it's alright tropical part of texas, i care about you. we love your native parrots and ocelots and kudamundis
(not sure if you can see texas, but is in neotropical)
texas' multiple coral reefs (i believe it's a group of 3 coral reefs)
i think texas' tropical region is underrated and pretty neat in terms of creatures and plants, and also cool coral reef (not in the tropical part of texas, but is still cool)
and i was also thinking about the fact that there are some trees in texas that lose their leaves in the summer, and also the tropical part of texas is in the transition zone of arid and wet, so it still rains there, but very little (i feel most of the rains come from tropical storms/hurricanes) (the southern most city in the tropical part of texas (Brownsville) gets about 21.3 inches of rain per year, the average for the US is 30 inches, and its closer to what LA (14.25 inches, notorious for never raining) receives rather than Florida (53.7 inches, the other tropical state))
I have to do a lot of research for my Texas based series, and i think south texas is what i find myself oohing and ahhing at
and another side tangent!
Chorioactis geaster (Texas Star mushroom) being only found in Texas and Japan is very interesting! but! i think Hibiscus striatus ssp. lambertianus being only native to a single town in Brazil and a single town in Texas isnt talked about too much and is also pretty interesting (first map)! (and the species itself being only native to pretty much Brazil and Texas is also very neat, second map)