Can I Survive in the Rainforest? (point)
- Mia
- Jun 16, 2025
- 3 min read
Rainforests help to provide water for people. Trees act as a water store by intercepting rainfall. As we always say: forests are our best defense against climate change. They are one of the world's primary carbon reservoirs—absorbing carbon dioxide from the air, storing it, and generating oxygen. Within them, we found a steady supply of wood, plants and animals, as well as fruits and vegetables. We used these resources to create medicines, cloths, resins, pigments and many other materials. As the millennia passed, human communities grew and our need for goods from the forests grew with it.
I can survive in a rainforest because I can seek food. You guys might really ask me, why am I so positive to live in a rainforest. Well you might think there is no food or water or anything but in fact, there is. And in a rainforest, the fruits and vegetables there are even better than the ones in the city. It would be easy to find food there. Oh yes, water. Rainforests are sometimes next to lakes so I think water isn’t a problem either. And lastly, a shelter. Shelters are hard to find but it isn’t hard to build.
Every single day, I can keep a journal with the date. With this, it could help me. I can make bottles and put letters in it and let it flow away to hope for a connection. This would be easy. Journaling is like eating broccoli. You know it’s good for you but you just don’t want to do it. I know because I feel the same way. Imagine how my heart sank when I was told during my first day of naturalist training that I had to keep a journal. I can’t write. I can’t draw. I have the artistic talent of a baloney sandwich. The thought of keeping a journal filled me with dread. If hiking in nature is milk and cookies, then keeping a journal is broccoli. But still it is important.
I can catch an animal or a fish and keep it as a pet. to have the love I need. Birds and mammal species love to eat the tasty fruits provided by trees. Even fish living in the Amazon River rely on fruits dropped from forest trees. In turn, the fruit trees depend upon these animals to eat their fruit, which helps them to spread their seeds to far-off parts of the forest. Almost all plants in tropical lowland forests are pollinated by animals, with bees, followed by beetles and flies, most important. Most seeds are also dispersed by animals, except in the upper canopy, with birds, fruit bats, primates, and a variety of terrestrial mammals most important.
I can survive in a rainforest because I can seek food. You guys might really ask me, why am I so positive to live in a rainforest. Every single day, I can keep a journal with the date. With this, it could help me. I can make bottles and put letters in it and let it flow away to hope for a connection. This would be easy. I can catch an animal or a fish and keep it as a pet. to have the love I need. Birds and mammal species love to eat the tasty fruits provided by trees. Even fish living in the Amazon River rely on fruits dropped from forest trees.


