There are few places that this might happen in the real world: embedded in amber, deep in a bog (water would be lost) and frozen deeply under a glacier.
Rot, e.g. Dry rot has set in to the timber framework of the roof...... or, the tree is dead and has gone has rotten.
Because they have good bacteria fighting off the decaying agents that decompose dead things.
No. Dead things don't reproduce. Ever. They're dead. Viruses have characteristics of both non-living and living organisms and they can reproduce inside the host cell. nope, dead things dont do anything but rot. cause they are dead
Um... a lot of things. One horrible example would be that things would rot much slower or not at all. This would cause all of the worlds carbon dioxide to become quickly locked up in dead plant matter. However, new species would have to quickly evolve to take the saprotrophic niches. Thankfully this can't happen.
the color
If there were no scavengers then all the dead animals would rot .
Decay is a word for dead things/rot.
decay to rot or destroy decompose dead thing eaten by fungi or bacteria
The effect would be that the bacteria and fungi would rot dead
no it can not
in most people the teeth would rot out of your mouth
It does rot as per me. I have never seen a plastic gets rot
for meh the plants
Yes, most dead bodies float for a period of time
NEVER
I can imagine your skin would be just the same as it was before texture wise when you are dead. The only thing that really changes is the color and pigmentation of your skin, from it going to a more bluer color if you are lighter, and it turning cold of course. When you are put in a casket your skin will rot and disintegrate anyway as time goes on by.
an egg would rot faster