HOW THE RAIN FOREST WORK
Tropical Rain Forest is the most complex
ecosystem on earth! It produces about 2.000 grams of dry plant
material per Km2 per year, compared with 1.250 grams per Km2
for a temperate forest. It is an association of producing,
consuming and decomposing organisms, all ultimately deriving
their energy from sunlight. The producers are the plants,
the consumers are the animals, and the decomposers consist
of bacteria, fungi and certain small animals like millipedes
and termites, which break down dead organic material so that
minerals, carbon, nitrogen and other important elements can
be recycled.
The crowns and foliage of the rain forest trees form several
strata or stories. A major division exists between the canopy,
which is exposed to almost full sunlight, and the undergrowth,
which is much less brightly illuminated. There is, therefore,
a strong contrast between the microclimate of the canopy and
that of the strata closer to the ground, as well as intermediate
microclimates at middle levels.
Of all natural terrestrial ecosystems, none accomplish more
photosynthesis than tropical rain forest. The energy obtained
from the conversion of the sun’s rays into plant structural
material is then cycled through the ecosystem by plant eaters
such as various insects, birds, and mammals.
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