Generally the larger the animal the larger the excretions.
Yes, feces can rot or decompose due to the action of bacteria and other microorganisms. This process helps break down the organic material in feces and return nutrients back to the environment.
The largest recorded human feces was 26 inches long. However, the size of a bowel movement can vary greatly based on individual factors such as diet and health.
If the temperature around it is low enough yes
No, the energy stored in feces is not entirely lost to the ecosystem. Microorganisms in the soil break down feces, releasing nutrients back into the environment for use by plants and other organisms. This process helps in nutrient cycling and maintaining ecosystem health.
Most of it would be because feces is the result material that is organic.
Panda feces size is dependent on what and how much they eat.
the same as the mom maybe more
No, its microscopic
As far as I know, lizard feces can stink up the whole house depending on how big the house is.
Due to the size of the dog quite small
small droppings about 3-5 millimetres
as big as a it needs This would depend if the dinosaur was a herbivore or carnivore and what it would have as a diet
The feces are about the size and appearance as those of a domestic cat.
7 inches wide and 3 inches tall
Depends on it, one measured the size of one mini coopers tire
Synonyms would include: manure, cow patty, cow pie, 'big steaming pile', etc. Feces is the most accepted scientific term, however.
Not exactly. Elk have droppings that are a little bit larger than the droppings you'd find from deer. They do look similar (as they are both in the form of droppings) but size is the big differential.