Earth's Rainiest Rainforest: The Chocó Rainforest

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  • Опубликовано: 14 дек 2024

Комментарии • 240

  • @MemoTea
    @MemoTea Год назад +113

    A couple years ago, I lived for working purposes 6 month in an isolated part of the medium atrato region. When it rained, it was so loud under our tent you couldn't hear the person next to you speak! Definitely a magical place.

    • @MayheM_646
      @MayheM_646 8 месяцев назад +2

      But what has that to do with this video or the Chocó region?

    • @MemoTea
      @MemoTea 8 месяцев назад +20

      @@MayheM_646 1) Video talks about Choco as one of the rainiest places on earth. 2) Sharing my personal experience of this phenomenon on the internet. 3) What a strange question.

    • @MayheM_646
      @MayheM_646 8 месяцев назад +4

      @@MemoTea Why is it strange? It literally has nothin to do with the Chocó.

    • @JohanDanielAlvarezSanchez
      @JohanDanielAlvarezSanchez 5 месяцев назад +10

      @@MayheM_646the Atrato river is located on the Choco region.
      I also been there, one of the most stunning places I have been ever to

    • @samgayney88
      @samgayney88 2 месяца назад +3

      @@MayheM_646your account is 11 years old and somehow don’t understand the comment section

  • @casualearth-dandavis
    @casualearth-dandavis  2 года назад +235

    Definitions of the southern edge of the Chocó vary, but much of western Ecuador is really a continuation of these rainforests. Based on rainfall data alone, you wouldn’t expect most of this region to be as lush as it is. That’s because during the dry season, a thick fog (Garúa) sweeps in off the Humboldt/Peru current, keeping the forest cool and humid while it isn’t raining-reducing evaporation and plant stress. The resulting forests are called Garúa forests (a type of submontane cloud forest) for this reason. Although this air is very stable (no convection), the fog will still condense into mist when it’s lifted up even a slight mountain range or large hills. The driest areas, around Salinas and Mantas, are points jutting out into the Pacific with flatter terrain-they don’t slow or lift the Garúa-bearing southerly trade winds, and in the wet season they’re surrounded by convection-inhibiting cooler water. Rainfall decreases toward the Pacific coast in Ecuador, generally. Again, the exact parallel to this is found in from coastal NW Angola to Gabon, for all the same reasons.

    • @raddastronaut
      @raddastronaut Год назад +6

      This is a great channel.
      Great work.

    • @solomon4554
      @solomon4554 Год назад +1

      Does this also apply to islands in SE Indonesia that are affected by the cold West Australian Current?

    • @safuwanfauzi5014
      @safuwanfauzi5014 Год назад

      The only place species of Platycerium live in that area 'Platycerium Andium"

    • @perrylim9728
      @perrylim9728 3 месяца назад

      No wonder we dont see Tropical Cyclones in South Atlantic as a result @casualearth9076 !

  • @samuelrodriguez1404
    @samuelrodriguez1404 Месяц назад +7

    First time I've seen content in english talking about the forest where I belong, my birthplace. Thank you for this, truly.

  • @seanziewonzie
    @seanziewonzie 2 года назад +268

    Wonderful video as always. Amazing how you can seamlessly move from the climate science to the niche history and anthro-geography.

    • @ilayohana3150
      @ilayohana3150 Месяц назад +1

      yeah i absolutely loved that, actually best geography/history channel material; those who can see beyond the basic subject and link it to other complicated ones. best indication of intelligence

  • @quimbaya09
    @quimbaya09 Год назад +115

    I grew up in a neighbouring state from Chocò, I learned really good facts that I was not aware of with this video. Thank you.💪🏽🇨🇴

  • @christianbermudezrivas9025
    @christianbermudezrivas9025 Год назад +36

    Outstanding video! Greetings from Tumaco, Colombia, at the southern portion of the Chocó region!

    • @AstralHiGH
      @AstralHiGH Год назад +2

      dang im in the most moderate weather place Southern Cali, until earthquakes hit at least, do you guys get earthquakes

    • @toursbydee
      @toursbydee Год назад +4

      @@AstralHiGH Yes, in Colombia we get tremors and earthquakes!

