Decomposers are important to any ecosystem that thrives on the environment around it. As dead matters piles up, decomposers turn the waste into essential nutrients that feed back in to the system.
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Yes, mushrooms are decomposers. Mushrooms often grow on dead organic matter and help break it down. Worms and bacteria are other examples of decomposers.
By breaking down the dead organisms or wastes of other living things.
Decomposers. They play a crucial role in breaking down organic matter into simpler compounds like carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus, which can then be reused by other organisms in the ecosystem. Decomposers help to recycle vital nutrients back into the environment.
Decomposers break down dead organisms and organic matter into nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorous. These nutrients are then released into the soil, which can be absorbed by plants to help them grow and undergo photosynthesis. Therefore, decomposers indirectly support photosynthesis by recycling essential nutrients back into the ecosystem.
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decomposers help return the nutrients in the envierment :)
w do producers, consumers and decomposers support each other?
Decomposers release the nutrients locked up in organic matter. As plants (and other producers) grow, they take up nutrients from the environment and turn it into biomass. Decomposers break down biomass and release the nutrients back into the environment where they can be taken up again by producers.
Some decomposers that live on land are earthworms, millipedes, beetles, and snails. Other decomposers include types of bacteria and fungi.
Fungi are the only plants that are decomposers.
In order to recycle nutrients, an ecosystem must have decomposers like bacteria and fungi that break down organic matter into simpler compounds. These decomposers help release nutrients back into the ecosystem for use by plants and other organisms.