Peninsular Malaysian rain forests
0 sources
Peninsular Malaysian rain forests
Summary
Peninsular Malaysian rain forests is an ecoregion[1]. It draws 32 Wikipedia views per month (ecoregion category, ranking #24 of 213).[2]
Key Facts
- Peninsular Malaysian rain forests is in the country of Malaysia[3].
- Peninsular Malaysian rain forests is in the country of Indonesia[4].
- Peninsular Malaysian rain forests is in the country of Singapore[5].
- Peninsular Malaysian rain forests is in the country of Thailand[6].
- Peninsular Malaysian rain forests's instance of is recorded as ecoregion[7].
- Peninsular Malaysian rain forests's instance of is recorded as WWF ecoregion[8].
- Peninsular Malaysian rain forests's location is recorded as Malay Peninsula[9].
- Peninsular Malaysian rain forests's location is recorded as Peninsular Malaysia[10].
- Peninsular Malaysian rain forests's location is recorded as Indomalayan realm[11].
- Peninsular Malaysian rain forests's location is recorded as Malesia[12].
- Peninsular Malaysian rain forests's location is recorded as Sundaland[13].
- Peninsular Malaysian rain forests's Commons category is recorded as Peninsular Malaysian Rainforests Ecoregion[14].
- Peninsular Malaysian rain forests's WWF ecoregion code is recorded as IM0146[15].
- Peninsular Malaysian rain forests's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11jgz0sn4k[16].
- Peninsular Malaysian rain forests's One Earth ecoregion ID is recorded as peninsular-malaysian-rainforests[17].
Body
Geography
Country listings include Malaysia[3], a sovereign state[18], in Malaysia[19], founded in 1963[20]; Indonesia[4], a sovereign state[21], in Indonesia[22], founded in 1945[23]; Singapore[5], a sovereign state[24], in Singapore[25], founded in 1965[26]; and Thailand[6], a constitutional monarchy[27], in Thailand[28], founded in 1768[29].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include ecoregion[7] and WWF ecoregion[8].
Why It Matters
Peninsular Malaysian rain forests draws 32 Wikipedia views per month (ecoregion category, ranking #24 of 213).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[30]