Asked by aw2
he desert relies on precipitation from weather patterns, while the rainforest can create its own precipitation.
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Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
True.
Explanation: Deserts typically receive the little precipitation they get from broader weather systems (Hadley-cell subsidence, rain shadows, or sporadic storms). Tropical rainforests, by contrast, return large amounts of water to the atmosphere through evapotranspiration and so can help generate and sustain local and regional rainfall (though they still depend partly on moisture transport from elsewhere).
Explanation: Deserts typically receive the little precipitation they get from broader weather systems (Hadley-cell subsidence, rain shadows, or sporadic storms). Tropical rainforests, by contrast, return large amounts of water to the atmosphere through evapotranspiration and so can help generate and sustain local and regional rainfall (though they still depend partly on moisture transport from elsewhere).
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