Imagine your forest as a giant sponge that drinks in water and then lets it out into the air. Trees take in water from the ground through their roots, and they release it as vapor from tiny holes in their leaves, this is called transpiration. When enough trees do this at once, the vapor rises into the sky, forms clouds, and eventually falls down as rain. It's like a forest breathing out rain!
Examples
- Imagine walking through a thick forest on a hot day, your sweat is like the trees' transpiration, helping form clouds in the sky.
- During a dry season, forests still send vapor up to make rain, even without much rainfall nearby.
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See also
- Why Do Forests Create Their Own Weather?
- What are rainfall rates?
- How Does The Ocean Influence Weather?
- What are localized atmospheric conditions?
- How Does the Atmosphere Affect Weather Patterns?