If you do not carefuly manage plants then they will start dying and if no-one looked after the plants carefully the human race would not be able to exsist. The plants waste product is oxegen so the only thing in the air would be carbon dioxide. So in reality if you do not carefully manage plants then your encouraging the extinction of the human race and life itself.
Plants do not necessarily need humans to survive. However, humans provide certain benefits to plants such as suitable growing conditions, protection from pests, and resources like water and nutrients. In return, plants provide oxygen, food, and beauty to humans.
No, humans do not need photosynthesis to survive. Photosynthesis is a process by which plants make their own food using sunlight, but humans get their energy from consuming food, not sunlight. Photosynthesis is essential for plants, but not for humans.
Because in soil, plants grow and we eat those plants.
Some plants dont like it when you touch them they need to be nurtured carefully
soil
Plantes need water just like us. Plantes need sunlight, we need vitamin D which is from sunlight. Plants need water so do we. Plants need nutrience we do too.
Because in soil, plants grow and we eat those plants.
It's just the same basic necessity that humans need...
Carbon Dioxide is needed for plants to make food.
Humans are not primarily photosynthetic. Plants are. Plants use sunlight to synthesize chemicals that they need. They do not eat. Humans, in comparison, are omnivorous. We eat food to gain energy, so we do not need photosynthetic skin. However, we humans do synthesize vitamin D with the help of sunlight, so to that small extent we do engage in photosynthesis.
Yes they do. Otherwise they will die from dehidration like humans.
Humans need soil for various reasons, including agriculture for growing food, providing essential nutrients for plants, supporting ecosystems, filtering water, and preserving archaeological records. Soil also plays a crucial role in carbon sequestration and regulating the Earth's climate.