Decomposers are able to enter a food chain at any trophic level and are the most numerous organisms in an ecosystem. They include bacteria and fungi.
Examples of decomposers include bacteria, fungi, some insects, and snails, which means they are not always microscopic.
Fungi are among these and are consider to be alive.
Living. It's one of the five kingdoms! It has cells, organization, it uses energy, maintains internal functions, grows, and reproduces! That's what it needs to be a living thing!
Yes fungi is living.
fungi is living
Fungi are alive.
Living
no
yes
Living
It will be living until it dies.
Non.
non-living ;)
A virus is considered non-living. It does not have all the characteristics of a living thing unlike bacteria. Viruses need living cells to reproduce while any living things can reproduce (asexually or not).
Mushrooms are living fungi that aid in decomposing dead animal and plant matter.
No...may be as a contaminant from living things such as bacteria, fungi etc.
If it is sessile (does not move, not motile), it can be mistaken to be nonliving.
It can't because it is NOT a living organism.
Nonliving
Some nonliving things that can be found in a mini ecosystem are water, rocks, and air. Some living things that can be found in a mini ecosystem are animals, insects and fungi, and vegetation such as grass, trees and shrubs.
NOnliving, biotic is living
the earth is nonliving but has living organisms on it
nonliving
it is nonliving
nonliving
nonliving