Tropical Rainforest Climate

 A Tropical Rain Forest is a forest of tall trees in a region of year-round warmth. An average of 50 to 260 inches of rain falls every year. Rain forests belong to the tropical wet climate group. The temperature in a rain forest is rarely higher than 93 °F (34 °C) or drops below 68 °F (20 °C). The average high humidity is between 77 and 88%. There is usually a rare season of less rain. In monsoonal areas, there is a real dry season. Almost all rain forests lie near the equator. Frogs, newts and toads are usually vulnerable to such changes in the temperature and need very specific habitats to for them survive.  Other organisms might die of the change of temperature. Others would just move somewhere else if its to cold and move back home till the temperature goes back to normal. Tropical rainforest receieve 12 hours of sunlight a day. This does not affect the organisms that live there. The monthly precipitation in the tropical rainforest varies greatly depending on the season, but the annual precipitation is 262cm. Some tropical rainforest soils are very poor and infertile. The soil is less organic matter than of temperate forests, because the warm humid conditions encourage faster decay and recycling of nutrients back into living forest. It affects several species because they can't get no nutrients that they need.
 
 
 
 
 
 
https://www.marietta.edu/~biol/biomes/troprain.htm
https://www.blueplanetbiomes.org/rainforest.htm