The Amazon Teacher’s Guide
The World's Most Beautiful Roof
From an airplane, the rain forest canopy looks like vast fields of bulging broccoli. From the forest floor, it looks like a twisted maze of branches, vines and streamers. Both views are misleading. To the millions of plants and animals that live out their entire lives in the roof of the rain forest, the canopy is a sunny paradise with room to scamper across well-traveled branch paths, or even to fly, glide or leap.
The Canopy Takes a Lot of Heat (Wind and Rain Too!)
The
canopy is the powerhouse of the rain
forest, where more than 90% of photosynthesis
takes place and, in the fullest sense, life begins. Wind and pounding
rain cause dead leaves and branches
to fall down constantly from the canopy. On the floor, they decompose,
and are sucked up as nutrients by tree
roots, and then returned to the canopy to continue the
cycle of life. The brightly lit, noisy
world of the rainforest canopy, some 100 feet or more above
the floor, is in a lot of ways an undiscovered
continent.
Boldly Going Where No One Has Gone Before
Though it teems with life -
ants, plants,
monkeys and macaws,
the canopy was off limits to people until recently. It still remains
largely unexplored, but a new generation
of scientists is trying a variety of wildly imaginative
tactics to get up close and personal with life in the treetops.
Fifty percent (maybe more) of all rain
forest species live in the canopy. Determined women and men
have constructed platforms, nailed
ladders to trees, built walkways
suspended across crowns, and used mountain-climbing
equipment - all in an effort to unlock the ecological
secrets of the canopy. They’ve found a poisonous caterpillar,
and giant weevils that carry miniature
gardens of mosses and lichens on their
backs. Amid hundreds of individual plant and animal discoveries,
the most important discovery is that life on our glorious
plane is even more diverse
and more plentiful than anyone imagined!
A Rottin' Place to Live
As photosynthesis
is the dominant natural process is the canopy, the forest floor
is a dark house of decomposition. Here,
the work of nature is carried out by termites,
ants, fungi,
bacteria and millipedes - the
"cleaning crew" of the forest.
These organisms break down dead plants and animals into nutrients-and
they work fast! Decomposition is so
quick in the tropics, that the forest floor is pretty empty.
Can you see how these two layers of life-the canopy and the forest
floor are connected?