NATURE
Ecosystems
The world's most amazing rainforests
Last Updated: Friday, September 11, 2009 | 5:31 PM ET
By Anthony Grant, Forbes.com
Cathedral Grove in British Columbia's MacMillan Provincial Park is home to massive Douglas Fir trees. (Forbes.com)Even the urban jungle’s most dedicated denizens, so caught up in asphalt and ambition, could do well to remember the green worlds beyond their horizon. What better way to start than a foray into the densest, most richly diverse wildernesses this world has to offer? Rainforests are the rock stars of Earth’s ecosystems, generating nearly a third of the planet’s oxygen turnover and hosting mind-boggling biodiversity. From soaring vines and canopies to majestic fauna sheltered in a huge canopy of green, they practically demand an audience.
Despite the stark facts that rainforests once covered 14 per cent of the earth’s land surface and now cover only six per cent, and that thousands of species continue to be lost each year to deforestation, the rain does not stop, and there is still plenty of luxuriant terrain to explore and discover.
So much, in fact, that it can be difficult to choose which rainforest to begin with: from reserves in Australia to Belize to British Columbia and beyond, opportunities for adventurous travelers abound. Depending on the destination, you can either incorporate a rainforest visit into a broader itinerary, such as in Australia or Hawaii, or make it the centerpiece of a trip — for instance, a week-long river cruise though the heart of the vast Amazon rainforest.
Where the wild things really are
The planet’s major rainforests are found in the intertropical convergence zone, a region over the tropical oceans where the tradewinds from the northern and southern hemispheres converge, creating a continuous band of clouds. Most rainforests follow a four-part pattern: the dark forest floor, where only two per cent of sunlight penetrates, forms the base of the understory layer where birds, snakes and jungle cats like jaguars live.
Japan has Yakushima Island, a lush escape from the country’s urban grind where the locals say it rains 35 days a month. It has plants from both subtropical and cold temperate zones, and is dense with ancient Yakusugicedar trees in a sylvan landscape that inspired the setting of the film Princess Mononoke.
After that comes the extensive canopy layer, where the wild things really are: It’s home to exotic fruits and flowers and about half of all plant species on the planet, a varied fauna including parrots and monkeys, and a quarter of all insect species. Trees in the emergent fourth layer can exceed 260 feet (79 m) — not too tall for eagles, blue and gold macaws, vampire bats and even some monkeys like the black-and-white colobus who prefer life at the top.
Though the word “rainforest” tends to conjure visions of steam heat, monkeys and toucans with DayGlo bills, temperate rainforests are remarkable, too. There’s Cathedral Grove on Vancouver Island’s MacMillan Provincial Park, with its 800-foot-tall (243 m) Douglas Fir Trees, and the pristine Tarkine in Australia’s Tasmania, home of some of the planet’s purest rain and the fiesty Tasmanian devil, too.
Japan has Yakushima Island, a lush escape from the country’s urban grind where the locals say it rains 35 days a month. It has plants from both subtropical and cold temperate zones, and is dense with ancient Yakusugicedar trees in a sylvan landscape that inspired the setting of the film Princess Mononoke.
But isn’t splendor of this magnitude hard to get to? Not really: “You can fly from Tokyo’s Haneda airport to Kagoshima (100 minutes), then from Kagoshima to Yakushima Airport (40 minutes),” says Nori Akashi of the Japan National Tourism Organization. “Usually, you stay one night on the island to visit the rainforest — there are several accommodation facilities.”
Whether in Costa Rica’s Monte Verde Cloud Forest or the Hawaiian Islands (where beautiful rainforests in Maui and Kauai beckon) exploring a rainforest is not just a feast for the senses but can be good for the soul. It’s nature distilled to its essence, and however brief, the journey into a thousand shades of green is an intense one —those vibrant colors alone can create special effects.
According to Peri Enkin, a Hawaiian energy counselor and color therapist, "The moss green chakra relates to below the feet,” which she says could help you become grounded in your physical life. And because “emerald green relates to the heart,” according to her, getting your fill of that particular hue amidst the leaves and vines may ignite love and create compassion and care. Not a bad way to wind down a day in one of Planet Earth’s greenest, if rainiest, corners.
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