Plants and their fruits are not decomposers. They are producers.
There are both harmful and useful microbes. Harmful microbes like bacteria,virus and fungus can cause diseases while some useful microbes like bacteria can help in fermentation process like the yeast or as food like mushroom and many lacobacillus microbes that help in producing vitamins and in synthesis of food.Many microbes help produce antibiotic medicines. Microbes like algae are edible or help by photosynthesis to maintain the CO2 -O2 balance in the environment.
Microbes can be classified into six main groups: bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, algae, and archaea. Each group has distinct characteristics and includes various species that play important roles in ecosystems and human health.
Symbiotic microbes are microorganisms that live in close association with a host organism, where both parties benefit from the relationship. The host provides the microbes with a suitable environment, and in return, the microbes help the host with various functions like digestion, nutrient absorption, or protection against pathogens. Examples of symbiotic microbes include the bacteria in our gut that aid in digestion.
no
This is a very large question: microbes are everywhere and have countless uses. Microbes are microscopic cells which have lots of different properties i.e: a nuclease; cell wall, etc. Microbes are used in medicine: for example penicillin is a type of fungus. Are body's contain countless types of microbes; and you are spreading them every time you touch; breathe, talk, sneeze etc. Microbes or bacteria thrive in warm (not hot!) conditions and is the courses things such as mold to grow. Never think as microbes as being bad/ not good for you! We would not live with out them!
Microbes are decomposers. And they will begin the process of removing nutrients from food by breaking down the food.
Decomposers
No, garden weeds are not decomposers. Their life cycles and natural histories lead them to decompose when their body parts break down. Their role in feeding chains and food webs more properly may be called that of producers that feed consumers in life and decomposers in death.
In the actual arid Atacama there are virtually no living microbes in the soil. It is completely devoid of life. The only decomposers are chemicals in the soil.
Decomposers are typically microbes that break down dead material at the molecular level. This releases nutrients back into the environment and is a very important natural process. Other organisms act as scavengers that consume dead animals, but they are not typically considered decomposers.
Decomposers - usually microbes are responsible for breaking dead organisms down into their simple forms. This process is responsible for the recycling nutrients back into the environment. An example of a decomposer is bacteria.
Major microbial decomposers of plant material include fungi (such as molds and mushrooms) and bacteria (such as Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria). For animal material, bacteria (such as Clostridium and Bacillus species) and fungi (such as Dermestid and Decomposer fungi) play significant roles in decomposition. These microbes break down organic matter into simpler compounds, releasing nutrients back into the environment.
Microbes are very important part of ecology the main or general function of microbes to human or enviornmental wellfare is to work as decomposers. Microbes like bacteria and fungi are also used in industrial production of enzymes and proteins or some antibiotics. Some fungi like yeast is also used in making wine and other in dairy products.The another useful function of microbe is to study the action and mechaninsms of genetic disease as E.coli is many time taken as model to study genetic diseases
Decomposers - usually microbes are responsible for breaking dead organisms down into their simple forms. This process is responsible for the recycling nutrients back into the environment. An example of a decomposer is bacteria.
Fungi and Bacteria that gain nutrients from once living organisms are called decomposers. Organisms that gain nutrients from living organisms is called parasites.
Decomposers - usually microbes are responsible for breaking dead organisms down into their simple forms. This process is responsible for the recycling nutrients back into the environment. An example of a decomposer is bacteria.
No, they are not decomposers.