  • @an_otherwanderer
    @an_otherwanderer Год назад +57

    Im lying here, super high and with lower back pain but watching this video was very relaxing and informative. Keep it on dude!

    • @CallMeMimi27
      @CallMeMimi27 2 месяца назад +8

      I can confirm, being super high and watching nature documentals is very relaxing

    • @Luigiman59able
      @Luigiman59able Месяц назад +2

      Can also confirm.

    • @Idrinklight44
      @Idrinklight44 Месяц назад

      Concur!!! For me, being out in it, is a whole different experience , especially stoned!!! I'd swear you can communicate with nature..... .

    • @Idrinklight44
      @Idrinklight44 Месяц назад

      How's the back? Whatever you do, don't let them cut on you, little more than common butchers

    • @THERES_BEES_EVERYWHERE
      @THERES_BEES_EVERYWHERE 26 дней назад

      cam confirm, lower back pain jungle documentary you tube super high and pain lower back area jungle forest rain fall forest high with lower back pain. tropical greenhouse jungle fever too hot lower back pain high super back pain jungle rainforest lower back pain. super lower back pain watching high documentary in jungle. rainforest cafe lower rainforest back overwhelmingly

  • @Idrinklight44
    @Idrinklight44 Месяц назад +3

    Just so you know, IMO, you make truly award winning videos!! Lack of music is perfect!

  • @antoineisgoed
    @antoineisgoed Год назад +29

    Ive actually been here 4 years ago (somewhere near Nuqui). It was definitely an adventure to get there (small plane and taxi boat). And it was wet

  • @heya4405
    @heya4405 Год назад +12

    I went to the choco rainforest in Ecuador 1 year ago and it was amazing

    • @THERES_BEES_EVERYWHERE
      @THERES_BEES_EVERYWHERE 26 дней назад +1

      I went to the choco rainforest before you and it was even more amazing than when you were there

    • @heya4405
      @heya4405 26 дней назад

      @@THERES_BEES_EVERYWHERE that's cool

  • @Idrinklight44
    @Idrinklight44 Месяц назад +1

    Award winning!!! I think you do an outstanding job!!!

  • @SAbowser
    @SAbowser 2 года назад +23

    Glad I found this channel. Quality content as usual.

  • @rtvitko
    @rtvitko Год назад +18

    Outstanding production. Pointing out how conditions are similar where the geography is similar, allow us to improve our understanding of the forces that shape the world. Really loved the Palauan "abai" at 6:55. Palau is also in a unique ecological zone with relatively high rainfall and a comparatively low incidence of typhoons. Please keep up the great work.

  • @EdwardHamiltonDavis1
    @EdwardHamiltonDavis1 2 года назад +55

    Very good video! You are talented at explaining the role of climate in making unique places! The power of geography is made clear, and the material is quite appropriate for high school and even college classes. Thank you, Mr. Davis!

    • @akirathedog777
      @akirathedog777 Год назад

      Yeah , It amazed me to learn theres a rainforest with chocolate rain, should hace had tay zonday on

  • @thegamingteen44mc5
    @thegamingteen44mc5 Год назад +26

    You also forgot one detail, that the darién gap is located in this very rainforest and is the reason why the americas aren’t connected by road due to these conditions

  • @MapsDou
    @MapsDou Год назад +6

    Greetings from Colombia

  • @edwallace2828
    @edwallace2828 Год назад +7

    I always wondered about the Choco region. Thanks for putting this together.

  • @OsmarMty
    @OsmarMty Месяц назад +1

    This video was so refreshing for the mind

  • @ChelseyK1ng
    @ChelseyK1ng Год назад +10

    We must do our best to preserve the ecology of the Chocó rainforest region.

  • @lucaslevinsky8802
    @lucaslevinsky8802 Год назад +27

    3 times the rainfall of Manaus? That's shocking

    • @danielsac6316
      @danielsac6316 Год назад +18

      Last year I was in Leticia, Colombia, in September, at the River Amazon shore. Of the two weeks I was there it rained three of the days (to be fair it was a not-so-rainy season, dry season is practically non-existent there). Later, in October, I was in Buenaventura, in a village called Guapi (Cauca), in the Chocó region in Colombia, and in Sanquianga, a vast mangrove region also within the Chocó region. Of one week I was there it rained every day, one of those days it rained the 24 hours of it, with just a short break at noon, as if the clouds were gone to lunch and then, back to work. Yet, both Rainforests are the most beautiful things I've ever seen.
      🇨🇴🌳🌿

  • @DanDavisHistory
    @DanDavisHistory Год назад +1

    Fascinating, thank you.

