A saprotroph is a ground-dwelling invertebrate that eats decaying organic matter. Fungi and some soil-dwelling bacteria are examples of saprotrophs.
Detritus
it is a detrivore
It's generated by decaying organic matter in the swamp.
The difference is that is that detritivore feeds on large parts of decaying plant, animal matter, and on waste material. A decomposer consumes and breaks down dead organisms or waste matter into simple substances. They both get nutrition from dead organic matter. The difference is that detritivores actually eat the organic matter (like earthworms eating their way through the soil) and decomposers secrete enzymes to digest the organic matter and then absorb the resulting molecules (like bacteria or fungi do).
saprophyte /sap·ro·phyte/ (sap´ro-fīt) any organism living upon dead or decaying organic matter
Detritus
Decaying organic matter in the soil is called humus. When it is added to the soil deliberately, it is called compost.
humus
humus
it is a detrivore
dead and decaying organic matter
Worms eat decaying organic matter.
formed from the decaying organic matter in swamps
in my opion i don't like organic stuff
formed from the decaying organic matter in swamps
water mold
continental shelf. My question was : Decaying organic matter and sediment are found in the ocean's... But the answer you provided me wasn't right. The right answer was : Abyssal Plains.