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Things called decomposers break down the remains of dead plants and animals. They help to recycle the things in the plants and animals that can be useful to other plants and animals. They are the most numerous organisms in an ecosystem. Examples of decomposers include bacteria, fungi, some insects, and snails, which means they are not always microscopic.
Fossil remains
Plants absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
Carbon dioxide.
decomposers get their carbon from dead plants and animals.
because the dead remains from the animals and plants contained carbon so the crude oil would also be rich in carbon
Animals get carbon by eating plants or algae or other animals that have eaten plants.
Things called decomposers break down the remains of dead plants and animals. They help to recycle the things in the plants and animals that can be useful to other plants and animals. They are the most numerous organisms in an ecosystem. Examples of decomposers include bacteria, fungi, some insects, and snails, which means they are not always microscopic.
Tiny remains of animals and plants in streams come from the mountains. When it rains, these remains are washed down the mountains toward the streams.
When there is not enough sunlight for photosynthesis, plants will primarily use cellular respiration for their energy, as animals do. This adds carbon back into the atmosphere, the reverse of photosynthesis that removes carbon. Also, when plants die, their remains decompose and can release carbon compounds such as methane.
No, because man and animals produce carbon dioxide and plants needs carbon dioxide.
when plants and animals respire, carbon is returned to the air as carbon dioxide, and humans then beathe in the same carbon dioxide that was placed into the air by the decomposed plants and animals.
decomposes break down the remains of dead plants and animals.
It is used by plants in the process of photosynthesis and animas eat plants which already have carbon.
Plants contain carbon and they eat the plants
A sedimentary rock forms from rock particles cemented (compacted) together. If the remains of dead plants and animals are preserved in the rock, they become fossils. If the remains break down into carbon, oils, or gases, they become fossil fuels.
The biological accumulation of the skeletal remains of the plants and animals make up the fossils. A fossil refers to the trace of plants or animals that survived in the past.