  • @rayrocher6887
    @rayrocher6887 2 месяца назад

    Beautiful forests, I like nice cool rains, thanks for saving the rain forests, beautiful God like bless you

  • @SubvertTheState
    @SubvertTheState 2 года назад +5

    Just found this channel and i love it

  • @gabrielt.3181
    @gabrielt.3181 Год назад +10

    I didn't know that Colombia's west coast was so rainy. I knew about the Afro-Colombian concentration in the regions, but the region's weather singularity was clueless to me

  • @savagepro9060
    @savagepro9060 Год назад +15

    Glad I subscribed. The origin of Choco's black population and why they survived. Wow! The same for the maroons everywhere, including Guyana and Jamaica, in fact most of the Caribbean islands with thick forests!

  • @thatpilatesguy
    @thatpilatesguy 2 года назад +9

    Thank you! I’ve been trying to research and read about my beautiful country. You answered all my questions. 🙏🙏🙏

  • @prototropo
    @prototropo 2 года назад +63

    Love these presentations--the careful research and care for authenticity is appreciated.
    If there are any compelling reasons to cover the accomplishments of Alexander von Humboldt, whose work seems very much to intersect the interests of this series, I would be delighted to watch it.
    Having grown up near the confluence of several streams and rivers, I'm also intrigued with riparian flora and fauna. I've often wondered if they are the primary determinants of the surrounding biome's profile, or vice-versa.

    • @casualearth-dandavis
      @casualearth-dandavis  2 года назад +13

      Alexander Van Humboldt was indeed a fascinating individual---I have a lot of videos planned for the future, but I could definitely visit his biography. And I agree with you, riparian ecosystems are probably what fascinates me most---along with the human history of our interaction with rivers. Northern South America has some particularly interesting rivers---for instance, the Orinoco. There are many things I could say about it.

    • @prototropo
      @prototropo 2 года назад +7

      @@casualearth-dandavis Thanks! Anything you cover will be interesting to me.
      I'm currently looking for a nice edition of Humboldt's "Cosmos." They're hard to find--His compelling, heroic character doesn't seem to inspire much veneration in America.

  • @Feyenoord-el8ip
    @Feyenoord-el8ip 2 месяца назад +2

    Hace tres años, realmente hermoso. Ballenas avistadas a 500 metros de la costa.

  • @boomermoreno
    @boomermoreno Год назад +11

    I believe that part of the Colombia is called El Cielo Roto. Broken sky. I'm from Cali, Colombia, just on the other side of the mountains. My uncle had a little finca in Buenaventura and that's where I got malaria when I was five. That's some jungle out there boy. I was young, but I remember it like I was trecking through The Lost World.

    • @piedrablanca1942
      @piedrablanca1942 2 месяца назад +2

      ahora dilo en español

    • @saintjames5816
      @saintjames5816 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@piedrablanca1942el video está hecho para un público angloparlante y el comentario está dirigido para esa demografía. Entonces no pida que lo escriba en español porque no tiene ningún sentido

    • @saintjames5816
      @saintjames5816 2 месяца назад

      ​@@piedrablanca1942bobazo ignorante

  • @Dezso1777
    @Dezso1777 2 года назад +26

    According to an article on Weather Underground entitled "New Wettest Place on Earth Discovered?" by Christopher C. Burt, Puerto López de Micay in the Cauca Department, Pacifica Region, Colombia, is the wettest place on Earth, averaging 12,892.4 mm, or 507.57 inches, for the period of April 1960-February 2012. The Wikipedia article on López de Micay states that it receives 15,992.1 mm, or 629.6 inches of rainfall annually. This is absolutely incredible, to say the least! It would be interesting to know how people live there! How on Earth do they cope with all of that rain? Just wow!

