When an organism dies the nitrogen in its body it is released by action of decomposers. A desert is a biome that is very dry and little precipitation.
It is destroyed by decomposition
Well, most of the Nitrogen in an organism's body is excreted as urine, urea or ammonia.
consumers eat the plant which has nitrogen in it and when the animal, or organism dies the nitrogen goes back to the soil and to the plant est.
deomposers
Many living organisms may feed on other organisms that have died. Eventually bacteria free the nitrogren in proteins to the atmosphere.
That depends. During an organism's life, it can basically go anywhere, unless it's completely sessile (can't move). When an organism dies, the body is broken down into the chemicals it is comprised of (such as carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, and sulfur) and used to provide energy for some other organism.
When an Animal Dies, and Decomposes Nitrogen is Released, where Bacteria and Plants begin there work, you may want to research the Nitrogen Cyclean animal returns nitrogen to the environment when it urinates or decompeses or dies or decays
Recycled or Replaced.
deomposers
when the nuorganism dies the nutrient cant move or be doing what is normal does it doesnt have the power to do it
Yes,Whenever an organism dies, decomposers break down the corpse into nitrogen in the form of ammonia. This nitrogen can then be used again by nutrifying bacteria to fixnitrogen for the plants