After dead plants and animals are broken downby fungi , the mush is left to fertilize the soil. So decomposers help the soil. So I guess the fertile soil is good for alive plants, so the answer is YES!
Fungi obtain nutrients by forming a symbiotic relationship with plants known as mycorrhizae. The fungi help plants absorb water and essential minerals, while the plants provide sugars and other organic compounds to the fungi. This mutually beneficial relationship allows both the fungi and the plants to thrive.
protist
Fungi produces carbon dioxide in to the atmosphere which enables the process of photosynthesis and production of food in green plants.
Mycorrhyzae is the association between the plant and the fungi, though the literature occasionally call the fungi mycorrhyzae. The fungi get organic food ie. glucose and other compound from plants .
Fungi in soil can either help or harm plant growth. Beneficial fungi form partnerships with plants, aiding in nutrient absorption and disease resistance. Harmful fungi can cause diseases that weaken or kill plants.
Fungi do not use photosynthesis. Also, fungi don't have leaves and roots. Finally, unlike plants, the cell walls of fungi contain chitin.Fungi and plants are in the same domain (Eukarya), but are separate kingdoms. Plants are autotrophs (they make their own food through chemosynthesis or photosynthesis), while fungi are heterotrophs (more specifically they are either parasites or saprobes). Other differences are also present in structure (for example, fungi cell walls are made of chitin while plants' cell walls are made of cellulose), specialization, etc.
Fungi and plants are multicellular.
Mycorrhizal fungi form mutualistic relationships with plants by colonizing their roots and aiding in nutrient absorption, particularly phosphorus and nitrogen. These fungi help plants to better access soil nutrients and water, in return receiving sugars from the plant photosynthesis process.
Fungi feeding on dead plants help a pond or a forest by cleaning up the dead trees in the forest. It makes the pond cleaner fir the fishes, insects, and people to enjoy.
These fungi are called mycorrhizae (though, technially, the term "mycorrhizae" refers to the relationship between the fungi and the plants). They grow in or around the roots of a plant and out into the soil. This helps the plant in two ways: First, the fungal hyphae are a lot smaller than the plant's roots and can get into smaller places. Second, they greatly increase the surface area over which nutrients can be absorbed without a huge increase in volume.
Mycorrhizae are symbiotic relationships between the roots of plants and fungi that act as extensions of the root system. The fungi supply the plant with certain nutrients, and the plant in turn supplies the fungi with carbohydrates.
fungi & animals