    • @albertvanlingen7590
      @albertvanlingen7590 Год назад +2

      Mountains inland of the island New Guinea could also be a contender as the rainfall data up there is theoretically gauged but according to a pilot I spoke to on some peaks it rains there basically 365 days of the year with no one there to monitor this. Interior is just set at between 5000 and 6000mm per year but it doesn't take into account the higher parts of the inland mountains.

    • @kiwihib
      @kiwihib Год назад +1

      @@albertvanlingen7590 Same here in New Zealand with Fiordland.

    • @manumanumanuma
      @manumanumanuma Год назад +5

      The pacific region is the poorest in Colombia and possibly one of the poorest in the Americas, the amount of rainfall makes it difficult to build needed infrastructure. It’s also very disconnected from the rest of the country

    • @HerpetologoTropical
      @HerpetologoTropical 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@manumanumanumaYes, it is partially right. A deeper problem came with corruption and an armed conflict for decades.

    • @MayheM_646
      @MayheM_646 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@manumanumanumaI'm Colombian and u forgot to mention the armed conflict we have between the military force and the guerrillas in the region of Chocó, in which the guerrillas took advantage of because of it's difficult access due to the amount of rain and vast dense forest.

  • @acanpc333
    @acanpc333 2 месяца назад +4

    That was really interesting!! 🧐 thank you! 🇨🇴 I never knew much about the rainforest on the pacific side of Colombia. I love the labeled animal pictures and I appreciate that you said “consider” subscribing! I shall indeed! Cheers 🥂 to you! :)

  • @ericporto9603
    @ericporto9603 2 года назад +12

    This video was awesome im colombian and I've been at that forest before its beautiful there and there's fog very low where the mountains get really close to the coast

  • @arvidsfar1580
    @arvidsfar1580 8 дней назад +1

    Great video. I travelled there, almost 40 years ago, then took a small boat from Quibdó to Turbo in the Golfo de Urabá.

  • @LukeFromLasVegas
    @LukeFromLasVegas 2 года назад +3

    Great video, +1 ♥
    That Toucan was so cute!

  • @Israel220500
    @Israel220500 2 месяца назад +3

    5:38 I don't think a poisonous animal is more dangerous than an apex predator. Frogs will do nothing to you unless ingest or absorb their poison through your skin, jaguars can prey on humans if they have the opportunity.

    • @casualearth-dandavis
      @casualearth-dandavis  2 месяца назад

      Definitely true, though Jaguars also don't have a lot of negative human interactions (mostly with livestock).

    • @Israel220500
      @Israel220500 2 месяца назад

      @@casualearth-dandavis Absolutely true, we're just too good at using tools and weapons to be hunted. I'd argue that insects are the deadliest animals to humans in these regions, especially mosquitoes. Getting malaria, dengue or yellow fever in the middle of the rainforest is no fun.

  • @gabrielt.3181
    @gabrielt.3181 Год назад +1

    This channel is so cool, it deserves more subscribers

  • @jeffdeuchler1660
    @jeffdeuchler1660 9 месяцев назад

    This video was crazy good. Thanks so much for creating this.

  • @marydavis2836
    @marydavis2836 2 года назад +3

    Love it. What a cool fragile amazing ball we live on…
    Looking forward to the next one

  • @yanggang4352
    @yanggang4352 Год назад +30

    I can feel the mosquitos through my screen

    • @MayheM_646
      @MayheM_646 8 месяцев назад +3

      It's nothin but the wettest Neotropical region in the whole world, u can be sure there finna be a lot of mosquitos and insects. By the way, this is the only region in the world where u can find the Golden Dart Frog (Phyllobates), can't live anywhere else since this species need more than 95% of daily humidity and this is the only place that can have that or above every day.

    • @7phyton
      @7phyton 2 месяца назад +4

      I lived in Choco for most of a year, and surprisingly (to most people), mosquitoes are not nearly as abundant there as in other places such as those with more seasonal precipitation (South Florida), secondary forest, and mosaics of agriculture (with many large and small water impoundments) and other vegetation. Also in the far north: think Canada, Siberia, Alaska (state bird). But there are a lot of interesting and even beautiful mosquito species in Choco. Very diverse, as are most other groups of organisms. That said, although there aren't all that many mosquitoes, some of them do carry diseases you really do not want to get, so keeping covered up and using repellent is prudent.

