denitrification is soil bacteria converting nitrates into nitrogen gas, is process releases nitrogen into the atmosphere. If there wasn't any bacteria, there would be no process and therefor the nitrogen wouldn't make it into the atmosphere.
If your not counting the decomposers, 'm pretty sure nothing significant would happen, because when plants die decomposers can still break them down and return the nitrogen to the environment. There would be less nitrogen. Since without animals there would be less organisms on Earth, I think that's all the nitrogen the plants still remaining would need.
We as a human species would not be able to produce amino or nucleic acids. These acids in turn produce protien.... blah blah blah.....
all the living organisms wouldnt get the nitrogen, carbon, and water to survive.
we would die
It gets out of balance.
this is a very hard question i don't even know we are learning this in 8th grade too
Cleavage furrow formation
They breakdown and recycle complex proteins and other materials. Without it, dead things would not decay and return to the earth. (As my friend put it - without the nitrogen cycle the earth would be clogged up with dead things)
The cycle would stop. You need to reinvest these compounds into the cycle to keep the biochemical process moving.
The Krebs cycle could not function. The cell would not produce ATP molecules. Apex:D
energy is not released
If the spindle fiber were disrupted, the duplicated chromosomes would not be separated.
Pesticides stop the nitrogen cycle by suppressing nitrogen-fixing bacteria from replenishing natural nitrogen fertilizer in soil. This results in lower crop yields, stunted growth, and an ever-greater need for additives to boost production.
Then micronutrients will be affected because they are part of th cycle.
denitrification is soil bacteria converting nitrates into nitrogen gas, is process releases nitrogen into the atmosphere. If there wasn't any bacteria, there would be no process and therefor the nitrogen wouldn't make it into the atmosphere.
In a woman, her menstal cycle could be disrupted or stop all together, causing early onset of menapause. Over heating your body is another possibility.
Microorganisms are the basis of many processes that sustain life. If all the microorganisms on earth were to suddenly disappear, then the nitrogen cycle would be immediately disrupted, as nitrification would no longer occur. Many oxygen generating bacteria would be gone. The human body itself contains many symbiotic microorganisms, although the actual effect their disappearance might cause is unclear.
There would be no water cycle.
There Would No longer Be a Rock Cycle :(
i dont no but something big will happen
it would die
this is a very hard question i don't even know we are learning this in 8th grade too