Biomes Forests Rainforest
Rainforest
A living system of rain, layers, biodiversity, and interdependence.
Museum Page Status
This SciMu museum page is in development. More sections, images, sources, and related pathways may be added over time.
At a Glance
Quick Facts
Biome Family
Forests
Major Subtypes
Tropical rainforest; temperate rainforest
Known For
High biodiversity, layered forest structure, frequent rainfall, complex food webs
Why It Matters
Why It Matters
Rainforests are among Earth’s richest living systems. They help shape water cycles, store carbon, support extraordinary biodiversity, and connect climate, culture, conservation, and evolution.
Explore the Science
Explore the Science
Rainforests are layered ecosystems shaped by sunlight, rainfall, soil, plant growth, animal behavior, decomposition, and long evolutionary relationships among species.
Explore This Biome
Rainforest as a Museum Pathway
The Rainforest page is beginning to organize a living system into clear pathways: climate, water, layers, species, culture, conservation, and recovery.
What Is a Rainforest?
Define the rainforest biome family, global distribution, and essential ecological conditions.
Tropical Rainforest
Hot, wet, and diverse forests near the equator.
Temperate Rainforest
Cooler coastal forests rich in moss, fog, rain, and ancient trees.
Layers of the Forest
Explore emergent trees, canopy, understory, and forest floor.
Water Cycle
Rainforests help move water through clouds, soil, rivers, leaves, and air.
Biodiversity
A dense web of plants, animals, fungi, microbes, and relationships.
Stewardship
Human knowledge, local care, Indigenous stewardship, and restoration matter.
Deforestation & Restoration
Threats to forests also reveal pathways toward recovery.
Species Showcase
Life in the Rainforest
Representative species cards will grow richer as individual species pages and images are added.
Jaguar
Future species page
Orangutan
Future species page
Harpy Eagle
Future species page
Poison Dart Frog
Future species page
Layers of the Forest
A Vertical Living System
Rainforests can be explored from the tallest emergent trees down to the recycling life of the forest floor.
Emergent Layer
Trees rise above the canopy.
Canopy
A dense roof of leaves captures sunlight.
Understory
Shade-tolerant plants and animals live below.
Forest Floor
Decomposition recycles nutrients and life.
Threats & Conservation
Protecting Living Forests
Habitat Loss
Clearing, fragmentation, and road-building reduce forest area and continuity.
Climate Change
Changing temperature and rainfall patterns affect forest health and species ranges.
Biodiversity Loss
When habitats are damaged, food webs and ecological relationships can unravel.
Restoration & Stewardship
Protection, restoration, local knowledge, and long-term care can help forests recover.
Museum Pathways
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