Yes! An organism (soil,bacterium,fungus,or invertebrate),that decomposes organic material
Yes. They decompose dead plants and animals!
No, garden weeds are not decomposers. Their life cycles and natural histories lead them to decompose when their body parts break down. Their role in feeding chains and food webs more properly may be called that of producers that feed consumers in life and decomposers in death.
yes, ants are decomposers becasue they eat old food scraps so the food can decompose instead of rot and wait.
Decomposers decompose garbage or more likely an abiot substance that was left alon in an area with soil in it. to answer your question if they return raw materials,they do not. it just takes tham longer to decompose them. if you put a raw carrot in a field it would probably turn into siol but it would take longer them a boiled carrot that is already softer.
When these living things die, bacteria break down their bodies into nutrients completing the cycle
No, nuts are not decomposers. They are products of plants (producers), making them food.
The Earth would be filled with the things that decomposers decompose.
The decomposers would run out of food (for them) to decompose.
Clams are not decomposers. They are consumers.
no they are not as they only help the decompose rs not they are not decompose rs
Wolves are not decomposers.
To decompose means to break down. Decomposers break down organic materials.
No. Many, many species of decomposers are needed to completely decompose a dead body.
Yes,fungi are decomposers so they decompose EVERYTHING!!!
Turtles are not decomposers. They are consumers.
plastic, metal
They decompose dead, organic materials.
Elf owl is decompose?