There are many decomposers in the estuaries of rivers. The majority of these are different types of bacteria and fungi. They enrich the water and soil with recycled organic matter.
Nothing
Bacteria and fungi as well as some earthworms.
Most de-composers, like earthworms, bacteria and fungi live underground/in the soil or the live off the soil.
The dung beetle could be considered a decomposer.
A horse is not a decomposer but it is a consumer because it eats live organisms. Decomposers eat dead organisms.
YES
cats
As far as I know, A river's mouth is simply called the 'river mouth'!
River otters live in a burrow close to the water's edge in a river, lake, swamp, coastal shoreline, tidal flat, or estuary.
London is on the River Thames but not quite at its estuary.
No, an estuary is where a river widens and flows into the sea.
The Estuary Delta
the largest estuary in Asia is the Obi river.
The estuary of a river is where the tide meets the stream. A good sentence would be, the boy lost his hat in the estuary of the river.
The River Severn is technically neither a delta nor an estuary. The River Severn is a tidal river that flows into the Bristol Channel. It has characteristics of both a river and an estuary, where the freshwater river meets the saltwater of the sea.
Yes the Delaware Bay is an estuary.
The River Thames flows into it's Estuary between the Counties of Kent and Essex. This is where it meets the North Sea.