10 Animals That Live in the Rainforest
Tropical Rainforest Animals:
Here’s a list of 10 tropical rainforest animals that live in the rainforest as per their habitat and are not generally seen:
Jaguar
The Jaguar (Panthera onca) is the largest cat species in the Americas and the third largest in the world after the lion and tiger. The Jaguar prefers to live in tropical forests and is distributed from Central America to Argentina and Paraguay. It is very similar to a leopard, but more muscular and larger. The jaguar is a solitary superpredator of the ecosystem in which it lives.
Tiger
The largest modern cat: the weight of the largest male Amur and Bengal tigers exceeds 300 kg, which is purely Asian. It lives in a wide variety of landscapes and climatic zones, including the tropical forests of Hindustan, Indochina, and Indonesia. One of their favorite things is that they love water and bathe regularly. It climbs trees in childhood only.
Scarlet Macaw
One of the most iconic species of rainforest animal, the Scarlet Macaw is a striking, large parrot with bright red plumage and brilliant blue and yellow wing feathers. Its powerful beak can open hard nuts and seeds. Scarlet macaws are one of the few species that mate for life.
Sloth
The slow-moving sloth, weighing only 3.5–4 kilograms, lives exclusively in trees, feeding on leaves, branches, and fruit. It moves so slowly that its fur takes on a green tint from the algae that grows on it.
Orangutan
The name “orangutan” comes from the Indonesian language and means forest person. For the inhabitants of trees with red fur, it was hardly possible to come up with a more suitable name. Hominids spend most of their lives in trees and only occasionally descend to the ground. Their physique, with long arms and strong fingers and toes, is ideally suited to their lifestyle and helps them climb branches and trees.
Gorilla
Mountain gorillas are the largest living primates on earth! Along with chimpanzees, orangutans, and bonobos, they are the closest living relatives of humans, and mountain gorillas have the most developed brains of the four ape species. They live mainly on the lush mountain slopes of the national parks of Rwanda, Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo in Central Africa. Mountain gorillas live in groups of about 30 members, with one dominant male leader.
Chimpanzee
Chimpanzee is a species of great ape native to the forests and savannahs of tropical Africa. The chimpanzee lives in groups that range in size from 15 to 150 members, although individuals travel and forage in much smaller groups during the day. The species lives in a strict male-dominated hierarchy, where disputes are generally settled without the need for violence.
Emerald Tree Boa
The emerald tree boa is a non-venomous species of boa that is considered one of the most beautiful snakes in the world. They are known for their mysterious emerald coloration, from which they get their name, and are often confused with the green tree python. These snakes are scattered throughout the northern rainforests of the South American continent and are also known as the Green Tree Boa or simply the Emerald Boa. This species is not dangerous to humans and is quite popular in the animal trade.
Capybara
Bearing a strong resemblance to its cousin (the guinea pig), the capybara is the largest rodent on earth, weighing over 45 kilograms and standing about 60 centimeters tall. It lives in dense vegetation along the banks of water bodies and often jumps into bodies of water to hide from predators. They can hold their breath for up to five minutes.
Red Panda
The Red Panda is a rare mammal with a crepuscular lifestyle that lives in China, northern Burma, Bhutan, Nepal, and northeast India. These are rather small creatures, comparable in size to a domestic cat: body length: 50–64 cm, tail length: 28–48 cm, and weight: about 5 kg. Red pandas live on average 8–10 years.
Red-Eyed Tree Frog
The red-eyed tree frog usually lives in lowland tropical forests that are located near a certain body of water (rivers, lakes, etc.). As an “arboreal amphibian,” the red-eyed tree frog typically lives in trees and tall deciduous plants. They spend most of their tadpole stage in the water, migrating to trees only as they mature and age.
Animals and Plants of the Rain Forest
The world’s tropical rainforests are home to some of the rarest and most unique species of flora and fauna that are found nowhere else on our planet. It is the most diverse biome on Earth and supports a huge variety of fauna. One of the reasons for such a wide variety is the constant warmth. Tropical rainforests also contain vast reserves of water (2,000 to 7,000 mm of rainfall annually) and a variety of food sources for animals. Read below to learn more about Tropical Rainforest: Animals and Plants of the Rain Forest.
Table of Content
- Where is the largest tropical rainforest?
- What animals and plants are in the tropical rainforest?
- Rainforest Definition: What defines a rainforest?
- How many tropical rainforests are there in the world?
- Characteristics of a Tropical Rainforest
- 10 Animals That Live in the Rainforest
- Why are there so many animals that live in the rainforest?
- Rainforest Animal Facts for Kids