RE: Musing Posts
In some literature that rainfall in the Mediterranean forest is very high. Rainfall data that actually shows large numbers, for example in Assam exceeding 11,000 mm / year, in Bogor Approximately 4,500 mm / year. Important things are very different from local and special conditions. In general, in large areas and repeated observations for a long time, rainfall in the region is only given between 2,500 to 4,000 mm / year.
- On Mount Waialeale (Hawaii)
Rain can fall to 11,500 millimeters per year, even more over time. This mountain is a volcanic area so it is exposed to clouds and moisture coming from the sea, which literally acts as a cloud of land barrier around.
- in New Zealand (Milford Track, and of course, is one of the wettest places (6,000 to 8,000 millimeters per year).
- Gunung Mulu (Malaysia)
5,000 mm per year in the rainforest of Mount Mulu, in the heart of the island of Borneo in Malaysia.
- Yakushima Island (Japan)
Yakushima is a Japanese island with perennial floods. A place where there is rainfall between 4,000 and 10,000 mm of water per year,
BMP Tropical Forest Ecology