MontagK505
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2008
- Messages
- 3,035
Jungles arise in areas of high rainfall, and temperatures high enough to allow trees (or some other large plant) to grow. Thus, we need to look at two conditions: rainfall, and temperatures.
To get world-wide rainfall you need a relatively flat planet. Many deserts on Earth are caused by the rainshadow effect of mountains; if you remove those mountains, rainfall would be much more consistent. The second thing you need is relatively large air circulation cells. Jungles are associated with latitudes where Earth's air currents cause an updraft, which causes condensation (air closer to the ground is generally more moist than higher up), which causes rain. Deserts form in the opposite areas--where air circulation causes downdrafts, bringing drier air down to the ground. Finaly, you need high evaporation rates, as in order for rain to fall you need moisture in the air.
Temperatures are a bit trickier....You don't necessarily need a HOT planet, but you DO need a HOMOGENOUS planet. What I mean is, the reason we have tropics and poles is that our planet isn't that efficient at transfering heat across the planet (well, outside of icehouse events). I'm not sure what it would take to make the planet more thermally homogenous....Any spherical body is going to have the same problem, and while increased total temperatures can help I'm not sure it's going to be enough. I guess one way would be a planet like Venus, which has such thick clouds that heat really doesn't escape. The problem there, obviously, is the lack of photosynthesis, but chemosynthesis may be prefered in such an environment. The other problem is the whole "hot enough to boil lead" thing, though, which is somewhat tricky to work around...
In reality, I highly doubt we'll find too many planets that are all one thing. It's vastly more likely that we'll find planets much like our own--with wildly divergent biomes, ranging from very hot to very cold and from very wet to very dry. Pretty much only a dead rock is homogenous, and Mars shows that even that isn't entirely true.
Not without completey messing up biology. It takes some hardy organisms to survive the transition from equatorial to polar conditions and vice versa, and not just in terms of temperature. This is more likely to starilize the planet than make jungles.
A common theme is to have a jungle world be a satellite of a gas giant orbiting at a comfortable distance from it's primary. Green house effect keeps the modest heat from the primary star trapped in the atmosphere, while tidal effects pump energy into the core resulting in a hopefully even temperature distribution. The jungle might not spread clear to the poles, but it might be wider than found on earth. (Now what movie did I see this in?)
