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>> No.31514976 [View]
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31514976

>>31513699
Well, the short answer is both, since /risu/ sits in the subtropical location, where whether it counts as tropical or temperate depends on which definition you use. If you go by the WWF definition, southeastern /risu/ would be subtropical moist broadleaf forests, while southwestern /risu/ would be a mix of subtropical dry broadleaf forests, and maybe subtropical grasslands, savannas, and shrublands (depending on whether /mep/'s magical climate spreads beyond its border).
Ultimately, the west is not as dry as you have described outside the southernmost part, and you can probably find some nut-bearing trees like pine (pinyon pine is the most well-known example in semi-arid environment, although it's a New World plant). Teak can also be grown in such an environment, although irrigation should help their growth during unusually long dry seasons.
For the north, you can make a case for either subtropical moist broadleaf forests or temperate broadleaf and mixed forests. The difference is fairly minor, since both forests will be dominated by broadleafs. They might even be evergreen if the land is waterlogged enough to last between monsoon seasons (which is also why you see the subtropical forest spreading further north in China than in North America, as China experiences a much more noticeable monsoon than NA).

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