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Rainforest Floor

Photos: C & D Frith
Australia's Wet Tropics Rainforest Life
The Forest Floor:
- The forest floor is home to old fallen leaves and fruits, rotten branches,
ancient or diseased trees, mosses, lichens, fungi and many animal species.
- Mosses of different greens cover the fallen tree trunks, which as they rot, also
find bracket shaped fungal fruiting bodies growing on them. The fungi contain millions of
microscopic single-celled reproductive spores, which are dispersed by wind, rain-splash,
animals or by the fruiting body itself by exploding when mature. Many fungi look like the
familiar mushroom, but others can be unusually shaped, resembling corals, staghorns,
shells, tongues or slimes. Bright colours often add to the forest floor, as they may be
red, yellow, orange, purple, blue or even luminescent at night.
- Fungi and bacteria are the catalysts of the decomposition process. They break up
rotting vegetation into smaller pieces (detritus) and make food available for many
creatures collectively known as detritivores.
- Living within leaf litter are the worms, springtails, amphipods, mites,
millipedes and snails who graze upon small bits of detritus, which breaks it down further.
- Seeing leaf skeletons on the forest floor is an indication that the nutritious
soft, once green parts of the leaf have been digested away by both fungi and small
detritivores.
- To further speed up the breakdown process, rainforest cockroaches and beetles
feed directly upon rotting wood.
- At the same time as receiving their own nourishment, the decomposers and
detritivores release the important nutrients from the dead plant material through their
own body waste and when they die, their own bodies. Tree roots can then recycle the
nutrients as they absorb them from the soil for new plant growth.
- The plant roots generally grow on or just beneath the forest floor as this is
where the nutrients are concentrated. Shallow roots are therefore more efficient than deep
roots in rainforest environments. The systems extend out horizontally either from the
trunk base or from buttresses at the base of the tree.
- Buttresses comprise woody flanged extensions that radiate outwards from the lower
part of the tree base. They can reach enormous proportions around the base of a tree
they may even be 10 m high. They help support a trees weight in the shallow
soil by taking up strains and stresses.
- Continuing the food web, carnivorous invertebrates (eg scorpions, spiders and
beetles) feed on tiny detritivores. In turn, these are then food for larger
ground-dwelling carnivores such as frogs, skinks, birds and mammals. The larger.
Warm-blooded animals provide food for blood-sucking leeches.
- Birds such as chowchillas, whipbirds, scrubwrens and fernwrens search for small
invertebrates in the leaf litter during the day. At night, bandicoots nose their way
through the litter and rotting logs looking for grubs, native rats search for fruits and
small invertebrates, and rainforest dingoes stalk any suitable prey.
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