    • @zoltanvonbozzay9678
      @zoltanvonbozzay9678 Месяц назад

      If you have a lot of rain and moving water you get less mosquitoes, since they can only lay eggs that survive in stagnant water. I'm in a dry area of Spain and many more mosquitoes than ten years in Costa Rica.

    • @SirBrucie
      @SirBrucie Месяц назад

      Hello country ball

    • @peyton4140
      @peyton4140 Месяц назад

      When I was doin research in Choco (Ecuador), I surprisingly had no issues with mosquitos- not even sand flies. There’s a lot of bats and other insects that eat blood suckers I bet.
      I got absolutely eaten by mosquitoes when I went back to Georgia, haha.

  • @toursbydee
    @toursbydee Год назад +1

    Greetings from, Buenaventura, Colombia. Another rainy place on the pacific coast!!

  • @BlaBlaBlaInDaHouse
    @BlaBlaBlaInDaHouse Год назад +1

    Another great video. Thank you for this. Fantastic channel, what a find!

  • @EdwardHamiltonDavis1
    @EdwardHamiltonDavis1 2 года назад +12

    Very good video. I love how you bring in the power of geography to explain human cultural patterns.

  • @lk29392
    @lk29392 2 года назад +1

    Very nice video. Hopefully your channel blows up pretty soon.

  • @culbinator
    @culbinator Год назад +2

    I learned so much from this. Thank you so mucg

  • @joshw9424
    @joshw9424 Месяц назад

    Really interesting video highlighting a lesser known but nonetheless very unique region!

  • @ziggyfrnds
    @ziggyfrnds 5 месяцев назад +1

    New subscriber here! Your content is v informative and well presented. Thanks for sharing!

  • @SiTengoTiempo
    @SiTengoTiempo Год назад

    Excellent video on the Chocó region. Thanks for this!

  • @thiebautlevi-funck1101
    @thiebautlevi-funck1101 Год назад +4

    Reunion island southeastern rainforest have the world records from rainfall from 6h to 2 weeks periods, rainforest above sainte rose receive around 14m of precipitation annually. Some places in higher altitude probably get more (some estimate up to 20m but there isn't any weatherstation there). And there is no dry season here. So it may be small, but it is without any doubt this place that holds the tilte for the rainiest rainforest on earth.... at least untill we discover some other rainier forest.

  • @jacobmiller7684
    @jacobmiller7684 9 месяцев назад

    I heard that the choco taco is back at taco bell. I'd like to think this video saved it. Thank you for your dedication and diligence.

  • @PePeninja494
    @PePeninja494 Год назад +3

    Fun fact … in Choco is considered one of the best parts to buy Gold in Colombia… the gold is considered of high quality…

  • @xibalbalon8668
    @xibalbalon8668 Год назад +1

    Cool to see the Moskito coast mentioned

  • @louismolina17
    @louismolina17 Год назад

    love your vids !!

  • @kirilkolev5109
    @kirilkolev5109 2 года назад +28

    Loving this channel. Would you ever consider a video on Thrace along the Black Sea and all the warring that happened with the Roman Empire? A forgotten region often overshadowed by teachings about the Romans and Byzantines instead.

    • @casualearth-dandavis
      @casualearth-dandavis  2 года назад +17

      I agree that’s a fascinating and overlooked region, and I do have some notes on it-mostly on the climate, Holocene Panthera leo, Black Sea storms, the spread of the griculture, and some other tidbits. Aside from the Via Egnatia, I don’t know much about the Roman history there, but I could imagine it’d be fascinating. I meant to reply to this comment a week ago-my mistake.

  • @huntercool2232
    @huntercool2232 Год назад +1

    Very interesting. Thank you for this video I enjoyed listening!

  • @kanealoha
    @kanealoha 2 года назад +1

    I really enjoyed that. Thanks!

  • @pikiwiki
    @pikiwiki Год назад

    Great video. Nice presentation. Very sophisticated. Great work

  • @drorbazer7531
    @drorbazer7531 7 месяцев назад

    What an outstanding channel, every single one of your videos is purely captivating, just perfection.
    Thank you

  • @Beeontree
    @Beeontree Год назад +5

    Great video, this really makes me want to visit Columbia.

