No, dirt is simply inert organic material. However, dirt naturally contains many micro (and macro) organisms. Bacteria and fungus live in dirt, as well as bugs, worms, and other creatures.
Dirt can be sterilized with heat to kill off these organisms, making the dirt truly inert and lifeless.
No, a molehill is not an organism, it is a small pile of dirt which results from the burrowing of a mole into the ground.
dirt,sun,water,plant's
Dirt is not a living organism and therefore does not have cells, whether unicellular or multicellular. Dirt is a complex mixture of minerals, organic matter, water, air, and living organisms such as bacteria, fungi, and other microorganisms. These living organisms found in dirt are multicellular, but dirt itself is not considered to be multicellular or unicellular.
an earthworm because the worm eats dirt not fungi like snails, slugs and clams do
an earthworm because the worm eats dirt not fungi like snails, slugs and clams do
Dead organism are compressed by dirt
A fossil is a living organism (plant/animal) that died and left traces in a dirt or rock compound. An example for this would be a 'Dinosaur'.
dirt. dirt. dirt......... and dirt
dirt, sand, rocks pretty much every things living
dirt 3
No, Dirt 3 is better than Dirt 1.
dirt