dusk or dawen. The many rainforest bat species are especially well adapted for this lifestyle. Using their sonar, bats navigate easily through the mass of trees in the rainforest, feeding on insects and fruit.
While most rainforest species spend their lives in the trees, there is also a lot of life on the forest floor. Great apes, wild pigs, big cats and even elephants can all be found in rainforests. There are number of people who live in the rainforests, as well. These tribes—which, up until recently, numbered in the thousands—are being forced out of the rainaforests at an alarming rate because of deforestation.
Deforestation
In the past hundred years, humans have begun destroying rainforests at an alarmin rate. Tody, roughly 1.5 acres of rainforest are destroyed every second. People are cutting down the rainforests in pursuit of three major resources:
Land for crops
Lumber for paper and other wood products
Land for livestock pastures
In the cureent economy, people obviously have a need for all of these resources. But almost all experts agree that, over time, we will suffer much more from the destrucgion of the rainforests than we will benefit.
The world’s rainforests are an extremely valuable natural resource, to be sure, but not for their lumber or their land. They are the main cradle of life on Earth, and they hold millions of unique life forms that we have yet to discover. Destroying the rainforests is comparable to destroying an unknown planet—we have no idea what we’re losing. If deforestation continues at its current rate, the world’s tropical rainforests will be wiped out within 40 years. [br] The largest number of rainforests in the world are located on the African continent.
选项
A、Y
B、N
C、NG
答案
C
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3624823.html
相关试题推荐
RainforestsTropicalrainforestsare
RainforestsTropicalrainforestsare
RainforestsTropicalrainforestsare
RainforestsTropicalrainforestsare
RainforestsTropicalrainforestsare
RainforestsTropicalrainforestsare
RainforestsTropicalrainforests
RainforestsTropicalrainforests
RainforestsTropicalrainforests
RainforestsTropicalrainforests
随机试题
下列法律文件中,规定内阁对君主负责的是()。A.英国1689年《权利法案》
施工单位与建材公司订立一份钢材采购合同,履行期限内钢材市场价格发生波动,根据《合
患者,女性,65岁。胃癌根治术后当天夜间突然发热39℃。为避免病情进一步发展,关
基金资产估值是指对基金所拥有的()按一定的原则和方法进行估值。A.基金资
以行气解郁、调经散结为主的饮片是A.生香附B.醋香附C.四制香附D.酒香附E.香
根据变电一次设备标准缺陷库,集合式电力电容器构架及基础,构架锈蚀不会造成够架变形
耦合电容器红外检测检测范围,重点检测()、()、接头及二次回路。耦合电容器$
在宋朝,《洗冤录》是中国乃至世界最早的()A.案例集 B.成文法典 C.法
骨折治疗中不轻易切开复位内固定,最主要的原因是A.影响骨折处血运,导致延迟愈合或
在劳动力市场均衡分析图形中,如果劳动力供给曲线不变,出口下降导致劳动力需求曲线向
最新回复
(
0
)