Why did Gorwystan single out the central agricultural region and Mozambique for discussion? Naturally, there is a reason.
In East Africa, the biggest factor affecting agricultural distribution is actually rainfall. In the nine agricultural regions, except for the Two Rivers region (Somali), rainfall is generally above 400 millimeters, while in Mozambique and the central agricultural region, rainfall ranges between 600 to 1,500 millimeters. Beyond that, it's a true tropical rainforest climate.
Generally speaking, tropical rainforest climate has precipitation over 2,000 millimeters annually. Of course, the Congo rainforest in East Africa is an exception, with rainfall usually ranging between 1,500 to 2,000 millimeters. In special circumstances, certain areas might break through 3,000 millimeters, akin to most parts of the Amazon rainforest being stable above 2,000 millimeters.
