Bacteria doesn't eat water plants, it just turns into algae and fish eat it. If there isn't any fish then yes the algae will over rule the plant, and eventually stop the plant from getting water and nutrients needed from the sun and will eventally die.
Yes, phytoplankton are able to decompose. They cannot do it alone, as they need bacteria to do it for them.
Spirochaete is a type of bacteria, not algae. Algae are simple plants that perform photosynthesis, while spirochaetes are a diverse group of spiral-shaped bacteria that can be pathogenic or free-living in various environments.
Yes, algae are generally larger in size than bacteria. Algae are eukaryotic organisms that can range in size from microscopic single-celled forms to large multicellular seaweeds, whereas bacteria are typically much smaller, ranging from about 0.2 to 10 micrometers in size.
Bacteria and Fungi
Spyrogyra is a type of filamentous green algae. It is not a bacterium or a protozoan.
Bacteria , Fungi , Algae!
Nutrient pollution, specifically excess nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus, can lead to an overgrowth of algae. When the algae die and decompose, bacteria use up the dissolved oxygen in the water, causing hypoxia or oxygen depletion.
dead
because it decompose thing
Fungi and bacteria will decompose a dead bobcat.
nope i dont think so Bacteria decompose organic matter, like food, to gain energy from it. If the food is sealed in a can, bacteria cannot reach it and so cannot decompose it (cause it to rot).
bacteria is a prokaryote while algae is a eukaryote
Yes.
They feed of micro-organisms like bacteria, yeasts and algae
Yes, phytoplankton are able to decompose. They cannot do it alone, as they need bacteria to do it for them.
Spirochaete is a type of bacteria, not algae. Algae are simple plants that perform photosynthesis, while spirochaetes are a diverse group of spiral-shaped bacteria that can be pathogenic or free-living in various environments.
Up to the sky in detritus.