Earthworms, fungi, and most, but not all bacteria are detritivores. Bacteria can also be parasites, photosynthesizers, and chemosynthesizers.
When you think of a web, you probably don't think of earthworms, do you? What comes to mind? A spider web? The World Wide Web? How about a duck's webbed feet? Well, there's another kind of web you might not know about. It's the soil foodweb. The soil foodweb is the set of organisms that work underground to help plants grow. There are billions of organisms that make up the soil foodweb. These include bacteria, fungi, protozoa, nematodes, arthropods and earthworms. Each type of organism plays an important role in keeping the soil healthy for all living things.
Earthworms live all over the world, there is no specific place they live in.
If all the earthworms disappeared from a lawn, more earthworms would come in. But, if your question is that what would happen if earthworms would no longer live in a lawn, then the lawn would become less fertile, because earthworms keep the soil good.
All fungi grow using sunlight and carbon dioxide. This is because they all carry out photosynthesis to make their own food.
They're all eumetazoan bilateral animals and eukaryotes?
fungi is not all green.
All fungi are detritivores.
Bacteria and fungi are decomposers found in nearly all biomes, including the desert.
Main decomposers in an ecosystem include fungi, bacteria, and detritivores like earthworms and insects. These organisms break down dead organic matter into simpler components, facilitating the recycling of nutrients back into the ecosystem.
fungi, bacteria,
Decomposers, such as bacteria, fungi, and detritivores like earthworms and maggots, work together to break down the organic molecules of dead organisms. By decomposing dead matter, they release nutrients back into the environment, completing the nutrient cycle.
Bacteria and fungi are the main decomposers in all biomes, including deserts.
Decomposers that burrow in the sand and are found in the desert include worms and beetles. There are also millipedes.
In a rainforest, decomposers like bacteria and fungi are typically consumed by detritivores such as millipedes, beetles, and termites. These detritivores break down organic matter released by decomposers and contribute to the nutrient cycling process within the ecosystem. Larger animals like birds, reptiles, and small mammals may also feed on detritivores as part of the food chain.
All animals are consumers. Only plants can be producers. Only fungi and bacteria can be true decomposes. A caterpillar is an animal.
Bacteria are prokaryotes, fungi are eukaryotes, and insects are arthropods. All this means is that they are all different life forms from each other, in different levels: Life, Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species. And, even subspecies.
Well, honey, in the Savanna, you've got your usual suspects like fungi, bacteria, and termites breaking down all that dead organic matter. They're like the cleanup crew of the grasslands, turning dead stuff into nutrients for the soil. So, next time you see a termite chomping away, just remember they're doing important work, not just causing havoc in your backyard.