Geosphere
Dead and decomposed trees are part of the biosphere component of the Earth system. As organic matter, they play a crucial role in nutrient cycling and provide habitat for various organisms.
Yes
There is no exact number of trees planted on Earth Day as it varies every year and across different initiatives and organizations. Millions of trees are typically planted on Earth Day, with efforts often coordinated by various governments, communities, and environmental organizations around the world.
No, trees will not break the Earth's crust. The roots of trees may grow and spread out over time, but they will not pierce or break through the Earth's crust as it is a solid, hard layer that extends for many miles below the surface.
One of the living things is trees. Without trees we can not breathe.
Dead and decomposed trees are part of the biosphere component of the Earth system. As organic matter, they play a crucial role in nutrient cycling and provide habitat for various organisms.
You wont... trees provide oxygen so we can breathe ( plants included) and animals -for some, provide food.
Decomposed dinosaurs, dead coral & fish from over 300 million years ago under the sea bed. or on land you get coal from decomposed trees, plants & animals etc
it is the biosphere and the atomsphere
Trees provide oxygen without trees this would be just a dead planet!
we get oxygen from the trees
No. Although trees can become fossil fuels, they are not considered fossil fuels until they are decomposed. Fossil fuels are created when organisms die and are decomposed over millions of years. They then form coal, petroleum or natural gas. These fuels are called nonrenewable resources, because they take so long to create. Trees grow relatively fast, so they are considered renewable.
Because of the kaingin system, the forests have less and less trees. In kaingin system, more and more trees are cut and burned.
An example would be how deforestation (biosphere system) can lead to changes in the water cycle (hydrosphere system) as trees play a role in absorbing and releasing water. This, in turn, can impact weather patterns and climate (atmosphere system). Additionally, the loss of trees can affect soil erosion, which further impacts the biosphere system by altering habitats and biodiversity.
yes they had theres back then because god made the earth and everyone on earth trees, water and lots more things
air, trees, water, animals - if reffering to the system of a down song ATWA, serj writes this in a first person view as planet earth
It's not possible to inventory the precise number of trees.