Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Laurisilva of Madeira' has mentioned 'Temperate' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Laurel and laurophyll forests have a patchy distribution in warm temperate regions, often occupying topographic refugia where the moisture from the ocean condenses so that it falls as rain or fog and soils have high moisture levels.
This species diversity contrasts with other temperate forest types, which typically have a canopy dominated by one or a few species.
[9] In this sense, the laurel forest is a transitional type between temperate forests and tropical rainforests.
Most Laurel forest species are evergreen, and occur in tropical, subtropical, and mild temperate regions and cloud forests of the northern and southern hemispheres, in particular the Macaronesian islands, southern Japan, Madagascar, New Caledonia, Tasmania, and central Chile, but they are pantropical, and for example in Africa they are endemic to the Congo region, Cameroon, Sudan, Tanzania, and Uganda, in lowland forest and Afromontane areas.
[11] These subtropical forests lie between the temperate deciduous and conifer forests to the north and the subtropical/tropical monsoon forests of Indochina and India to the south.
In the temperate zone, the cloud forest between 2,000 and 3,000xc2xa0m altitude supports broadleaved evergreen forest dominated by plants such as Quercus lamellosa and Q. semecarpifolia in pure or mixed stands.
Epiphytes, including orchids, ferns, moss, lichen, and liverworts, are more abundant than in either temperate laurel forests or the adjacent lowland tropical rain forests.
Tree Heath (Erica arborea) grows in southern Iberia, but without reaching the dimensions observed in the temperate evergreen forest or North Africa.
Azores temperate mixed forests Canary Islands dry woodlands and forests Madeira evergreen forests
As one moves south into central Florida, as well as far southern Texas and the Gulf Coastal margin of the southern United States, the sclerophyll character slowly declines and more tree species from the tropics (specifically, the Caribbean and Mesoamerica) increase as the temperate species decline.
The laurel forest is the most common Central American temperate evergreen cloud forest type.
There are still some temperate evergreen hills in the north.
Main article: Valdivian temperate rain forests
The Valdivian temperate rain forests, or Laurisilva Valdiviana, occupy southern Chile and Argentina from the Pacific Ocean to the Andes between 38xc2xb0 and 45xc2xb0 latitude.