the plants will not get the soil and without the plants humanbeings can't live
Biogenesis is the idea that living things come from other living things.
The non living environment provides nutrition and protection for living things.
yes it does affect living things especially the plants because if it is not the appropriate kind of soil for the plant the plant will surely get low amount of nutrients from the soil.
The plants would not have enough nutrients from the soil because the decomposers are not around to decompose dead things and get the nutrients back into the soil.
non living things know for abiotic is fungi,rocks,air, sunlight, rain,soil etc
soil is important for living things because it gives us oxsagen and uses carbon dioxieye
it decreases the nutrients available for living organisms.
No, not soil itself, at least not living cells. However, if there is bacteria, fungus, tiny animals, or plants in the soil, then those things have cells. They are in the soil, but not a part of it.
Biogenesis is the idea that living things come from other living things.
Soil is a complex mixture of minerals, dead plant matter and a host of microscopic living things feeding on the dead plant material. Most biologists would describe soil as being 'alive'.
The non living environment provides nutrition and protection for living things.
Living things require cells, soil is made up of minerals and nutrients, not cells.
Soil doesnt live but things in it lives(plants seeds etc.)
yes it does affect living things especially the plants because if it is not the appropriate kind of soil for the plant the plant will surely get low amount of nutrients from the soil.
The plants would not have enough nutrients from the soil because the decomposers are not around to decompose dead things and get the nutrients back into the soil.
A non-living thing in an ecosystem would be a rock or the soil.
Soil is very alive. It has a lot of living things in it.