Computer Science, asked by mikeyshea, 1 month ago

what are a plant and animal that has disappeared from the rainforest...?

Answers

Answered by RosyRain
2

  • Still, some of the most famous extinct animals are the dodo bird, sabertooth cat, the wooly mammoth, thylacine, quagga, passenger pigeon, Pyrenean ibex, Javan tiger, and of course various dinosaurs.
Answered by capricon17
2

Answer:

What would happen if rainforests disappeared?

What would happen if rainforests disappeared?First of all, rainforests are home to about 50% of all land spicies, which means that if they disappear then 50% of all land living spicies on this planet would go extinct. Second, rainforests create their own weather as the humidity that the plants lose during day returns as rainfall, so the weather will probably change in those areas and become much more dry. Third, rainforests creat about a quarter of the oxygen in our atmosphere, so there will be much less oxygen in the air. Probably to the level that humans can’t survive in long term. Evolution can allow spicies to adjust to changes that happen slowly, if you make an abrupt change to the environment then almost everything alive will not survive. Even if some of the living animals or plants will be able to survive this change from the oxygen drop perspective food webs are still fully reliant on each other so everything will still die. Think of how people will get food if for example livestock can’t survive in the new environment. And last, ecosystems are a very fragile thing. Who would have thought a hundrend or two years ago that releasing carbon dioxide to the atmosphere can cause a climate change or make the poles melt. Actions usually have hidden and unpredictable repercussions. You should look at the state of the world like a ball stuck in a pit in the ground. Give it a gentle sweep and it will pidget and return to the same place it was. Give it a slightly stronger sweep and the ball will be released from the pit it was stuck in and will start rolling down the hill toward a completely different state. It didn’t take that much to release the world from its equilibrium, a relatively slight sweep. but after the ball is rolling there is nothing in the world that can roll it back uphill to where it was. The forces that we are releasing are many orders of magnitude bigger than any thing humanity could have done directly. Living on this planet after the runaway process will start will be hell for at least a few hundred years, until a new equilibrium will be reached. Whatever it will be, the new state will probably not be hospitable to humans, as we were not designed to live in it.

What would happen if rainforests disappeared?First of all, rainforests are home to about 50% of all land spicies, which means that if they disappear then 50% of all land living spicies on this planet would go extinct. Second, rainforests create their own weather as the humidity that the plants lose during day returns as rainfall, so the weather will probably change in those areas and become much more dry. Third, rainforests creat about a quarter of the oxygen in our atmosphere, so there will be much less oxygen in the air. Probably to the level that humans can’t survive in long term. Evolution can allow spicies to adjust to changes that happen slowly, if you make an abrupt change to the environment then almost everything alive will not survive. Even if some of the living animals or plants will be able to survive this change from the oxygen drop perspective food webs are still fully reliant on each other so everything will still die. Think of how people will get food if for example livestock can’t survive in the new environment. And last, ecosystems are a very fragile thing. Who would have thought a hundrend or two years ago that releasing carbon dioxide to the atmosphere can cause a climate change or make the poles melt. Actions usually have hidden and unpredictable repercussions. You should look at the state of the world like a ball stuck in a pit in the ground. Give it a gentle sweep and it will pidget and return to the same place it was. Give it a slightly stronger sweep and the ball will be released from the pit it was stuck in and will start rolling down the hill toward a completely different state. It didn’t take that much to release the world from its equilibrium, a relatively slight sweep. but after the ball is rolling there is nothing in the world that can roll it back uphill to where it was. The forces that we are releasing are many orders of magnitude bigger than any thing humanity could have done directly. Living on this planet after the runaway process will start will be hell for at least a few hundred years, until a new equilibrium will be reached. Whatever it will be, the new state will probably not be hospitable to humans, as we were not designed to live in it.hope it helps

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