by everything
yes
AnswerPlants take Carbon Dioxide from the air by photosynthesis and replace it with oxygen
Yes, they absorb the carbon dioxide. They make sugars for their own food and release free nitrogen back into the soil. It is part of the carbon cycle. So therefore, they intake some of the carbon so that we have the perfect amount to live.
carbon dioxide because decomposers are typical animals
yes
yes
Yes, I think soil can emit carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
Nature's air contains carbon dioxide and deep soil.
Franz-Dieter Miotke has written: 'Carbon dioxide and the soil atmosphere' -- subject(s): Carbon dioxide, Karst, Soil air, Soil microbiology
carbon dioxide and puts oxygen back into the environmentcarbon dioxide
AnswerPlants take Carbon Dioxide from the air by photosynthesis and replace it with oxygen
Yes, they absorb the carbon dioxide. They make sugars for their own food and release free nitrogen back into the soil. It is part of the carbon cycle. So therefore, they intake some of the carbon so that we have the perfect amount to live.
the roots of the plant absorb the water from the soil. the stomata in the leaves absorb carbon dioxide
carbon dioxide because decomposers are typical animals
carbonic acid
Carbon goes back into the soil when dead animals decompose.
fossil fuels the soil and the ocean fruit and vegetables carbon dioxide all of the above