Well, the forest can't grow, expand, and be healthy without good soil, but the soil needs the nutrients of plants and their wastes to stay full of nutrients.
The main types of forests include tropical rainforests, temperate forests, boreal forests, and deciduous forests. Each type of forest has distinct characteristics in terms of climate, soil, vegetation, and biodiversity.
Lifecycle on the earth is interdependent. 1) plants get nutrient elements from the soil. 2) herbivores animals eat this plants. 3) carnivores animals depend on herbivores for food. 4) when the carnivores dies the body gets decomposed in soil IN this way they are interrelated
Soil and fresh water resources are interdependent because soil acts as a filter, holding and purifying water as it percolates through the ground. In turn, healthy soils support vegetation that helps to maintain water quality and regulate water flow. Without healthy soil, water quality can be compromised, and without adequate water, soil fertility and ecosystem health can decline.
forests absorb carbon dioxide that causes global warming forests keep soil from erosion forests trap rain
forests absorb carbon dioxide that causes global warming forests keep soil from erosion forests trap rain
I think yes, because the top soil and local soil is more difference each other.
Soil
NO
Because most of the nutrients were absorbed by the vegetation that was removed (trees or other plants), and so cannot be returned to the soil.
Acid rain in particular generate a large-scale dieback forests. The trees wither, including soil and soil flora become acidic.
An ecosystem is a large area with distinct characteristics in terms of climate, soil, plants, and animals. Ecosystems encompass all living organisms in a particular area interacting with each other and their physical environment. They can range from deserts and forests to oceans and grasslands.
Projects involving water, soil, and forests are often referred to as integrated natural resource management projects. These projects aim to sustainably manage and conserve the natural resources of water, soil, and forests for environmental, social, and economic benefits.