    • @pedritonavaja13
      @pedritonavaja13 Год назад +9

      Colombia, bro

    • @MayheM_646
      @MayheM_646 8 месяцев назад

      Colombia* little ignorant 🙄

    • @Lex_Lugar
      @Lex_Lugar 2 месяца назад

      @@MayheM_646meanwhile, you genius latinos write and say "Nueva York" like that’s acceptable

  • @helmutzollner5496
    @helmutzollner5496 Год назад

    Great program. A story well researched an told. I like your cadence and no-nonsense style. Happy to subscribe for more.
    Well done. Thank you.

  • @cheflos
    @cheflos Год назад +3

    Great video, i’ve been bingeing this channel lately. One note: there is an emphasis on the second o in Chocó as seen by the accent mark, so it’s pronounced less like Choke-oh more like choke-OH

  • @skyybluu3118
    @skyybluu3118 Год назад

    Great video thank you

  • @salvadorfuentes7777
    @salvadorfuentes7777 Год назад

    Absolutely fascinating video

  • @marshallsweatherhiking1820
    @marshallsweatherhiking1820 Год назад +1

    This is such a good informative channel.

  • @FreeAssange_
    @FreeAssange_ 2 года назад +2

    Quality content

  • @josesantos2603
    @josesantos2603 Год назад +3

    Excellent video, it is interesting to understand these hotspots of life on Earth. Close to my home, there is one of these, called Jureia Forest. Unfortunatelly, I see that amazing paradise but at the same time I get a little nervous about human exploration of close areas. We should change the way we live, humanity should live in tribes again, we must find a way.

  • @jony7779
    @jony7779 Год назад +5

    0:40 Correction the wettest place on earth is the ocean

  • @michaelince7998
    @michaelince7998 Год назад

    What a great video

  • @iangomez7190
    @iangomez7190 Год назад

    I love this video thank you

  • @BIG-DIPPER-56
    @BIG-DIPPER-56 2 года назад

    EXCELLENT - Thank You ! ! !
    🙂😎👍

  • @124thDragoon
    @124thDragoon Год назад +1

    Fantastic video. I’m curious though, what is the name of the piece of artwork shown at 8:00? It’s very evocative.

  • @tylerd55555
    @tylerd55555 Год назад

    great video. I lived for two years nearby the area is stunning and you can tell it is unique on earth

  • @bklynjon27
    @bklynjon27 2 года назад +3

    If RUclips channels were stocks, I'd be investing heavily in CE.

  • @tomallen5837
    @tomallen5837 2 года назад

    Fantastic I'm trying to get my kids to watch your Channel

  • @BBWahoo
    @BBWahoo Год назад +1

    I hear Donkey Kong lives here, which is why he got so pissed when K. Rool took his bananas, because he's gotta go all the way down south to get more.

  • @tommie.9032
    @tommie.9032 Год назад

    Oh wow the painting at 8:00 looks so beautiful, does anybody know its name?

  • @HerpetologoTropical
    @HerpetologoTropical 11 месяцев назад +1

    My dream is to explore remote areas right there. 😮😍 For those all interested, I recommend Alwin Gentry work for a botanical perspective on the Chocó. Thanks for this great content. Best wishes to all. 🙏

  • @markthornton7347
    @markthornton7347 Год назад

    excellent presentation....

  • @raneemacintosh6842
    @raneemacintosh6842 Год назад

    The Mosquito Coast and the Dismal Swamp? Sign me up.

  • @swayback7375
    @swayback7375 Год назад

    Great video

  • @cricket700612
    @cricket700612 Год назад

    Excellent content! 😃

  • @elsafier8741
    @elsafier8741 11 месяцев назад +1

    hi just wanted to say that i’m always very apprehensive click on a video about the global south from a channel that sounds like it’s some white guy talking over pictures of maps, but i was very pleasantly surprised by the respect and agency with which you spoke about enslaved africans and particularly maroon societies. i encourage you to keep making a point of expanding the thoughtful consideration you give to Black and Indigenous people in your videos!

