Why do both rainforest and coniferous forest have evergreen trees?
Answers
Answer:
rainforests and coniferous forests are quite different so it is hard to determine the similarities, but I guess that the main similarity is that they are both evergreen, meaning that the trees keep their leaves in winter, unlike deciduous forests do, although it is possible to have a deciduous rainforest, or a deciduous conifer forest, although it is rare because deciduous forests aren’t generally rainforests and there are only about 4 species of deciduous conifers on earth, so it is rare to find a forest of them. You can even have coniferous rainforests, for example, the great bear rainforest in south western Canada is a coniferous forest, but also a rain forest.
They are very different. One forest is based on the types of trees (coniferous) while the other is based on the climate and how it affects the forest. it’s basically like saying what are the similarities between a dense forest with lots of rain and a forest where all the trees bear cones. There can be both coniferous and rainforest at once, or it could be either, or neither of them.
it really depends on what type of rainforest you mean and what type of coniferous forest you mean.
Answer:
Even the sunlight does not reach the ground. Numerous species of trees are found in these forests. In some regions, some types of trees shed their leaves at different times of the year. Therefore, these forests always appear green and are known as evergreen forests.