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Daintree Rainforest Relationships

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ave you ever wonder what it’s like in a rainforest biome? A rainforest is a type of biome that have many tall trees with a warm climate year round and have many rainfall yearly. Daintree Rainforest is one of the rainforest biome on the Earth. The Daintree Rainforest is one of the oldest rainforest on Earth. It’s located in the region northeast of Queensland, Australia, north of Mossman and Cairns. It has the latitude and longitude of 16.1700°S and 145.4185°E with an elevation of 1270 meters. The Daintree Rainforest is home to a vast variety of organisms, including 13 species of butterflies that does not live anywhere else on Earth, and have many landforms and bodies of water within it. The climate of the Daintree Rainforest is tropical. This means that the climate there is …show more content…

For example, the native hibiscus(Hibiscus tiliaceus) provide nectar for the Ulysses butterfly(Papilio ulysses). In exchange the Ulysses butterfly pollinate them as it goes around collecting nectar. The Ulysses butterfly and the native hibiscus’ relationship can also be describe as a mutualist relationship because both organisms are benefiting within this relationship. There are also predator/prey relationship within here. Some predator/prey relationship would be the cassowary eating reptiles, such as snakes, and crocodiles eatings platypuses. Another relationship in the Daintree Rainforest is parasitism between the Strangler Fig(Ficus aurea) and its host tree. The Strangler Fig is the one that's being benefited in this relationship because the host tree ends up losing its nutrients since it gets wrapped around by the Strangler Fig which blocks off light that is used for photosynthesis. The roots of the Strangler Fig also compete with its host tree for water and nutrients, so as it grows the roots gets thicker and blocks off all water and nutrients(Schaffner, 1). This can even end up causing the host tree to

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