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The Rain Forest is Closer Than You Think!

To most people, tropical rain forests seem like faraway places that we might dream of visiting. In fact, plant pieces of the mysterious rainforest puzzle play important roles in our daily lives that we either are not aware of or take for granted. Open your closets, medicine cabinets, garages, refrigerators and pantries. Visit a florist, a hospital, a bakery, a theatre, a hardware store, candy store, not to mention a grocery store, and you will quickly realize that rain forests are closer than you think!

Jungle Produce

Every year the average American consumes more than 25 pounds of bananas, and today there are few places in the world where it is not possible to buy a banana. Introduced to Europe in 1882, bananas were the first rain forest fruit discovered by westerners and were originally available by prescription only. Oranges originally came from the rain forest, as did lemons, limes, and grapefruits. Tomato, potato, pineapple and papaya, cashews, coffee, cloves and corn, all have wild roots in tropical rain forests or other tropical habitats near rain forests. A recent tour at the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens entitled, “ Ten Plants That Shook the World,” included six history-changing plants that originated in the tropics (sugar cane, corn, bamboo, rubber, quinine, and pepper).

Count the number of tropical fruits for sale at your local grocery store. It is only a fraction of the 3,000 types of fruits that grow in the world's tropical rain forests!

While you're thanking the rain forest for favorite foods, thank it for life-changing, life-saving medicines, woods, fibers, canes and oils, gums, resins, dyes and houseplants.

Just A Blip On the Screen of Possibilities

Describing the plants of a tropical rain forest is a little like trying to describe the people of New York City or Los Angeles. The plants are every bit as diverse as the people of these two large cities. In spite of decades of exploration and exploitation, scientists have only thoroughly examined about 1% of the hundreds of thousands of rain forest plants. Besides being good for people, new jungle products could be good for the jungle too, if they are properly managed. In many ways, some of which we don't even understand yet, all of us have a stake in the welfare of tropical rain forests and of the people, wildlife, and plants that thrive in them.

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