No, decomposers are living things, like fungi and bacteria. Soil usually contains living things, but it is mostly non-living.
After a period of time it decomposes and after long period of time it may even become dirt.
Dirt, because as rocks breakdown, they form sand; anything that decomposes breaks down into dirt.
leaves decomposes faster
bacteria decomposes the rainforest
Food decomposes by a few days in the dirt and worms feeding off of the product. The product placed in the dirt needs to be natural or just decompose-able. Food takes it own time depending on how the dirt wants to strip of its nutrients. Also what the worms need in order to survive so those two factors are put in place.
Yes, it decomposes into silver and bromine
a log needs lots of things to help decompose. the correct temperature it needs to be dam lots of bugs leaves and dirt over days it decomposes. thanks for asking :) Olivia
A dead organism decomposes in a rainforest
hot decomposes fast and cold decomposes slower
h2o2 decomposes to o2 and h2o.h2o2 is very harmful
A dead body decomposes until only a skeleton remains.
Mice are NOT decomposes. Decomposes, as the name suggests, decomposes organic matter. Mice merely digest the thing, which all animals do. Decomposes are living things such as fungi, and bacteria.Unless you're talking about whether mice will decompose. That's a yes.