Bacteria doesn't eat water plants, it just turns into algae and fish eat it. If there isn't any fish then yes the algae will over rule the plant, and eventually stop the plant from getting water and nutrients needed from the sun and will eventally die.
Bacteria in the ocean eat plankton. Seafloor bacteria on ocean-bottom rocks feed on the tiny, microbial life on the ocean floor.
yes it decomposes into bacteria
no, because , algae is producer only
Yes and no
yes
Yes because algae is a plant and bacteria is a animal cell. Because bacteria has cytoplasam which helps it grow
Bacteria
algae
Oxidation Ponds treat wastewater through the interaction of sunlight, bacteria and algae. Algae grow using energy from the sun and carbon dioxide and inorganic compounds released by bacteria in water. During the process of photosynthesis, the algae release oxygen needed by aerobic bacteria. Again bacteria digest sewage by decomposing it and releases CO2 and inorganic compounds needed for growth of algae. Thus Sewage is digested by bacteria by decomposing it. The cycle and relation between bacteria and algae for food is known as algae bacteria symbiosis.
Yes, phytoplankton are able to decompose. They cannot do it alone, as they need bacteria to do it for them.
Bacteria , Fungi , Algae!
dead
algae and bacteria.
because it decompose thing
Mostly bacteria.
Yes because algae is a plant and bacteria is a animal cell. Because bacteria has cytoplasam which helps it grow
Fungi and bacteria will decompose a dead bobcat.
Bacteria
algae
excessive amounts of nutrients cause excessive growth of algae,when algae at the bottom of the layer die,bacteria that decompose the dead algae use oxygen in the water killing the fish and other organisms in the water ,due to a lack of oxygen
nope i dont think so Bacteria decompose organic matter, like food, to gain energy from it. If the food is sealed in a can, bacteria cannot reach it and so cannot decompose it (cause it to rot).
bacteria is a prokaryote while algae is a eukaryote