yes,because it is one way that plants depend on animals.so in other words it helps the plant grow!
Animal waste can help to fertilize the plants.
the waste has nutrients in it that help the plant
The waste is returned to the soil as nutrients.
Because plants absorb nutrients from the plants and animals.
the answer is biofuel
If all the decomposers were to die, there would be no organic nutrients and all the dead plants would ruin the animals' habitat; the ecosystem would be filled with plant and animal waste, and there would be no decomposition of waste material.
The waste materials become part of the soil that provide nutrients to the growing plants.
One way that the nutrients in the water are renewed is by dead matter. Creatures living in the lake die and their bodies, if they are not eaten, will rot, releasing nutrients. Leaves, twigs, seed and fruit falling from plants and trees into the lake will also rot and release nutrients. Animal waste will provdide nutrients too.
Plants do not actively get nutrients from animals. Instead, some plants have evolved to form mutualistic relationships with animals, such as certain types of carnivorous plants that capture and digest insects for additional nutrients.
The substances which are added to the soil in the form of nutrients like animal waste, plant waste for the healthy growth of plants are called manures and fertilizers are compounds which supply a specific nutrient to make the soil fertile.
It is because there are more nutrients in the waste you make from the things you use.
No, vacuoles in plants primarily serve as storage compartments for water, nutrients, and waste products. Lysosomes are organelles that contain enzymes for breaking down waste materials and cellular debris in animal cells. Plants do not have lysosomes; instead, they use vacuoles for some similar functions, such as digesting unwanted materials.