Rotting vegetation means decompostion of vegetation
fungi only grows on rotting vegetation because it doesn't have any chlorophyll so it can't make it's own food, so it grows on rotting vegetation because it can take the food from the other plants.
you go to your dad and find his but then slap it and u get a rotting log
Many saprophytic fungi, such as Polyporus, live under a rotting log.
The larval stage of the insect (the caterpillar) has a mouth and eats (vegetation.) Once it goes through metamorphisis, the mouth becomes a proboscis and the adult only drinks (water and nectar or the juice of rotting fruit mostly.) Some tropical butterflies visit carrion and dung to feed.
Those flowers are pollinated by flies, which are attracted to the smell of rotting meat. Yuck.
fungi only grows on rotting vegetation because it doesn't have any chlorophyll so it can't make it's own food, so it grows on rotting vegetation because it can take the food from the other plants.
Fungi only grows on rotting vegetation because that is the only way that it can receive its food. Fungi is not able to produce food for itself.
Decaying vegetation puts out heat, and this heat incubates the eggs.
Caterpillars that I have observed seem to prefer live vegetation, but a rotting log may contain grubs and other larvae.
Mushrooms grow anywhere that there is dampness and rotting vegetation.
They are the 'clean-up crew' of an environment. They feed on animal waste and rotting vegetation.
Boils on the cattle
My father, who often sailed the North Atlantic, always said they smelled like rotting vegetation.
Rotting trees and vegetation emit carbon dioxide and methane, both greenhouse gases.
lipids
Yes, snails eat all kinds of vegetation, fresh and/or rotting, including vegetables and fruits.
Triceratops probably laid their eggs in nests made of vegetation. The rotting plant material would help to incubate the eggs.