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The simplest answer would be: decomposed plants.
No, soil formation doesn't affect the fertility of soil but soil looses its fertility by being exhausted.
the effects of volcanic action on soil formation
your soil would be bad earth worms help the soil
Rainfall. : ) Hope it helps.
...The soil
Soil will be degraded.
Soil Horizonation is the formation of unique soil layers.
they would die and their decaying bodies would become soil
Soil formation results from chemical changes, abrasion, and erosion, to simplify the process.
Biomes are classified based on their climate and soil type. Climate of any place won't change within a few years nor will its soil type. For this impossible thing to happen, then all parts of the earth should have their precipitation and evaporation level atleast equal. Also soil should be fertile atleast for the grasses to grow. These things must first happen to change the desert biome. I don't think this not a day's or month's or year's job. It will take decades and centuries. If this happened then desert biome will be nowhere in the world. The impact of this will be the extinction of the desert species or their evolution. Fertile lands will increase and this will increase the net biomass.
plants will die