The extraordinary planet of ours is home to some amazing rainforests that support more than half of the entire world's population of plants and animals. These forests are important for they regulate Earth's weather and temperature. But are we mindful of our forests In the race for development, we chose to cut them down, our home planet's lungs. Forests are filters of the earth for they absorb greenhouse gas like carbon dioxide and give out oxygen for everyone to breathe. In present times, our rainforests are most vulnerable, next to the polar ice caps, as they have fallen prey to large-scale deforestation and environmental pollution caused by human beings. We tend to forget that if these forests cease to exist, then so will we.
Our rainforests are home to several rare and endemic species of plants and animals. Trees that go up as high as our eyes can see, leaves broad enough to shut out sun rays, forest floor overgrown with moss and creepy crawlies, fresh water lakes, rivers long and wide, flamboyant birds and equally mesmerising and unique animals--all these and much more constitute our forests. Protecting them is protecting ourselves.
Here are five important rainforests of the world that we need to know about.
Amazon Rainforest
It is only the world&rsquos largest tropical rainforest, home to some 390 billion trees, thousands of birds and animals, and a huge varieties of insects, and many more. The rainforest covers an area of 5,500,000 sq.km, covering Brazil, Peru, Colombia, Venzuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana. The rainforest takes its name from the river Amazon About 60 percent of the forest is contained in Brazil.











