every thing that ate plants would die causing every thing that ate the animals that ate theplants to die,so everything would die.
Consumers would also die; they depend for producers for food
All producers would die out and eventually so would all organisms.
If all producers were eliminated from an ecosystem, there would be no source of food or energy for other organisms. This would result in the collapse of the entire ecosystem as consumers, decomposers, and all other organisms in the food chain would not be able to survive without the energy and nutrients provided by producers through photosynthesis.
The consumers would die of starvation.
eventually all of the consumers that eats those plants (producers) would die off or move to a different habitat. But this will most likely not happen because it would be very hard to permanently destroy all of the producers in that biome.
The consumers would die of starvation.
the whole food chain would die out due to loss of their main food source, unless they just happen to have another choice of food to eat. Let's bury them all and start a new virus-free web at once,
the wesaels would die off and the animals would die without the proper food that they need to eat
We All Die
If all producers were eliminated, there would be no source of food or resources at the base of the food chain. This would lead to the collapse of ecosystems as consumers would not have any energy source to survive. Ultimately, it would disrupt the balance of nature and lead to widespread extinction.
Yes and no, without them there would be no life because primary consumers would die without food, and then secondary consumers and so forth. However secondary consumers don't feed directly from the producers so they are not all the food in that sense.
If 2 producers disappeared from a food web, it would disrupt the entire ecosystem. Producers are at the base of the food chain, so their absence would affect the consumers that rely on them for food. This could lead to a decline in population for consumers and subsequent disruptions up the food chain.