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A tropical rainforest without rain wouldn't be much of a rainforest. I mean, all plants
need water to grow, and without it, they shrivel up and die. So what about the ancient Hawai'ian
proverb,"Hahai no ka ua i ka ulula`au", which means "the rain follows after the forest"?
How could that be?
Well, all land plants lose water when the pores on their leaves open up during photosynthesis,
and this evaporation draws more water up through their stems. With so much rain soaking the
soil in rainforests, water is nearly unlimited, and accordingly, rain forest trees can afford
to move and lose more water than other plants. All that water vapor rising from the forest
feeds moisture-laden clouds while causing convection - together, these effects accelerate
the formation of rain - which falls to the soil and gets taken up all over again.
This cycle--absorption, evaporation, rain-- happens everywhere there are plants. However,
super-wet soil, fast-pumping trees and hot tropical sun make the cycle so fast in the
rainforest that - unlike other biomes where clouds might form in one place and rain in
another - all that water stays in the same region.
So without the forest pumping so much water into the air, rainforests wouldn't be as rainy.
And without so much rain, the forest couldn't pump so much water into the air. So which
came first, the rain, or the rainforest?
Well, before rain forests, ancestors of trees like cypress, pine and spruce dominated the
land - but they were conservative when it came to using (and losing) water - so the
air tended to be dry, meaning less rain.
However, around 130 million years ago, a new kind of plant developed that took the risk
of losing more water in return for souped-up photosynthesis - these were the flowering
plants, and their risk paid off: their faster growth enabled them to out-compete the ancestral
pines and take over the tropical regions of the globe.
Angiosperms lost so much water into the air that as they spread, they brought their own
rain with them. And today, tropical rainforests receive more rain than if they were replaced
by pine forests- in some places as much as a meter more rain each year. That's equivalent
to an extra two and a half hours of heavy rain every week. Not surprisingly, all that
water cools off the forest, too, which is why the Amazon isn't nearly as hot as the
Sahara or even an east Texas pine forest in summer.
But the hot, dry tropics of the past may soon be a part of our future. In parts of the Amazon
where vast swaths of rainforest have been logged or cleared for agriculture, weather
stations are already observing decreased rainfall, and forest fires have become more frequent.
Scientists worry that these changes will lead to ever hotter, drier and more flammable tropics
in the coming decades, making things tougher both for the remaining forest and for the
people who live there. So, when in drought, plant a tree. Seriously - Hahai no ka ua i
ka ulula`au (the rain follows after the forest).