    • @casualearth-dandavis
      @casualearth-dandavis  11 месяцев назад

      I know exactly what you mean. I am no anthropologist (as you can tell by my mispronunciations), but I am always interested in the lives of indigenous people. Thank you for watching.

  • @adanactnomew7085
    @adanactnomew7085 Год назад

    1:28 Reminds of the wettest place in North America being right next to the relatively dry, Mediterranean climate of Victoria BC

  • @motafoka1
    @motafoka1 Год назад

    excellent class

  • @Discopig2166
    @Discopig2166 2 месяца назад +1

    I love this shit, where did this come from, RUclips? Thanks

  • @DanTheArtisan91
    @DanTheArtisan91 Год назад

    05:40 googled it and read the whole wikipedia page so interesting animal

  • @adambohlin1942
    @adambohlin1942 Год назад +2

    A rainforest is identified by daily downpour if it lacks that factor, like in parts of India it is classified as djungle. Many get these 2 biotops wrong.

    • @MayheM_646
      @MayheM_646 8 месяцев назад

      Exactly, finally someone who knows about it 👍

  • @stephensibley
    @stephensibley Год назад

    You're very good mate

  • @matias3550
    @matias3550 Год назад +2

    great video . even im from south america, i didnt have any idea of all this 😮

  • @salt-emoji
    @salt-emoji Год назад

    Just found your channel. 👌👌

  • @Vativ
    @Vativ Год назад

    I fuck with the channel a lot, underrated af

  • @cjthebeesknees
    @cjthebeesknees Год назад +1

    The precious shiny minerals humans covet so much being abundant in such a beautiful and unique, yet relatively small region/ecosystem is one of the cruelest kinds of irony humanity must suffer and endure. Hope this biological wonder of Mother Nature, rainforest isn’t wiped from the face of the earth over our greed.

  • @navirobayo
    @navirobayo Год назад

    Amazing

  • @manjuhs8444
    @manjuhs8444 Год назад +1

    I want entire earth to be rainforest

  • @piedrablanca1942
    @piedrablanca1942 2 месяца назад

    tenemos que dejar todo el Choco como reserva natural por el bien de todo el planeta

  • @nbchannelnb
    @nbchannelnb Год назад

    Please continue producing content. It is unique on youtube and extremely informational/entertaining!
    RUclips algorithm, push the channel to the masses!

  • @stewiegriffin3496
    @stewiegriffin3496 Год назад

    How come there are Ecuatorial westerlies?
    I always thought that trade winds from the northern and the southern hemisphere tended to be drawn to the west and thus when they met ar the Ecuator create winds that would flow East ro West. How is it possible for them to reverse direction?

    • @casualearth-dandavis
      @casualearth-dandavis  Год назад +1

      There are equatorial westerlies in a number of places, especially near or over large continents. The model you're talking about is a vast oversimplification of tropical climate, and that pattern is really only consistent over the middle of the Pacific. As this video discusses, trade winds are attracted to the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). The ITCZ is centered over the area with the most heat energy (rapidly rising air), so it moves with seasons over hot continents. As the trade winds rush toward it, they curve due to the coriolis force (to the right of their intended path in the northern hemisphere, and to the left of their intended path in the southern hemisphere). When the ITCZ is over the equator, they will move just as you describe--they will curve into easterly winds. However, if the ITCZ is north of the equator, for instance, the winds which cross the equator to reach it will curve into westerly winds due to the reversal of the coriolis force. As the video discusses, cool water off of Peru and Ecuador keeps the ITCZ north of the equator in that area year-round, so winds are always curving into equatorial westerlies and slamming into Colombia's Pacific coast. This same exact phenomenon happens in the South Atlantic near Africa. The Benguela current keeps the ITCZ near Gabon for much of the year.

  • @HoustonGuy
    @HoustonGuy Год назад

    Please pronounce correctly...it's Chocó and not Choco. I'm French-Colombian and I love this part of Colombia...beautiful topography.

  • @funkycowsx2
    @funkycowsx2 Год назад

    Cool.

  • @dariusstarrett8837
    @dariusstarrett8837 Год назад

    4:35 Higashikata Josuke bird

  • @gabrielfernandessilva3707
    @gabrielfernandessilva3707 Год назад

    I like to see weather maps at WindyTv and I always notice that this region is very wet.