They break down the dead animal or plant and return the good nutrients to the soil
They break down the dead animal or plant and return the good nutrients to the soil.
Hope this helped!
-Chocolate391 =)
Dingusberries (bacteria) Shrinky dinks (fungi)
Arthropods, microorganisms, and worms are what eats away at decomposing leaves.Specifically, decomposing leaves contain carbon and other nutrients attractive to decomposers and scavengers. Among the most important of the decomposing leaf-eaters number such arthropods as dung beetles and ground-dwelling bugs. Microorganisms such as bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and viruses specialize in eating away at ground litter.
it eats off of rotting trees or plant or any other natural source ya
Azobacter, Rhizobium,etc
fungi and bacteria grow from spores.
Dingusberries (bacteria) Shrinky dinks (fungi)
get rid of living bacteria
Arthropods, microorganisms, and worms are what eats away at decomposing leaves.Specifically, decomposing leaves contain carbon and other nutrients attractive to decomposers and scavengers. Among the most important of the decomposing leaf-eaters number such arthropods as dung beetles and ground-dwelling bugs. Microorganisms such as bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and viruses specialize in eating away at ground litter.
Decomposing bacteria and nitrogen-converting bacteria important to farmers because they help to send nutrients through the soil. These types of bacteria regulate nitrogen n the soil.
They are a very important part of any ecosystem. Fungi and bacteria are decomposes.
The biggest species of decomposers are fungi.
Bacteria that attack and digest dead tissue are called prime decomposers or decomposing bacteria. As digesting as it sounds, decomposing bacteria are a healthy and much needed part of the food web.
bacteria and fungi
it eats off of rotting trees or plant or any other natural source ya
There would be no mushrooms lack of decomposing.
Dogs
Azobacter, Rhizobium,etc