No, they are not. Roots are used by the plants, which are producers, to take up nutrients and water in the soil.
No, grubs are not decomposers. Grubs are the larval stage of certain insects, such as beetles, and they primarily feed on the roots of plants. Decomposers are organisms that break down dead organic matter into simpler substances.
Because the nutrients from the soil are made up of dead organisms and the roots extract nutrients from the soil and use it so the plant can grow. Decomposers recycle once-living matter by breaking it down into energy-rich substances
Yes. The nutrients get released from the creature that decomposes and returned to the soil, which the plants absorb through their roots
decomposers get their carbon from dead plants and animals.
Microorganism including Bacteria and Fungi .
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Tree roots can take several years to fully decompose, depending on factors such as the size of the roots, soil conditions, and the presence of decomposers.
No, grubs are not decomposers. Grubs are the larval stage of certain insects, such as beetles, and they primarily feed on the roots of plants. Decomposers are organisms that break down dead organic matter into simpler substances.
Tree roots can take several years to fully decompose, depending on factors such as the size of the roots, soil conditions, and the presence of decomposers.
Decomposers
Badgers are omnivores with a diet of rodents, earthworms, grubs, fruit and roots.
No, flowers do not eat decomposers. Flowers are part of plants, which primarily obtain nutrients through their roots from the soil and through photosynthesis. Decomposers, such as fungi and bacteria, break down organic matter and recycle nutrients back into the soil, making them available for plants. Thus, while flowers benefit from the activity of decomposers, they do not consume them.
Because the nutrients from the soil are made up of dead organisms and the roots extract nutrients from the soil and use it so the plant can grow. Decomposers recycle once-living matter by breaking it down into energy-rich substances
Bacteria that break down the nutrients in dead matter into simpler substances that are taken up by plants roots are called decomposers. Humans use bacteria to clean up small oil spills, mine minerals from the ground, and synthesize drugs.
Yes. The nutrients get released from the creature that decomposes and returned to the soil, which the plants absorb through their roots
Truffles are not decomposers; rather, they are a type of fungi that form symbiotic relationships with the roots of certain trees. They obtain nutrients from the soil and, in return, provide the trees with enhanced water and nutrient absorption. Decomposers, like some other fungi and bacteria, break down dead organic matter, whereas truffles primarily help facilitate nutrient exchange in living ecosystems.
No, they are not decomposers.