2. Index:
1.What´s a tropical rainforest?
2. Fauna of a tropical rainforest
-1.1. Golden lion tamarin
-1.2. Jaguar
-1.3. Capybara
-1.4.Poison dart frogs
-1.5. Monarch Butterfly
3. Vegetation of the tropical rainforest
-2.1. Asai
-2.2. Tabebuia serratifolia
-2.3 Carniverous Plants
-2.4 Orchids
-2.5. Bromeliads
3. 1. What´s a tropical rainforest?
Tropical rainforests
are a world like none
other; and their
importance to the
global ecosystem and
human existence is
paramount.
4. In terms of their biological
diversity, tropical rainforests are
a natural reservoir of genetic
diversity which offers a rich
source of medicinal plants,
high-yield foods, and a myriad
of other useful forest products.
They are an important habitat
for migratory animals and
sustain as much as 50 percent
of the species on Earth, as well
as a number of diverse and
unique indigenous cultures.
5. Tropical rainforests play
an elemental role in
regulating global
weather in addition to
maintaining regular
rainfall, while buffering
against floods,
droughts, and erosion.
They store vast
quantities of carbon,
while producing a
significant amount of
the world's oxygen.
6. Today, more than two-thirds of the world's tropical
rainforests exist as fragmented remnants. Just a few
thousand years ago, tropical rainforests covered as
much as 12 percent of the Earth's land surface, but
today less than 5 percent of Earth's land is covered
with these forests.
7. 2. Fauna of a tropical rainforest
More than half of the
world's species of animals
are found in the
rainforest.
Many rainforest species
are rapidly disappearing
due to deforestation,
habitat loss and pollution
of the atmosphere.
8. 1.1 Golden Lion Tamarin
It´s a small New World
monkey of the family
Callitrichidae.
It gets its name from its
bright reddish orange
pelage and the extra long
airs around the face ears
which give it distinctive
name.
Its original habitat is Brazil.
They are social and groups
typically consist of 2-8
members
9. 1.2 Jaguar
Panthera is a genus of the family
Felidae (cats), which contains four
well-known living species: the tiger,
the lion, the jaguar, and the leopard.
Is a big cat, a feline in the Panthera
genus, and is the only Panthera
species found in the Americas.
The jaguar is the third-largest feline
after the tiger and the lion, and the
largest in the Western Hemisphere.
A study based on mitochondrial
genomes suggests that the about 11.3
million years ago Panthera separated
from other felid species and then
evolved into the several species of the
genus.
10. 1.3 Capybara
Capybaras have heavy, barrel-
shaped bodies and short heads with
reddish-brown fur on the upper part
of their body that turns yellowish-
brown underneath.
Is the largest extant rodent in the
world.
It is a highly social species and can
be found in groups as large as 100
individuals, but usually lives in
groups of 10–20 individuals.
The capybara is not a threatened
species, though it is hunted for its
meat and skin.
11. 1.4 Poison Dart Frog
Is the common name of a
group of frogs in the family
Dendrobatidae which are
native to Central and South
America.
These species are diurnal
and often have brightly-
colored bodies. Although all
wild dendrobatids are at least
somewhat toxic
Levels of toxicity vary
considerably from one
species to the next and from
one population to another.
12. 1.5 Monarch Butterfly
It is perhaps the best known of
all North American butterflies.
Since the 19th century, it has
been found in New Zealand, and
in Australia since 1871 where it
is called the Wanderer.
It is resident in the Canary
Islands, the Azores, and
Madeira, and is found as an
occasional migrant in Western
Europe and a rare migrant in the
United Kingdom.
13. 2. Vegetation of tropical rainforest
More than two thirds of the world's
plant species are found in the tropical
rainforests: plants that provide shelter
and food for rainforest animals as well
as taking part in the gas exchanges
which provide much of the world's
oxygen supply.
Rainforest plants live in a warm humid
environment that allows an enormous
variation rare in more temperate
climates: some like the orchids have
beautiful flowers adapted to attract the
profusion of forest insects.
14. 2.1. Asai: The prodigy fruit
Cientific Name: Euterpe Oleracea
Common names: Asaí, Acaí, Acay
Usable parts: Fruit
What is it?
-Is the palm tree´s fruit in the
rainforest of the north of Brazil. It´s
round, with a diameter of about
10mm,
-its color is dark purple and it grows
with a bunch form. The name of
these bunches receives the name
of “cacho”.
-The Asai has unique properties
and there aren´t any natural product
that can level them.
15. 2.2 Tabebuia serratifolia
This plant grows in the
Cerrado vegetation of
Brazil, reaching up to
French Guiana, Bolivia,
Paraguay and Northern
Argentina.
It is one of the largest and
strongest of tropical forest
trees, growing up to 150
feet tall while the base can
be 4 to 7 feet in diameter.
It is a commercially farmed
hardwood notable for its
extreme hardness and
resistance to fire and pests.
16. 2.3 Carniverous Plants
Some plants are adapted to
obtain nutrients from animal
matter.
The best known of these is
probably the Venus fly trap, but
more impressive is the pitcher
plant Nepenthes rafflesiana,
found in southeast Asia.
This plant grows to 30 feet tall
and may have pitchers 12 inches
in length, usually crammed full of
digested insects.
Pitcher plants also eat small
mammals and reptiles that
attempt to steal the insects from
the pitcher.
17. 2.4 Orchids
Orchids comprise one of the most
abundant and varied of flowering
plant families.
There are over 20,000 known
species and orchids are especially
common in moist tropical regions.
Temperate orchids usually grow in
the soil, tropical orchids are more
often epiphytes which grow non-
parasitically on trees.
Orchid flowers vary considerably in
shape color and size, although they
share a common pattern of three
petals and three petal-like sepals.
The lower petal has a very
distinctive appearance.
18. 2.5 Bromeliads
Bromeliads are related to the
pineapple family.
Their thick, waxy leaves form a bowl
shape in the centre for catching
rainwater.
Some bromeliads can hold several
gallons of water and are miniature
ecosystems in themselves providing
homes for several creatures including
frogs and their tadpoles, salamanders,
snails, beetles and mosquito larvae.
Those that die decompose and furnish
the plant with nutrients.
One bromeliad was found to contain
several small beetles, crane flies,
earwigs, a frog, a cockroach, spiders,
fly larvae, a millipede, a scorpion,
woodlice and an earthworm!